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
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includegraphics: get the "scale" value of a figure whose size is expressed by "width"
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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
Lets take this string:
boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf
that generates this figure:
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:
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
add a comment |
Lets take this string:
boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf
that generates this figure:
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:
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
The redefinition ofGscale@box
in this answer does what you want.
– Phelype Oleinik
8 hours ago
@PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition ofGscale@box
should help me.
– Gabriele Nicolardi
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Lets take this string:
boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf
that generates this figure:
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:
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
Lets take this string:
boxedincludegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]FIGURE.pdf
that generates this figure:
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:
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
boxes crop includegraphics scale
edited 7 hours ago
David Carlisle
506k4211531905
506k4211531905
asked 8 hours ago
Gabriele NicolardiGabriele Nicolardi
59049
59049
The redefinition ofGscale@box
in this answer does what you want.
– Phelype Oleinik
8 hours ago
@PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition ofGscale@box
should help me.
– Gabriele Nicolardi
7 hours ago
add a comment |
The redefinition ofGscale@box
in this answer does what you want.
– Phelype Oleinik
8 hours ago
@PhelypeOleinik Thank you but I can't see how the redefinition ofGscale@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
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
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:
Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In yourscale=thelastscalefactor
example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed bywidth
because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.
– Gabriele Nicolardi
21 mins ago
add a comment |
You can keep the width=
on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example 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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
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:
Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In yourscale=thelastscalefactor
example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed bywidth
because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.
– Gabriele Nicolardi
21 mins ago
add a comment |
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:
Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In yourscale=thelastscalefactor
example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed bywidth
because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.
– Gabriele Nicolardi
21 mins ago
add a comment |
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:
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:
answered 7 hours ago
Phelype OleinikPhelype Oleinik
28k64794
28k64794
Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In yourscale=thelastscalefactor
example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed bywidth
because I don't want it to be printed in my PDF.
– Gabriele Nicolardi
21 mins ago
add a comment |
Please see that I need the figure to be trimmed but not resized. In yourscale=thelastscalefactor
example the figure is resized too. Moreover I need to "phantom" in some way the figure expressed bywidth
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
add a comment |
You can keep the width=
on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example 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
add a comment |
You can keep the width=
on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example 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
add a comment |
You can keep the width=
on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example 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
You can keep the width=
on the graphics and trim/clip separately so not affecting the scaling, see the last example 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
answered 7 hours ago
David CarlisleDavid Carlisle
506k4211531905
506k4211531905
add a comment |
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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
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
answered 51 mins ago
John KormyloJohn Kormylo
47.7k32775
47.7k32775
add a comment |
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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
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
answered 7 hours ago
frougonfrougon
1,730712
1,730712
add a comment |
add a comment |
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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