Size of subfigure fitting its content (tikzpicture)












4















How can I set the width of a subfigure to fit its content, i. e. a tikzpicture.



In my MWE I do not want to specify 0.1textwidth respectively 0.9textwidth, but instead I want the whitespace to be distributed equally around both subfigures.



documentclass{article}
usepackage{showframe}
usepackage{tikz}
usepackage{subcaption}

begin{document}

begin{figure}[ht]
hfill
begin{subfigure}[b]{0.1textwidth}
centering
begin{tikzpicture}
node[draw] (pd1) {a};
end{tikzpicture}
caption{}
end{subfigure}%
hfill
begin{subfigure}[b]{0.9textwidth}
centering
begin{tikzpicture}
node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

draw (b) to (c);
end{tikzpicture}
caption{}
end{subfigure}%
hfill
caption{}
end{figure}

end{document}


I found this answer How can I access the size of a tikzpicture's bounding box outside the tikzpicture? but didn't read it in detail until now. I was wondering if my aim could be achieved easier.










share|improve this question



























    4















    How can I set the width of a subfigure to fit its content, i. e. a tikzpicture.



    In my MWE I do not want to specify 0.1textwidth respectively 0.9textwidth, but instead I want the whitespace to be distributed equally around both subfigures.



    documentclass{article}
    usepackage{showframe}
    usepackage{tikz}
    usepackage{subcaption}

    begin{document}

    begin{figure}[ht]
    hfill
    begin{subfigure}[b]{0.1textwidth}
    centering
    begin{tikzpicture}
    node[draw] (pd1) {a};
    end{tikzpicture}
    caption{}
    end{subfigure}%
    hfill
    begin{subfigure}[b]{0.9textwidth}
    centering
    begin{tikzpicture}
    node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
    node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

    draw (b) to (c);
    end{tikzpicture}
    caption{}
    end{subfigure}%
    hfill
    caption{}
    end{figure}

    end{document}


    I found this answer How can I access the size of a tikzpicture's bounding box outside the tikzpicture? but didn't read it in detail until now. I was wondering if my aim could be achieved easier.










    share|improve this question

























      4












      4








      4


      2






      How can I set the width of a subfigure to fit its content, i. e. a tikzpicture.



      In my MWE I do not want to specify 0.1textwidth respectively 0.9textwidth, but instead I want the whitespace to be distributed equally around both subfigures.



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{showframe}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usepackage{subcaption}

      begin{document}

      begin{figure}[ht]
      hfill
      begin{subfigure}[b]{0.1textwidth}
      centering
      begin{tikzpicture}
      node[draw] (pd1) {a};
      end{tikzpicture}
      caption{}
      end{subfigure}%
      hfill
      begin{subfigure}[b]{0.9textwidth}
      centering
      begin{tikzpicture}
      node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
      node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

      draw (b) to (c);
      end{tikzpicture}
      caption{}
      end{subfigure}%
      hfill
      caption{}
      end{figure}

      end{document}


      I found this answer How can I access the size of a tikzpicture's bounding box outside the tikzpicture? but didn't read it in detail until now. I was wondering if my aim could be achieved easier.










      share|improve this question














      How can I set the width of a subfigure to fit its content, i. e. a tikzpicture.



      In my MWE I do not want to specify 0.1textwidth respectively 0.9textwidth, but instead I want the whitespace to be distributed equally around both subfigures.



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{showframe}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usepackage{subcaption}

      begin{document}

      begin{figure}[ht]
      hfill
      begin{subfigure}[b]{0.1textwidth}
      centering
      begin{tikzpicture}
      node[draw] (pd1) {a};
      end{tikzpicture}
      caption{}
      end{subfigure}%
      hfill
      begin{subfigure}[b]{0.9textwidth}
      centering
      begin{tikzpicture}
      node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
      node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

      draw (b) to (c);
      end{tikzpicture}
      caption{}
      end{subfigure}%
      hfill
      caption{}
      end{figure}

      end{document}


      I found this answer How can I access the size of a tikzpicture's bounding box outside the tikzpicture? but didn't read it in detail until now. I was wondering if my aim could be achieved easier.







      tikz-pgf subfloats






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Apr 3 at 23:07









      BenBen

      8901520




      8901520






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          5














          You could place the tikzpicture in a savebox and measure its size. This size can then be used for the subfigure.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usepackage{subcaption}

          newsavebox{myboxb}
          newlength{mylengthb}

          newsavebox{myboxa}
          newlength{mylengtha}

          begin{document}

          savebox{myboxa}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengtha}{usebox{myboxa}}

          savebox{myboxb}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengthb}{usebox{myboxb}}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          mbox{}
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengtha}
          usebox{myboxa}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengthb}
          usebox{myboxb}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          mbox{}
          caption{}
          end{figure}

          end{document}


          (Thanks to @marmot for spotting the issue about the hfill between the images and the boarders)






          share|improve this answer


























          • @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

            – user36296
            Apr 4 at 9:30



















          4














          I think that @samcarter's nice proposal is the way to go. This is only if you need to access the nodes later (with remember picture), in which case saveboxes may be inconvenient. This proposal measures the widths of the tikzpictures and writes them to the aux files such that they get used in the next run. Conceptually it is the same as e.g. this nice answer.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{calc}
          usepackage{subcaption}
          ifdefinedfigwidthA
          else
          xdeffigwidthA{2cm}
          fi
          ifdefinedfigwidthB
          else
          xdeffigwidthB{2cm}
          fi
          tikzset{save tikzpic width in/.style={execute at end picture={
          path let p1=($(current bounding box.east)-(current bounding box.west)$)
          in pgfextra{xdef#1{x1}};}}}
          begin{document}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthA}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthA]
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill%
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthB}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthB]
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill{vphantom{x}}
          caption{}
          end{figure}
          makeatletter
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthA{figwidthA}relax}
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthB{figwidthB}relax}
          makeatother
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
























          • Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

            – Ben
            Apr 3 at 23:56











          • @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

            – marmot
            Apr 4 at 1:41












          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "85"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f483067%2fsize-of-subfigure-fitting-its-content-tikzpicture%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          5














          You could place the tikzpicture in a savebox and measure its size. This size can then be used for the subfigure.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usepackage{subcaption}

          newsavebox{myboxb}
          newlength{mylengthb}

          newsavebox{myboxa}
          newlength{mylengtha}

          begin{document}

          savebox{myboxa}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengtha}{usebox{myboxa}}

          savebox{myboxb}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengthb}{usebox{myboxb}}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          mbox{}
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengtha}
          usebox{myboxa}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengthb}
          usebox{myboxb}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          mbox{}
          caption{}
          end{figure}

          end{document}


          (Thanks to @marmot for spotting the issue about the hfill between the images and the boarders)






          share|improve this answer


























          • @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

            – user36296
            Apr 4 at 9:30
















          5














          You could place the tikzpicture in a savebox and measure its size. This size can then be used for the subfigure.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usepackage{subcaption}

          newsavebox{myboxb}
          newlength{mylengthb}

          newsavebox{myboxa}
          newlength{mylengtha}

          begin{document}

          savebox{myboxa}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengtha}{usebox{myboxa}}

          savebox{myboxb}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengthb}{usebox{myboxb}}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          mbox{}
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengtha}
          usebox{myboxa}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengthb}
          usebox{myboxb}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          mbox{}
          caption{}
          end{figure}

          end{document}


          (Thanks to @marmot for spotting the issue about the hfill between the images and the boarders)






          share|improve this answer


























          • @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

            – user36296
            Apr 4 at 9:30














          5












          5








          5







          You could place the tikzpicture in a savebox and measure its size. This size can then be used for the subfigure.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usepackage{subcaption}

          newsavebox{myboxb}
          newlength{mylengthb}

          newsavebox{myboxa}
          newlength{mylengtha}

          begin{document}

          savebox{myboxa}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengtha}{usebox{myboxa}}

          savebox{myboxb}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengthb}{usebox{myboxb}}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          mbox{}
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengtha}
          usebox{myboxa}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengthb}
          usebox{myboxb}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          mbox{}
          caption{}
          end{figure}

          end{document}


          (Thanks to @marmot for spotting the issue about the hfill between the images and the boarders)






          share|improve this answer















          You could place the tikzpicture in a savebox and measure its size. This size can then be used for the subfigure.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usepackage{subcaption}

          newsavebox{myboxb}
          newlength{mylengthb}

          newsavebox{myboxa}
          newlength{mylengtha}

          begin{document}

          savebox{myboxa}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengtha}{usebox{myboxa}}

          savebox{myboxb}{begin{tikzpicture}
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}}
          settowidth{mylengthb}{usebox{myboxb}}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          mbox{}
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengtha}
          usebox{myboxa}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{mylengthb}
          usebox{myboxb}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill
          mbox{}
          caption{}
          end{figure}

          end{document}


          (Thanks to @marmot for spotting the issue about the hfill between the images and the boarders)







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 4 at 9:29

























          answered Apr 3 at 23:14









          user36296user36296

          1




          1













          • @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

            – user36296
            Apr 4 at 9:30



















          • @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

            – user36296
            Apr 4 at 9:30

















          @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

          – user36296
          Apr 4 at 9:30





          @marmot Thanks for noticing this! I just changed the code a bit and included something similar

          – user36296
          Apr 4 at 9:30











          4














          I think that @samcarter's nice proposal is the way to go. This is only if you need to access the nodes later (with remember picture), in which case saveboxes may be inconvenient. This proposal measures the widths of the tikzpictures and writes them to the aux files such that they get used in the next run. Conceptually it is the same as e.g. this nice answer.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{calc}
          usepackage{subcaption}
          ifdefinedfigwidthA
          else
          xdeffigwidthA{2cm}
          fi
          ifdefinedfigwidthB
          else
          xdeffigwidthB{2cm}
          fi
          tikzset{save tikzpic width in/.style={execute at end picture={
          path let p1=($(current bounding box.east)-(current bounding box.west)$)
          in pgfextra{xdef#1{x1}};}}}
          begin{document}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthA}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthA]
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill%
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthB}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthB]
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill{vphantom{x}}
          caption{}
          end{figure}
          makeatletter
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthA{figwidthA}relax}
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthB{figwidthB}relax}
          makeatother
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
























          • Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

            – Ben
            Apr 3 at 23:56











          • @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

            – marmot
            Apr 4 at 1:41
















          4














          I think that @samcarter's nice proposal is the way to go. This is only if you need to access the nodes later (with remember picture), in which case saveboxes may be inconvenient. This proposal measures the widths of the tikzpictures and writes them to the aux files such that they get used in the next run. Conceptually it is the same as e.g. this nice answer.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{calc}
          usepackage{subcaption}
          ifdefinedfigwidthA
          else
          xdeffigwidthA{2cm}
          fi
          ifdefinedfigwidthB
          else
          xdeffigwidthB{2cm}
          fi
          tikzset{save tikzpic width in/.style={execute at end picture={
          path let p1=($(current bounding box.east)-(current bounding box.west)$)
          in pgfextra{xdef#1{x1}};}}}
          begin{document}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthA}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthA]
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill%
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthB}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthB]
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill{vphantom{x}}
          caption{}
          end{figure}
          makeatletter
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthA{figwidthA}relax}
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthB{figwidthB}relax}
          makeatother
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
























          • Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

            – Ben
            Apr 3 at 23:56











          • @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

            – marmot
            Apr 4 at 1:41














          4












          4








          4







          I think that @samcarter's nice proposal is the way to go. This is only if you need to access the nodes later (with remember picture), in which case saveboxes may be inconvenient. This proposal measures the widths of the tikzpictures and writes them to the aux files such that they get used in the next run. Conceptually it is the same as e.g. this nice answer.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{calc}
          usepackage{subcaption}
          ifdefinedfigwidthA
          else
          xdeffigwidthA{2cm}
          fi
          ifdefinedfigwidthB
          else
          xdeffigwidthB{2cm}
          fi
          tikzset{save tikzpic width in/.style={execute at end picture={
          path let p1=($(current bounding box.east)-(current bounding box.west)$)
          in pgfextra{xdef#1{x1}};}}}
          begin{document}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthA}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthA]
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill%
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthB}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthB]
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill{vphantom{x}}
          caption{}
          end{figure}
          makeatletter
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthA{figwidthA}relax}
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthB{figwidthB}relax}
          makeatother
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer













          I think that @samcarter's nice proposal is the way to go. This is only if you need to access the nodes later (with remember picture), in which case saveboxes may be inconvenient. This proposal measures the widths of the tikzpictures and writes them to the aux files such that they get used in the next run. Conceptually it is the same as e.g. this nice answer.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{showframe}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{calc}
          usepackage{subcaption}
          ifdefinedfigwidthA
          else
          xdeffigwidthA{2cm}
          fi
          ifdefinedfigwidthB
          else
          xdeffigwidthB{2cm}
          fi
          tikzset{save tikzpic width in/.style={execute at end picture={
          path let p1=($(current bounding box.east)-(current bounding box.west)$)
          in pgfextra{xdef#1{x1}};}}}
          begin{document}

          begin{figure}[ht]
          hfill
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthA}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthA]
          node[draw] (pd1) {a};
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill%
          begin{subfigure}[b]{figwidthB}
          centering
          begin{tikzpicture}[save tikzpic width in=figwidthB]
          node[draw] (b) at (0,0) {b};
          node[draw] (c) at (5,0) {c};

          draw (b) to (c);
          end{tikzpicture}
          caption{}
          end{subfigure}%
          hfill{vphantom{x}}
          caption{}
          end{figure}
          makeatletter
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthA{figwidthA}relax}
          immediatewrite@mainaux{xdefstringfigwidthB{figwidthB}relax}
          makeatother
          end{document}


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Apr 3 at 23:40









          marmotmarmot

          117k5150283




          117k5150283













          • Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

            – Ben
            Apr 3 at 23:56











          • @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

            – marmot
            Apr 4 at 1:41



















          • Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

            – Ben
            Apr 3 at 23:56











          • @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

            – marmot
            Apr 4 at 1:41

















          Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

          – Ben
          Apr 3 at 23:56





          Is there a reason you use { brackets } around vphantom?

          – Ben
          Apr 3 at 23:56













          @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

          – marmot
          Apr 4 at 1:41





          @Ben No. It is a relic of something else I tried.

          – marmot
          Apr 4 at 1:41


















          draft saved

          draft discarded




















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid



          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f483067%2fsize-of-subfigure-fitting-its-content-tikzpicture%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Plaza Victoria

          In PowerPoint, is there a keyboard shortcut for bulleted / numbered list?

          How to put 3 figures in Latex with 2 figures side by side and 1 below these side by side images but in...