On this page:
figure
figure*
figure**
figure-here
left-figure-style
center-figure-style
right-figure-style
left
figure-ref
Figure-ref
Figure-target
suppress-floats
2.1 Configuring Output
8.15

2 Figures🔗ℹ

 (require scriblib/figure) package: scribble-lib

procedure

(figure tag    
  caption    
  p ...    
  [#:style style    
  #:label-sep label-sep    
  #:label-style label-style    
  #:continue? continue?])  block?
  tag : string?
  caption : content?
  p : pre-flow?
  style : style? = center-figure-style
  label-sep : pre-content? = ": "
  label-style : element-style? = #f
  continue? : any/c = #f

procedure

(figure* tag    
  caption    
  p ...    
  [#:style style    
  #:label-sep label-sep    
  #:label-style label-style    
  #:continue? continue?])  block?
  tag : string?
  caption : content?
  p : pre-flow?
  style : style? = center-figure-style
  label-sep : pre-content? = ": "
  label-style : element-style? = #f
  continue? : any/c = #f

procedure

(figure** tag    
  caption    
  p ...    
  [#:style style    
  #:label-sep label-sep    
  #:label-style label-style    
  #:continue? continue?])  block?
  tag : string?
  caption : content?
  p : pre-flow?
  style : style? = center-figure-style
  label-sep : pre-content? = ": "
  label-style : element-style? = #f
  continue? : any/c = #f

procedure

(figure-here tag    
  caption    
  pre-flow ...    
  [#:style style    
  #:label-sep label-sep    
  #:label-style label-style    
  #:continue? continue?])  block?
  tag : string?
  caption : content?
  pre-flow : pre-flow?
  style : style? = center-figure-style
  label-sep : pre-content? = ": "
  label-style : element-style? = #f
  continue? : any/c = #f
Creates a figure. The given tag is for use with figure-ref or Figure-ref. The caption is an element. The pre-flow is decoded as a flow.

For HTML output, the figure and figure* functions are the same, while figure** allows the content to be wider than the document body. For two-column Latex output, figure* and figure** generate a figure that spans columns.

For Latex output, figure-here generates a figure to be included at the position in the output text where the figure-here occurs in the source text. For HTML output, all figure variants place the figure where the use appears in the source text.

By default, style is set so that the content of the figure is centered. Use left-figure-style, center-figure-style, or right-figure-style to specify the alignment.

The label-sep and label-style arguments adjust the way that the caption’s label is shown. By default, the label is the word “Figure” followed by a space, the figure number, “:”, and a space, but label-sep can specify an alternative to the “:” and ending space. The composed label is given the style specified by label-style.

If continue? is a true value, then the figure counter is not incremented.

Changed in version 1.24 of package scribble-lib: Added the #:label-sep and #:label-style arguments.

Implements figure alignments.

The left binding is a synonym for left-figure-style, provided for backward compatibility.

procedure

(figure-ref tag    
  ...+    
  #:link-render-style link-style)  element?
  tag : string?
  link-style : (or/c link-render-style? #f)
Generates a reference to one or more figures, using a lowercase word “figure”.

If link-style or (current-link-render-style) at the time of rendering indicates the 'number style mode, then the word “figure” itself is not hyperlinked. Otherwise, the word figure is hyperlinked together with the referenced figure’s number.

Changed in version 1.26 of package scribble-lib: Added the #:link-render-style argument.

procedure

(Figure-ref tag    
  ...+    
  #:link-render-style link-style)  element?
  tag : string?
  link-style : (or/c link-render-style? #f)
Like figure-ref, but capitalizes the word “Figure”.

Changed in version 1.26 of package scribble-lib: Added the #:link-render-style argument.

procedure

(Figure-target tag [#:continue? continue?])  element?

  tag : string?
  continue? : any/c = #f
Generates a new figure label. This function is normally not used directly, since it is used by figure.

procedure

(suppress-floats)  element?

Produces an empty element that renders in Latex as \suppressfloats, which discourages the placement of figures in the column or page of the surrounding text.

2.1 Configuring Output🔗ℹ

Output uses the following style names, which can be adjusted in an overriding ".css" or ".tex" specification: