开发者

How do I ref a figure in LaTeX before it occurs?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-20 04:06 出处:网络
I always like my figures to be placed in between text as oppos开发者_运维百科ed to the top or bottom of the page. I also like to talk about the figure before it is shown. So I am trying to have someth

I always like my figures to be placed in between text as oppos开发者_运维百科ed to the top or bottom of the page. I also like to talk about the figure before it is shown. So I am trying to have something like this:

By looking at Figure~\ref{fig:VCO} you can see that blah blah blah.

\begin{figure}[h]
\caption{VCO test circuit}\label{fig:VCO}
\begin{center}
\includegraphics[width=0.9\columnwidth]{figures/VCO_circuit.eps}
\end{center}
\end{figure}

This doesn't seem to work because it I guess it is referencing something that hasn't occurred yet? Does anyone have some simple solution? I am still very new to LaTeX.


Generally LaTeX needs at least two passes to resolve all its references, the first time to write them to an auxiliary file and the second time to put them into the final ps/pdf/dvi file. So it does not matter where the reference is.

A third pass will be needed, for example, if your document has a long table-of-contents which will screw up page numbers.


It failed the first time because labeling and referencing are a two-pass process. The first time you processed your latex, all the labels were being indexed so the ref failed. The second time around, since the labels had been indexed the ref knew what it was actually referencing.


I would add that latexmk (link) has proven invaluable to me over the years. This is a LaTeX "build" script written in Perl that is designed to compile .tex source files the right number of times. It parses the output from the latex command and performs dependency checking to ensure that the output document is kept up-to-date with the minimum number of passes. It can also deal with BibTeX bibliography files. Generally speaking, I invoke latexmk from either an Ant or GNU Make makefile and treat it just like I'm compiling C++ code, for example.


I had same problem and I found this solution:

\graphicspath{{images/}}
\DeclareGraphicsExtensions{.jpg}

\makeatletter
\newenvironment{tablehere}
  {\def\@captype{table}}
  {}

\newenvironment{figurehere}
  {\def\@captype{figure}}
  {}
\makeatother

\begin{figurehere}
\includegraphics[height=5cm]{2-14aGa-Sur.jpg}
\caption{Hliněná destička s mapou severu Mezopotámie}
\label{fig:Ga-Sur}
\end{figurehere}

\graphicspath{{images/}} is there to declare your path to your pictures

\DeclareGraphicsExtensions{.jpg} is there for declare picture extension (multiple can be with comma (I think ;-))

\makeatletter
\newenvironment{tablehere}
  {\def\@captype{table}}
  {}

\newenvironment{figurehere}
  {\def\@captype{figure}}
  {}
\makeatother

is there for precise determination of position here

\begin{figurehere}
\includegraphics[height=5cm]{2-14aGa-Sur.jpg}
\caption{Hliněná destička s mapou severu Mezopotámie}
\label{fig:Ga-Sur}
\end{figurehere}

there is your picture with height specified and caption and label with it...

I hope it will help you ;-).

0

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消