Figures."

Figures."

I am using the following code to put my two figures side by side with different captions, \begin{figure*}[t!] \centering \begin{subfigure}[b]{0.5\textwidth} \centering \ Skip to main content Stack Exchange Network

@ScienceFriction, I don’t know if it will help, but I noticed that if you want to put image side by side in subfigure environment, you have to add a % symbol just after (in the same line) the first \end{subfigure}. If you delete this symbol, figures (still in subfigure environment) will be placed one below the other. – Your answer is misleading. In the case, that ina document preamble you load package float (which define H), figure can still appear at the top of page (for example, if on the page is not enough space for figure, it is pushed to the. I found an IEEE Transactions template from the IEEE society that has supports 2 columns with balancing, column figures and wide figures (the screenshot in the question is also an IEEE Transactions paper). The Transactions templates can be found inside stock MiKTeX (for windows), or otherwise on this page.

I found an IEEE Transactions template from the IEEE society that has supports 2 columns with balancing, column figures and wide figures (the screenshot in the question is also an IEEE Transactions paper). The Transactions templates can be found inside stock MiKTeX (for windows), or otherwise on this page. But as you can see the figures are number individually. If want to present a group of related figures, it may not be the one you are looking for. The results from subfig and subcaption are very similar. Though each has its own way of usage. However, there are reports on subfig not working properly with hyperref. Then you can specify text (and sectional commands) in a multicols environment (with a mandatory argument specifying the number of columns), while specifying your figures in the usual way. The layout is different, since the content flows now with the multicols environment. I need to insert 10 figures (in two columns- side by side) in LaTeX that will have one global caption, but also I need to name each figure (1a, 1b, 1c, ... ect.). So they will look like: So they will look like: Package subfigure – Deprecated: Figures divided into subfigures. The pack­age is now con­sid­ered ob­so­lete: it was su­per­seded by sub­fig, but users may find the more re­cent sub­cap­tion pack­age more sat­is­fac­tory.

Then you can specify text (and sectional commands) in a multicols environment (with a mandatory argument specifying the number of columns), while specifying your figures in the usual way. The layout is different, since the content flows now with the multicols environment. I need to insert 10 figures (in two columns- side by side) in LaTeX that will have one global caption, but also I need to name each figure (1a, 1b, 1c, ... ect.). So they will look like: So they will look like: Package subfigure – Deprecated: Figures divided into subfigures. The pack­age is now con­sid­ered ob­so­lete: it was su­per­seded by sub­fig, but users may find the more re­cent sub­cap­tion pack­age more sat­is­fac­tory. As Werner commented: the section Moving tables and figures in LaTeX in the TeX FAQ states:. Even if you use the placement specifier [h] (for ‘here’), the figure or table will not be printed ‘here’ if doing so would break the rules; the rules themselves are pretty simple, and are given on page 198, section C.9 of the LaTeX manual.

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