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includegraphics: get the “scale” value of a figure whose size is expressed by “width”


Knowing how much resizebox scalesget the width (in pt) of a boxScale three symbols to the same sizeScale images in proportion to textwidthHow to scale multiple elements to maximum width while keeping their relative size fixed?Includegraphics doesn't show the figure. Overleaf v2What is the minipage equivalent of `width=linewidth` for includegraphicsHow to label a figure and call it using the command vcenterhboxincludegraphics[height=…em]C:/Users/abc/Documents/…?How can I center a text and figure vertically in a framed box of fixed size? (Ideally within the tocentry environment from the achemso package.)How to scale MetaPost drawings with consistent line width and label text size in ConTeXt?Find the width of a figure in latex, to properbly align multiple minipages within a figure













3















Lets take this string:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf


that generates this figure:



enter image description here



Now lets say that I need to crop the blank margins of the figure keeping the figure's size.



I though I could do it with something like:



boxedincludegraphics[trim = L B R T, clip, scale=x]FIGURE.pdf


Where L, B, R, and T are respectively the left, bottom, right and top trimming values and x is the scaling value.



The following example should better explain my question:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf\

boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf


The previus code generates the following layout:



enter image description here



As you can see, using scale value instead of width lets me crop the figure keeping its size.



My question is: how can I get the exact (more or less) value of the scale parameter without go by trial and error? (My idea is to write some Emacs Lisp code to change the LaTeX code accordingly.)



I am open to any idea or suggestion.



Note. In most cases I use external software to crop my images (pdfcrop, briss etc.) but, sometimes, as in this case, they don't work so I need to trim manually.










share|improve this question
























  • The redefinition of Gscale@box in this answer does what you want.

    – Phelype Oleinik
    8 hours ago











  • @PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition of Gscale@box should help me.

    – Gabriele Nicolardi
    7 hours ago















3















Lets take this string:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf


that generates this figure:



enter image description here



Now lets say that I need to crop the blank margins of the figure keeping the figure's size.



I though I could do it with something like:



boxedincludegraphics[trim = L B R T, clip, scale=x]FIGURE.pdf


Where L, B, R, and T are respectively the left, bottom, right and top trimming values and x is the scaling value.



The following example should better explain my question:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf\

boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf


The previus code generates the following layout:



enter image description here



As you can see, using scale value instead of width lets me crop the figure keeping its size.



My question is: how can I get the exact (more or less) value of the scale parameter without go by trial and error? (My idea is to write some Emacs Lisp code to change the LaTeX code accordingly.)



I am open to any idea or suggestion.



Note. In most cases I use external software to crop my images (pdfcrop, briss etc.) but, sometimes, as in this case, they don't work so I need to trim manually.










share|improve this question
























  • The redefinition of Gscale@box in this answer does what you want.

    – Phelype Oleinik
    8 hours ago











  • @PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition of Gscale@box should help me.

    – Gabriele Nicolardi
    7 hours ago













3












3








3








Lets take this string:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf


that generates this figure:



enter image description here



Now lets say that I need to crop the blank margins of the figure keeping the figure's size.



I though I could do it with something like:



boxedincludegraphics[trim = L B R T, clip, scale=x]FIGURE.pdf


Where L, B, R, and T are respectively the left, bottom, right and top trimming values and x is the scaling value.



The following example should better explain my question:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf\

boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf


The previus code generates the following layout:



enter image description here



As you can see, using scale value instead of width lets me crop the figure keeping its size.



My question is: how can I get the exact (more or less) value of the scale parameter without go by trial and error? (My idea is to write some Emacs Lisp code to change the LaTeX code accordingly.)



I am open to any idea or suggestion.



Note. In most cases I use external software to crop my images (pdfcrop, briss etc.) but, sometimes, as in this case, they don't work so I need to trim manually.










share|improve this question
















Lets take this string:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf


that generates this figure:



enter image description here



Now lets say that I need to crop the blank margins of the figure keeping the figure's size.



I though I could do it with something like:



boxedincludegraphics[trim = L B R T, clip, scale=x]FIGURE.pdf


Where L, B, R, and T are respectively the left, bottom, right and top trimming values and x is the scaling value.



The following example should better explain my question:



boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf\

boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdfquad %
boxedincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=0.238]FIGURE.pdf


The previus code generates the following layout:



enter image description here



As you can see, using scale value instead of width lets me crop the figure keeping its size.



My question is: how can I get the exact (more or less) value of the scale parameter without go by trial and error? (My idea is to write some Emacs Lisp code to change the LaTeX code accordingly.)



I am open to any idea or suggestion.



Note. In most cases I use external software to crop my images (pdfcrop, briss etc.) but, sometimes, as in this case, they don't work so I need to trim manually.







boxes crop includegraphics scale






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









David Carlisle

506k4211531905




506k4211531905










asked 8 hours ago









Gabriele NicolardiGabriele Nicolardi

59049




59049












  • The redefinition of Gscale@box in this answer does what you want.

    – Phelype Oleinik
    8 hours ago











  • @PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition of Gscale@box should help me.

    – Gabriele Nicolardi
    7 hours ago

















  • The redefinition of Gscale@box in this answer does what you want.

    – Phelype Oleinik
    8 hours ago











  • @PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition of Gscale@box should help me.

    – Gabriele Nicolardi
    7 hours ago
















The redefinition of Gscale@box in this answer does what you want.

– Phelype Oleinik
8 hours ago





The redefinition of Gscale@box in this answer does what you want.

– Phelype Oleinik
8 hours ago













@PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition of Gscale@box should help me.

– Gabriele Nicolardi
7 hours ago





@PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition of Gscale@box should help me.

– Gabriele Nicolardi
7 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















4














All graphics are written to the PDF with a scale factor. When you specify a size the package just converts it to an appropriate scale factor. You can make Gscale@box remember that scale factor for you (source):



documentclassarticle
usepackagegraphicx

makeatletter
letORG@Gscale@boxGscale@box
longdefGscale@box#1%
xdefthelastscalefactor#1%
ORG@Gscale@box#1
makeatother

begindocument

noindent
fboxincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad
fboxincludegraphics[scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image\

noindent
fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad %
fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image

enddocument


Output:




enter image description here







share|improve this answer























  • Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

    – Gabriele Nicolardi
    21 mins ago


















3














You can keep the width= on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example here:



enter image description here



documentclassarticle
usepackagegraphicx,adjustbox
begindocument



includegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image

bigskip

includegraphics[clip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cm, width=.4textwidth]example-image

bigskip

adjustboxclip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cmincludegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image


enddocument





share|improve this answer






























    1














    I never liked the idea of scaling and clipping at the same time, not knowing which comes first (keyword order means nothing). This solution clips first then scales by using savebox and adjustbox.



    documentclassarticle
    usepackagegraphicx
    usepackageadjustbox

    newsaveboxtempbox

    begindocument

    noindent
    saveboxtempboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip]example-image%
    fboxadjustboxwidth=0.4textwidthuseboxtempbox

    enddocument





    share|improve this answer






























      0














      I'm not quite sure this is what you are looking for, but here is a way to compute, for instance, 1000 times the desired scale factor, rounded to the nearest integer:



      documentclassarticle
      usepackagegraphicx

      newcountmyscale

      begindocument
      setbox0=hboxincludegraphicsexample-image%
      myscale=numexpr 400*textwidth / wd0 relax
      showthemyscale % displays 430 on the terminal

      includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-image

      includegraphics[scale=0.43]example-image % same width as above

      enddocument





      share|improve this answer























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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        4














        All graphics are written to the PDF with a scale factor. When you specify a size the package just converts it to an appropriate scale factor. You can make Gscale@box remember that scale factor for you (source):



        documentclassarticle
        usepackagegraphicx

        makeatletter
        letORG@Gscale@boxGscale@box
        longdefGscale@box#1%
        xdefthelastscalefactor#1%
        ORG@Gscale@box#1
        makeatother

        begindocument

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad
        fboxincludegraphics[scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image\

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad %
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image

        enddocument


        Output:




        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer























        • Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

          – Gabriele Nicolardi
          21 mins ago















        4














        All graphics are written to the PDF with a scale factor. When you specify a size the package just converts it to an appropriate scale factor. You can make Gscale@box remember that scale factor for you (source):



        documentclassarticle
        usepackagegraphicx

        makeatletter
        letORG@Gscale@boxGscale@box
        longdefGscale@box#1%
        xdefthelastscalefactor#1%
        ORG@Gscale@box#1
        makeatother

        begindocument

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad
        fboxincludegraphics[scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image\

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad %
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image

        enddocument


        Output:




        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer























        • Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

          – Gabriele Nicolardi
          21 mins ago













        4












        4








        4







        All graphics are written to the PDF with a scale factor. When you specify a size the package just converts it to an appropriate scale factor. You can make Gscale@box remember that scale factor for you (source):



        documentclassarticle
        usepackagegraphicx

        makeatletter
        letORG@Gscale@boxGscale@box
        longdefGscale@box#1%
        xdefthelastscalefactor#1%
        ORG@Gscale@box#1
        makeatother

        begindocument

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad
        fboxincludegraphics[scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image\

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad %
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image

        enddocument


        Output:




        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer













        All graphics are written to the PDF with a scale factor. When you specify a size the package just converts it to an appropriate scale factor. You can make Gscale@box remember that scale factor for you (source):



        documentclassarticle
        usepackagegraphicx

        makeatletter
        letORG@Gscale@boxGscale@box
        longdefGscale@box#1%
        xdefthelastscalefactor#1%
        ORG@Gscale@box#1
        makeatother

        begindocument

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad
        fboxincludegraphics[scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image\

        noindent
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, width=0.4textwidth]example-imagequad %
        fboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip, scale=thelastscalefactor]example-image

        enddocument


        Output:




        enter image description here








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 7 hours ago









        Phelype OleinikPhelype Oleinik

        28k64794




        28k64794












        • Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

          – Gabriele Nicolardi
          21 mins ago

















        • Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

          – Gabriele Nicolardi
          21 mins ago
















        Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

        – Gabriele Nicolardi
        21 mins ago





        Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In your scale=thelastscalefactor example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed by width because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.

        – Gabriele Nicolardi
        21 mins ago











        3














        You can keep the width= on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example here:



        enter image description here



        documentclassarticle
        usepackagegraphicx,adjustbox
        begindocument



        includegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image

        bigskip

        includegraphics[clip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cm, width=.4textwidth]example-image

        bigskip

        adjustboxclip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cmincludegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image


        enddocument





        share|improve this answer



























          3














          You can keep the width= on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example here:



          enter image description here



          documentclassarticle
          usepackagegraphicx,adjustbox
          begindocument



          includegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image

          bigskip

          includegraphics[clip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cm, width=.4textwidth]example-image

          bigskip

          adjustboxclip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cmincludegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image


          enddocument





          share|improve this answer

























            3












            3








            3







            You can keep the width= on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example here:



            enter image description here



            documentclassarticle
            usepackagegraphicx,adjustbox
            begindocument



            includegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image

            bigskip

            includegraphics[clip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cm, width=.4textwidth]example-image

            bigskip

            adjustboxclip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cmincludegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image


            enddocument





            share|improve this answer













            You can keep the width= on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example here:



            enter image description here



            documentclassarticle
            usepackagegraphicx,adjustbox
            begindocument



            includegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image

            bigskip

            includegraphics[clip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cm, width=.4textwidth]example-image

            bigskip

            adjustboxclip,trim=1cm .5cm .7cm .1cmincludegraphics[width=.4textwidth]example-image


            enddocument






            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 7 hours ago









            David CarlisleDavid Carlisle

            506k4211531905




            506k4211531905





















                1














                I never liked the idea of scaling and clipping at the same time, not knowing which comes first (keyword order means nothing). This solution clips first then scales by using savebox and adjustbox.



                documentclassarticle
                usepackagegraphicx
                usepackageadjustbox

                newsaveboxtempbox

                begindocument

                noindent
                saveboxtempboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip]example-image%
                fboxadjustboxwidth=0.4textwidthuseboxtempbox

                enddocument





                share|improve this answer



























                  1














                  I never liked the idea of scaling and clipping at the same time, not knowing which comes first (keyword order means nothing). This solution clips first then scales by using savebox and adjustbox.



                  documentclassarticle
                  usepackagegraphicx
                  usepackageadjustbox

                  newsaveboxtempbox

                  begindocument

                  noindent
                  saveboxtempboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip]example-image%
                  fboxadjustboxwidth=0.4textwidthuseboxtempbox

                  enddocument





                  share|improve this answer

























                    1












                    1








                    1







                    I never liked the idea of scaling and clipping at the same time, not knowing which comes first (keyword order means nothing). This solution clips first then scales by using savebox and adjustbox.



                    documentclassarticle
                    usepackagegraphicx
                    usepackageadjustbox

                    newsaveboxtempbox

                    begindocument

                    noindent
                    saveboxtempboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip]example-image%
                    fboxadjustboxwidth=0.4textwidthuseboxtempbox

                    enddocument





                    share|improve this answer













                    I never liked the idea of scaling and clipping at the same time, not knowing which comes first (keyword order means nothing). This solution clips first then scales by using savebox and adjustbox.



                    documentclassarticle
                    usepackagegraphicx
                    usepackageadjustbox

                    newsaveboxtempbox

                    begindocument

                    noindent
                    saveboxtempboxincludegraphics[trim = 65 20 150 20, clip]example-image%
                    fboxadjustboxwidth=0.4textwidthuseboxtempbox

                    enddocument






                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 51 mins ago









                    John KormyloJohn Kormylo

                    47.7k32775




                    47.7k32775





















                        0














                        I'm not quite sure this is what you are looking for, but here is a way to compute, for instance, 1000 times the desired scale factor, rounded to the nearest integer:



                        documentclassarticle
                        usepackagegraphicx

                        newcountmyscale

                        begindocument
                        setbox0=hboxincludegraphicsexample-image%
                        myscale=numexpr 400*textwidth / wd0 relax
                        showthemyscale % displays 430 on the terminal

                        includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-image

                        includegraphics[scale=0.43]example-image % same width as above

                        enddocument





                        share|improve this answer



























                          0














                          I'm not quite sure this is what you are looking for, but here is a way to compute, for instance, 1000 times the desired scale factor, rounded to the nearest integer:



                          documentclassarticle
                          usepackagegraphicx

                          newcountmyscale

                          begindocument
                          setbox0=hboxincludegraphicsexample-image%
                          myscale=numexpr 400*textwidth / wd0 relax
                          showthemyscale % displays 430 on the terminal

                          includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-image

                          includegraphics[scale=0.43]example-image % same width as above

                          enddocument





                          share|improve this answer

























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            I'm not quite sure this is what you are looking for, but here is a way to compute, for instance, 1000 times the desired scale factor, rounded to the nearest integer:



                            documentclassarticle
                            usepackagegraphicx

                            newcountmyscale

                            begindocument
                            setbox0=hboxincludegraphicsexample-image%
                            myscale=numexpr 400*textwidth / wd0 relax
                            showthemyscale % displays 430 on the terminal

                            includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-image

                            includegraphics[scale=0.43]example-image % same width as above

                            enddocument





                            share|improve this answer













                            I'm not quite sure this is what you are looking for, but here is a way to compute, for instance, 1000 times the desired scale factor, rounded to the nearest integer:



                            documentclassarticle
                            usepackagegraphicx

                            newcountmyscale

                            begindocument
                            setbox0=hboxincludegraphicsexample-image%
                            myscale=numexpr 400*textwidth / wd0 relax
                            showthemyscale % displays 430 on the terminal

                            includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]example-image

                            includegraphics[scale=0.43]example-image % same width as above

                            enddocument






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                            answered 7 hours ago









                            frougonfrougon

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