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LaTeX is an editing tool that takes care of the format so you only have to worry about the contents of your document; nevertheless, better control of floating elements is sometimes necessary. This article explains how to position images and tables in a LaTeX document.

Introduction

The default alignment for images and tables is set to left

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. 
Etiam lobortis facilisis sem. Nullam nec mi et neque pharetra
sollicitudin.

\includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth]{overleaf-logo}

Praesent imperdiet mi nec
ante. Donec ullamcorper, felis non sodales commodo, lectus velit
ultrices augue, a dignissim nibh lectus placerat pede.
 Vivamus nunc nunc, molestie ut, ultricies
vel, semper in, velit. Ut porttitor.

PositioningTnIEX1OverleafV2.png

This is a simple example, for a description of this and other ways to include images in your LaTeX file see the article Inserting Images.

 Open an example in Overleaf


Positioning images

Basic positioning

To change the default alignment of an image from left or right, an easy option is to add

\usepackage[export]{adjustbox}

to the preamble of your file and then use an additional option in your image-importing statement

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. 
Etiam lobortis facilisis sem. Nullam nec mi et neque 
pharetra sollicitudin.

\includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth, right]{overleaf-logo}

Praesent imperdiet mi necante. Donec ullamcorper, felis 
non sodales commodo, lectus velit ultrices augue,
a dignissim nibh lectus placerat pede. Vivamus nunc nunc, 
molestie ut, ultriciesvel, semper in, velit. Ut porttitor.

PositioningTnIEx2OLV2.png

The package adjustbox enables an additional option in the \includegraphics command, in the example the picture is aligned to right. The available values are: left, right, center, outer and inner, the last two are intended for two-sided documents.

 Open an example in Overleaf


The figure environment

The figure environment (see Inserting Images) is intended to provide automatic positioning.

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing 
elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum libero ut metus. 
Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo. Morbi sed elit sit amet 
ante lobortis sollicitudin.

\begin{figure}[h]
\includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth, inner]{overleaf-logo}
\caption{Caption}
\label{fig:figure2}
\end{figure}

PositioningTnIEx3OLV2.png

This environment uses a positioning parameter passed inside brackets, it can take the next values:

Parameter Position
h Place the float here, i.e., approximately at the same point it occurs in the source text (however, not exactly at the spot)
t Position at the top of the page.
b Position at the bottom of the page.
p Put on a special page for floats only.
! Override internal parameters LaTeX uses for determining "good" float positions.
H Places the float at precisely the location in the LaTeX code. Requires the float package. This is somewhat equivalent to h!.

You can put more than one value in the parameter, for instance, if you write [ht] LaTeX will try to position the figure here, but if it's not possible (the space may be insufficient) then the figure will appear at the top of the page. It is recommended to use more than one positioning parameter to prevent unexpected results.

 Open an example in Overleaf


Multiple images in one figure

It is possible to insert several images in one figure, each one with its own reference and label

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque...

\begin{figure}[h]

\begin{subfigure}{0.5\textwidth}
\includegraphics[width=0.9\linewidth, height=6cm]{overleaf-logo} 
\caption{Caption1}
\label{fig:subim1}
\end{subfigure}
\begin{subfigure}{0.5\textwidth}
\includegraphics[width=0.9\linewidth, height=6cm]{mesh}
\caption{Caption 2}
\label{fig:subim2}
\end{subfigure}

\caption{Caption for this figure with two images}
\label{fig:image2}
\end{figure}

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PositioningTnIEx4OLV2.png

First, you must import the package subcaption by adding to the preamble

\usepackage{subcaption}

then you can use the environment \subfigure that takes one parameter, the width of the figure. This environment must be used inside a figure environment, captions and labels can be set to each subfigure.

 Open an example in Overleaf


Wrapping text around a figure

The package wrapfig provides a useful feature, text can be floated around the images.

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer 
adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum 
libero ut metus. Pellentesque placerat.

\begin{wrapfigure}{l}{0.25\textwidth}
\includegraphics[width=0.9\linewidth]{overleaf-logo} 
\caption{Caption1}
\label{fig:wrapfig}
\end{wrapfigure}

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer 
adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum

PositioningTnIEx5OLV2.png

First import the package wrapfig by adding

\usepackage{wrapfig}

to the preamble.

After that you can use the environment wrapfig, it takes two parameters that are passed inside braces: the alignement that can be l, r, c, i or o; this letters stand for left, right, centre, inner and outer (the last two intended for two-sided documents). The second parameter is the width of the figure, in the example is 0.25 the width of the text. See the reference guide for a list of possible length units.

 Open an example in Overleaf


Positioning tables

Options for table positioning are similar to those available for figures.

Basic positioning

Default position of the tabular environment is centre.

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. 
Sed interdum libero ut metus. Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo. Morbi sed elit sit amet 
ante lobortis sollicitudin.

\arrayrulecolor[HTML]{DB5800}
\begin{tabular}{ |s|p{2cm}|p{2cm}|  }
\hline
\rowcolor{lightgray} \multicolumn{3}{|c|}{Country List} \\
\hline
Country Name or Area Name& ISO ALPHA 2 Code &ISO ALPHA 3 \\
\hline
Afghanistan & AF &AFG \\
\rowcolor{gray}
Aland Islands & AX  & ALA \\
Albania    &AL & ALB \\
Algeria   &DZ & DZA \\
American Samoa & AS & ASM \\
Andorra & AD & \cellcolor[HTML]{AA0044} AND \\
Angola & AO & AGO \\
\hline
\end{tabular}

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing 
elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum libero ut metus. 
Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo. Morbi sed elit sit 
amet ante lobortis sollicitudin.

 Open this code fragment in Overleaf


The following graphic shows the result of the code fragment above:

PositioningTnIEx6.png

You can also  open a complete project example project in Overleaf.

To learn about how to create tables see the Tables article.

The table environment

The table environment is intended to automatically position tables so they fit nicely in the flow of your document.

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer 
adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum 
libero ut metus. Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo.
Morbi sed elit sit amet ante lobortis sollicitudin.

\begin{table}[ht]
\arrayrulecolor[HTML]{DB5800}
\centering
\begin{tabular}{ |s|p{2cm}|p{2cm}|  }
\hline
\rowcolor{lightgray} \multicolumn{3}{|c|}{Country List} \\
\hline
Country Name or Area Name& ISO ALPHA 2 Code &ISO ALPHA 3 \\
\hline
Afghanistan & AF &AFG \\
\rowcolor{gray}
Aland Islands & AX  & ALA \\
Albania    &AL & ALB \\
Algeria   &DZ & DZA \\
American Samoa & AS & ASM \\
Andorra & AD & \cellcolor[HTML]{AA0044} AND \\
Angola & AO & AGO \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\caption{Table inside a floating element}
\label{table:ta}
\end{table}

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer 
adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum 
libero ut metus. Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo. 
Morbi sed elit sit amet ante lobortis sollicitudin.

 Open this code fragment in Overleaf


The following graphic shows the output produced by the Overleaf link:

PositioningTnIEx7.png

A position parameter, inside brackets, can be passed to the table environment. This parameter can take the next values:

Parameter Position
h Place the float here, i.e., approximately at the same point it occurs in the source text (however, not exactly at the spot)
t Position at the top of the page.
b Position at the bottom of the page.
p Put on a special page for floats only.
! Override internal parameters LaTeX uses for determining "good" float positions.
H Places the float at precisely the location in the LaTeX code. Requires the float package. This is somewhat equivalent to h!.

You can set more than one value in the parameter, for instance, if you write [ht] LaTeX will try to position the table here, but if it's not possible (the space may be insufficient) then the table will appear at the top of the page. It is recommended to use more than one positioning parameter to prevent unexpected results.

Notice also the command \centering. This changes the alignment of the table within its container to centre instead of the default left.

 Open an example in Overleaf


Wrapping text around a table

If your table don't take all available space and you want to put text next or before it, is possible with the package wrapfig.

First, import the package

\usepackage{wrapfig}

then you can use the environment wraptable which takes two parameters: The first one is the alignment that can be l, r, c, i or o for left, right, centre, inner and outer respectively. The second one is the width of the table container, keep in mind that this latter parameter must be the same as the width of the table, otherwise things may not be properly aligned.

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer 
adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum 
libero ut metus. Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo. 
Morbi sed elit sit amet ante lobortis sollicitudin.

\begin{wraptable}{r}{8cm}
\arrayrulecolor[HTML]{DB5800}
\centering
\begin{tabular}{ |s|p{2cm}|  }
\hline
\rowcolor{lightgray} \multicolumn{2}{|c|}{Country List} \\
\hline
Country Name or Area Name& ISO ALPHA 2 Code \\
\hline
Afghanistan & AF \\
\rowcolor{gray}
Aland Islands & AX \\
Albania    &AL  \\
Algeria   &DZ \\
American Samoa & AS \\
Andorra & \cellcolor[HTML]{AA0044} AD   \\
Angola & AO \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\caption{Table inside a wraptable}
\label{table:ta2}
\end{wraptable}

Praesent in sapien. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer 
adipiscing elit. Duis fringilla tristique neque. Sed interdum 
libero ut metus. Pellentesque placerat. Nam rutrum augue a leo. 
Morbi sed elit sit amet ante lobortis sollicitudin...

 Open this wrapfig code fragment in Overleaf


The following graphic shows the output produced by the Overleaf link:

PositioningTnIEx8OLV2.png

Reference guide

LaTeX units and lengths

Abbreviation Definition
pt A point, is the default length unit. About 0.3515mm
mm a millimetre
cm a centimetre
in an inch
ex the height of an x in the current font
em the width of an m in the current font
\columnsep distance between columns
\columnwidth width of the column
\linewidth width of the line in the current environment
\paperwidth width of the page
\paperheight height of the page
\textwidth width of the text
\textheight height of the text
\unitlength units of length in the picture environment.

Further reading

For more information see:

Overleaf guides

LaTeX Basics

Mathematics

Figures and tables

References and Citations

Languages

Document structure

Formatting

Fonts

Presentations

Commands

Field specific

Class files

Advanced TeX/LaTeX