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DATE: 2019-01-29
AUTHOR: John L. Godlee
When I convert markdown documents to pdf files using LaTeX and Pandoc, LaTeX is very helpful at placing images optimally to minimise whitespace. a basic pandoc command might look like this:
pandoc -f markdown -t latex -o output.pdf input.md
The issue is, when I'm using pandoc with markdown, I often don't care about the placement of images. I'm normally making short documents for note-taking or something like that. As a result, I normally place images in the text in the place I want them to appear in the pdf output.
After a bit of googling for inspiration, I found two methods of doing this. The first, is very simple and tells pandoc not to create figures, but instead just to include images inline.
pandoc -f markdown-implicit_figures -t pdf -o output.pdf input.md
This is fine, but it removes centering on the images, and removes the option for me to include a caption with ![CAPTION HERE](img/diagram.png).
A better option I think, is to allow LaTeX to use the float package in order to place images using attributes such as [H] to force images to appear where they appear in the source.
I already have a LaTeX template that I use for pandoc, called simple_doc.latex. It lives in ~/.pandoc/templates/ so it can be linked to easily in pandoc commands.
The relevant piece of simple_doc.latex is:
$if(graphics)$ \usepackage{graphics} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage{float} \makeatletter % Define max width and max height arguments to be conditional on img size \def\maxwidth{\ifdim\Gin@nat@width>\linewidth\linewidth\else\Gin@nat@width\fi} \def\maxheight{\ifdim\Gin@nat@height>\textheight\textheight\else\Gin@nat@height\fi} \makeatother % Scale images if necessary, so that they will not overflow the page % margins by default, and it is still possible to overwrite the defaults % using explicit options in \includegraphics[width, height, ...]{} \setkeys{Gin}{width=0.5\maxwidth,height=0.5\maxheight,keepaspectratio} \let\origfigure\figure \let\endorigfigure\endfigure \renewenvironment{figure}[1][2] { \expandafter\origfigure\expandafter[H] } { \endorigfigure } $endif$
I got the inspiration for this from this Stack Overflow question[1].