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\begin{figure}[placement] body of the figure \caption{figure title} \end{figure}Figures are objects that are not part of the normal text, and are usually "floated" to a convenient place, like the top of a page. Figures will not be split between two pages.
The optional argument [placement]
determines where LaTeX will try to
place your figure. There are four places where LaTeX can possibly put a
float:
h
(Here) - at the position in the text where the figure
environment appears.
t
(Top) - at the top of a text page.
b
(Bottom) - at the bottom of a text page.
p
(Page of floats) - on a separate float page, which is a page
containing no text, only floats.
tbp
.
The body of the figure is made up of whatever text, LaTeX commands, etc.
you wish. The \caption
command allows you to title your figure.
\begin{table}[placement] body of the table \caption{table title} \end{table}Tables are objects that are not part of the normal text, and are usually "floated" to a convenient place, like the top of a page. Tables will not be split between two pages.
The optional argument [placement]
determines where LaTeX will try to
place your table. There are four places where LaTeX can possibly put a
float:
h
: Here - at the position in the text where the table
environment appears.
t
: Top - at the top of a text page.
b
: Bottom - at the bottom of a text page.
p
: Page of floats - on a separate float page, which is a page
containing no text, only floats.
report
and article
classes use the default placement
[tbp]
.
The body of the table is made up of whatever text, LaTeX commands, etc.,
you wish. The \caption
command allows you to title your table.