Documentation/Maemo Documentation Guidelines/Formatting in LaTeX
This chapter includes information about how to format Maemo documentation text in LaTeX environment.
Basic instructions on how to use LaTeX can be found here in the LaTeX Wikibook
To be able to create a reference to a specific element in a document, you must label that element with the unique LaTeX special characters and especially spaces in the label name. Position \label
tag on the next row after the referenced element tag (like \section
).
For references, use \ref
tag with a unique label.
[edit] Using LaTeX formatting commands
[edit] Using list of tables
Use \listoftables
to create a list of tables automatically. Used for PDF documents to get a more book-like result.
[edit] Using list of figures
Use \listoffigures
to create a list of figures automatically. Used for PDF documents to get a more book like result.
[edit] Using LaTeX special characters
LaTeX has special characters _$#%{}^~{}
that need to be handled in text with a special marking like \_
, \$
, \#
, \%
, \{
, \}
, \^
and \~{}
.
[edit] Using highlight for example code
Use \textraw{Example text}
or \verb|Example text|
to highlight command line examples, function names, and file names in base text. The difference between these two is that \textraw
allows normal LaTeX commands inside text will be ignored and handled as plain text.
Both \textraw
and \verb
will display given text in an appropriate fixed-width font.
\textraw is a Maemo-specific definition and is usable only in the Maemo environment. |
For example:
- Function
\textraw{example\_function\_name()}
. - Function example_function_name().
- Command
\textraw{\$ mkdir \~{}/folder}
. - Command $ mkdir ~/folder.
- File
\verb|~/folder/example_file.txt|
. - File
~/folder/example_file.txt
.
[edit] Using highlight for important words
Use Italics for other than command line examples and function or file names.
For example:
- This is
\textit{important example text}
. - This is important example text.
[edit] Using highlight for user interface component names
Use Bold for UI element names in text. UI element name in text is the same as UI element caption in UI.
For example:
- This is
\textbf{UI Element Caption}
. - This is UI Element Caption.
[edit] Using normal headings
Use the chapter tag for level 0 chapters (a) together with a unique label. Use the section (for a.b), subsection (for a.b.c) or subsubsection (for a.b.c.d) tag together with unique label for other headings.
For example:
Chapter:\chapter{Example chapter title}
\label{cha:example-chapter-title}
Section:\section{Example section title}
\label{sec:example-chapter-title-example-section-title}
Subsection:\subsection{Example subsection title}
\label{sec:example-chapter-title-example-subsection-title}
Subsubsection:\subsubsection{Example subsubsection title}
\label{sec:example-chapter-title-example-subsubsection-title}
[edit] Using level 4 headings
Use Bold without a label for level 4 (a.b.c.d.e) headings. This way, level 4 titles are not numbered or included in the table of contents.
For example:
-
\textbf{Example level 4 title}
- Example level 4 title
[edit] Using command line and screen output examples
Use {graybox}
environment for command line and screen output examples that require more than one row.
{graybox} is a Maemo-specific definition and is usable only in the Maemo environment. |
Explicit new lines (\\
) need to be given inside {graybox}
environment to separate different rows. LaTeX special characters (_$#%{}^~{}
) need to be handled in text with special marking unless they are used inside \verb
command.
For example:
<empty line is required before graybox>\begin{graybox}
\$ First command line
\textraw{\$ Second line in TextRaw}
Third line has underscore (character '\_') and dollar sign (character '\$')
\end{graybox}
$ First command line
$ Second line in TextRaw
Third line has underscore (character '_') and dollar sign (character '$')
[edit] Using notes
Use {notebox}
environment for notes that require whole sentence or paragraph to be highlighted.
{notebox} is a Maemo-specific definition and is usable only in the Maemo environment. |
Explicit new lines (\\
) need to be given inside {notebox}
environment to separate different rows. LaTeX special characters (_$#%{}^~{}
) need to be handled in text with special marking unless they are used inside \verb
command.
For example:
\begin{notebox}
This is note text inside a yellow box\textraw{Second line in TextRaw}
Third line has underscore (character '\_') and dollar sign (character '\$')
\end{notebox}
{{ambox|text=This is note text inside a yellow box
Second line in TextRaw
Third line has underscore (character '_') and dollar sign (character '$')
[edit] Using code listings
Use \lstset
and \lstinputlisting
for listing source code for C/C++, CSS, HTML, Java, JavaScript, Latex, Pascal, Perl, PHP, Postscript, Python, Ruby, SQL, Tcl, Properties files, Makefile, XML, Log files, Ini files and Shell scripts.
For example:
\lstset{language=C}
\lstinputlisting{chapters/DocumentationGuidelines/snippets/example_source.c}
/* * example_source.c, an example source code for kernel module * * Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation. All rights reserved. * * This maemo code example is licensed under a MIT-style license, * that can be found in the file called "COPYING". * */ #include <linux/module.h> /* needed by all kernel modules */ #include <linux/init.h> /* needed for custom init/exit functions */ #include <linux/kernel.h> /* needed for KERN_ALERT macro */ /* Special macro to indicate license (to avoid tainting the kernel) */ MODULE_LICENSE("Dual MIT/GPL"); static int hello_init(void) { printk(KERN_ALERT "Hello, world\n"); /* top priority message */ return 0; } static void hello_exit(void) { printk(KERN_INFO "Goodbye, world\n"); } /* macros to mark modules init/exit funcs (run on insmod/rmmod) */ module_init(hello_init); module_exit(hello_exit);
[edit] Using figures
Use \includegraphics
for figures without a file name extension. For example, use image_file_name
instead of image_file_name.png
.
Use option [H]
for figure environment if the position of the figure related to base text cannot be changed by LaTeX . For example \begin{figure}[H]
.
{{ambox|text=Use maemodoc-scaleimage
command line tool to scale down figure files that are bigger than recommended maximum size of 600 × 1200 (width × height) pixels. Use option [width=\textwidth]
when including figures in LaTeX that are wider than 340 pixels.
|}
All figures must be centered and have both a caption and a label.
For example:
\begin{figure}[H]
\caption{Example picture}
\label{fig:example-chapter-title-example-picture}
\centering
\includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{folder/images/LaTeX_logo}
\end{figure}
[edit] Combining small tables and figures
You can arrange small tables and figures side-by-side within the page width limitation.
The following figure environment arranges two small figures side-by-side and creates individual captions for each figure and one common caption for the whole figure environment.
\begin{figure}[H] \caption{Example logos} \label{fig:example-chapter-title-example-logos} \centering \subfloat[ESbox]{ \includegraphics{chapters/DocumentationGuidelines/images/esbox_logo} } \subfloat[PluThon]{ \includegraphics{chapters/DocumentationGuidelines/images/pluthon_logo} } \end{figure}
[ESbox] File:Esbox logo.png [PluThon] File:Pluthon logo.png |
[edit] Referring to a section
Use a standard reference \ref
to refer to a section in base text. Use a unique label in a reference and refer only to sections inside the same level 1 section (a.b).
File:Dialog-information.png | Note: Referring to the level 0 chapters (a) is not allowed because references can be used only inside same level 1 section (a.b). |
For example:
- For more information on example topic, see chapter
\ref{sec:example-chapter-title-example-section-title}
. - For more information on example topic, see chapter #Using LaTeX formatting commands.
[edit] Referring to a figure
Use standard reference \ref
to refer to a figure in base text. Use a unique label in a reference and refer only to sections inside the same level 1 section (a.b).
For example:
- For more information on example topic, see figure
\ref{fig:example-chapter-title-example-picture}
. - For more information on example topic, see figure 4.1.
[edit] Referring to a table
Use standard reference \ref
to refer to a table in base text. Use a unique label in a reference and refer only to sections inside same level 1 section (a.b).
For example:
- For more information on example topic, see table
\ref{tab:example-chapter-title-example-table}
. - For more information on example topic, see table 4.1.
[edit] Using HTML links
Use \htmladdnormallink
for external references that are not included in the Maemo bibliography database. Notice that link text is normal LaTeX text and characters _$#%{}^~
need to be handled with special marking but URL can be any normal HTTP link.
For example:
- For more information on example topic, see
\htmladdnormallink{maemo.org}{http://www.maemo.org}
. - For more information on example topic, see maemo.org.
[edit] Using Maemo bibliography database
Use \cite
for external references from Bibliography database. All references to external documents that are other than product version specific documents (documents that are not expected to change regularly) must use Maemo bibliography database. Use LaTeX tag \htmladdnormallink
for references to product version specific documents.
Give document name in Italics before citation from bibliography database and join document name and citation together with tilde (~). Tilde prevents LaTeX from breaking the row between document name end and citation link.
For example:
- For more information on example topic, see document
\textit{Maemo Documentation Guidelines}
~\cite{bibliography-key}
. - For more information on example topic, see document Maemo Documentation Guidelines [1].
- For more information on example topic, see document
\textit{Maemo Documentation Guidelines}
~\cite[Formatting in LaTex]{bibliography-key}
. - For more information on example topic, see document Maemo Documentation Guidelines Formatting in LaTex.
[edit] Using normal tables
Use \tabular
and \table
to create tables. For example to create a table with two half-page-wide columns that can expand to new lines, use the following definition:
\begin{tabular}{|p\{0.5\textwidth}|p{0.5\textwidth}|}
To set the width for the whole table, use {tabular*}
with option \textwidth
:
\begin{tabular*}{\textwidth}{|c|p{0.5\textwidth}|}
To reduce column width use @{}
: \begin{tabular}
{|@{}c@{}|c|}
.
To add horizontal lines between cells, use \hline
. To separate cells, use &
. To change row, use \\
.
Use option [H]
for table environment if LaTeX cannot change the position of the table related to base text: \begin{table}[H]
.
All tables must be centered and have both a caption and a label.
For example:
\begin{table}[H] \caption{Example normal table} \label{tab:example-chapter-title-example-table} \centering \begin{tabular}{|p{0.45\textwidth}|p{0.45\textwidth}|} \hline\hline \textbf{Column 1} & \textbf{Column 2} \\ \hline % Table data starts from here % 1 & 2 \\ \hline 3 & 4 \\ \hline 5 & 6 \\ \hline \hline \end{tabular} \end{table}
Column 1 | Column 2 |
---|---|
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
[edit] Using multi-column table rows
Use \multicolumn
to widen a table row to cover multiple columns. Avoid using multi-column cells for other purposes than creating subheadings for the table. If complex tables are needed create them outside LaTeX as images.
For example:
<code>\multicolumn{2}{|l|}{\textbf{\textit{Table SubHeader}}} \\ \hline
Column 1 | Column 2 |
---|---|
SubHeader Left | |
1 | 2 |
SubHeader Center | |
3 | 4 |
SubHeader Right | |
5 | 6 |
[edit] Using long tables
Use {center}
and {longtable}
environments to create tables that require multiple pages. For example, to create a table with two half-page-wide columns that can expand to new lines, use the following definition:
\begin{longtable}{|p{0.45\textwidth}|p{0.45\textwidth}|}
To reduce column width use @{}
:
\begin{longtable}{|@{}c@{}|c|}
To add horizontal lines between cells, use \hline
. To separate cells, use &
. To change row, use \\
.
All tables must be centered and have both a caption and a label.
For example:
\begin{center} \begin{longtable} {|p{0.45\textwidth}|p{0.45\textwidth}|} \caption{Example long table} \label{tab:example-chapter-title-example-long-table} % FirstHead \hline\hline \textbf{Column 1} & \textbf{Column 2} \\ \hline \endfirsthead % Head \hline\hline \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{\small\tablename \thetable{} Continued from previous page} \\ \hline\hline \textbf{Column } & \textbf{Column 2} \\ \hline \endhead % Foot \multicolumn{2}{|r|}{\small\tablename \thetable{} Continued to next page} \\ \hline \endfoot % LastFoot \hline\hline \endlastfoot % Table data starts from here % 1 & 2 \\ \hline 3 & 4 \\ \hline 5 & 6 \\ \hline ... & ... \\ \hline \end{longtable} \end{center}
Column 1 | Column 2 |
---|---|
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 | 6 |
7 | 8 |
9 | 0 |
... | ... |
[edit] Reducing the size of tables and figures
You can reduce the size of tables and figures that do not fit on the page without scaling them down.
Scaling and rotating does not work with tables, and reducing font size does not work with figures. |
If the object is too long or wide, you can:
- reduce the size of the table font
- rotate the figure
- scale down the figure
[edit] Reduce the size of the table
To reduce the size of the table use the font size command inside the table environment to reduce the size of the table font. Font size commands in order from biggest to smallest are:
Huge
, huge
, LARGE
, Large
, large
, normalsize
, small
, footnotesize
, scriptsize
and tiny
.
[edit] Rotate and scale down a figure
To fit on the page, figures in Maemo documents are recommended to have maximum size of 600 × 1200 (width × height) pixels. If a figure is bigger than this, it needs to be rotated, scaled down, or both rotated and scaled down before it can be used. Maemo documentation infrastructure provides a command line tool for automatic figure rotation and scaling.
For Maemo documents figures wider than 340 pixels must be scaled down in LaTeX to fit to the default page width used in PDF documents. Figures wider than 600 pixels or higher than 1200 pixels are recommended to be scaled down with maemodoc-scaleimage
command line tool for them to be readable also in HTML documents.
Use maemodoc-scaleimage command line tool to scale down figure files that are bigger than recommended maximum size of 600 × 1200 (width × height) pixels. Use option [width=\textwidth] when including figures in LaTeX that are wider than 340 pixels. |
Figures which are smaller than 340 × 1200 (width × height) pixels do not need to be scaled down either in LaTeX or with maemodoc-scaleimage
tool.
For example, the following command scales a figure down to the recommended maximum width and height.
$ ./maemodoc-scaleimage <image_file> -outpath <output directory>
The following command rotates the figure 90 degrees anticlockwise if doing so reduces the amount of scaling needed. The command scales down the figure to the recommended maximum width and height only if the figure after rotation still does not fit on the page.
$ ./maemodoc-scaleimage <image_file> -outpath <output directory> -rotate
[edit] References
- ↑ Maemo Documentation Guidelines. http://library.maemodocs.nokia.com
- This page was last modified on 9 November 2010, at 15:48.
- This page has been accessed 8,625 times.