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Drawing close together horizontal lines in Latex
Two rules directly under each otherHorizontal line below figure captionHorizontal and Dashed lines in captionRemove whitespace generated with ruleDrawing footnote separator lineVertical/Horizontal Rules in TabularXHow to have row lines in table span only some given percent of each column?Misaligment in a rule inside a bitboxvertical rule between columns containing tikzpictureDraw a horizontal line in latexHow to break a rule over lines?
How can I draw lines like in the picture in Latex? I tried using two consecutive rule
but they are not as close together as I would like them to be.
This is how I tried:
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
rules
New contributor
add a comment |
How can I draw lines like in the picture in Latex? I tried using two consecutive rule
but they are not as close together as I would like them to be.
This is how I tried:
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
rules
New contributor
Welcome to TeX-SE! According to tex.stackexchange.com/a/89424/121799 you could dodocumentclass[fleqn]article begindocument noindent hrule width hsize kern 0.5mm hrule width hsize height 0.4pt enddocument
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
How can I draw lines like in the picture in Latex? I tried using two consecutive rule
but they are not as close together as I would like them to be.
This is how I tried:
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
rules
New contributor
How can I draw lines like in the picture in Latex? I tried using two consecutive rule
but they are not as close together as I would like them to be.
This is how I tried:
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
noindentrule15cm0.7pt
rules
rules
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
OscarOscar
132
132
New contributor
New contributor
Welcome to TeX-SE! According to tex.stackexchange.com/a/89424/121799 you could dodocumentclass[fleqn]article begindocument noindent hrule width hsize kern 0.5mm hrule width hsize height 0.4pt enddocument
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Welcome to TeX-SE! According to tex.stackexchange.com/a/89424/121799 you could dodocumentclass[fleqn]article begindocument noindent hrule width hsize kern 0.5mm hrule width hsize height 0.4pt enddocument
– marmot
1 hour ago
Welcome to TeX-SE! According to tex.stackexchange.com/a/89424/121799 you could do
documentclass[fleqn]article begindocument noindent hrule width hsize kern 0.5mm hrule width hsize height 0.4pt enddocument
– marmot
1 hour ago
Welcome to TeX-SE! According to tex.stackexchange.com/a/89424/121799 you could do
documentclass[fleqn]article begindocument noindent hrule width hsize kern 0.5mm hrule width hsize height 0.4pt enddocument
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
The rule
macro has an optional first parameter which specifies the height above the baseline. So you can use that to bring two rules closer together:
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
noindentruletextwidth.5pt
rule[.8baselineskip]textwidth.5pt
enddocument
The disadvantage of this approach is that the rule behaves like its own paragraph. If you want to avoid that, then the hrule
approach is better, and you can get very exact spacing. Of course in this case you would probably want to add vertical space around the rules themselves. The following example doesn't do that in order to show the difference between the two methods.
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
This is some text.
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
vspace2pt
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
This is some text.
enddocument
add a comment |
Your Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The rule
macro has an optional first parameter which specifies the height above the baseline. So you can use that to bring two rules closer together:
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
noindentruletextwidth.5pt
rule[.8baselineskip]textwidth.5pt
enddocument
The disadvantage of this approach is that the rule behaves like its own paragraph. If you want to avoid that, then the hrule
approach is better, and you can get very exact spacing. Of course in this case you would probably want to add vertical space around the rules themselves. The following example doesn't do that in order to show the difference between the two methods.
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
This is some text.
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
vspace2pt
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
This is some text.
enddocument
add a comment |
The rule
macro has an optional first parameter which specifies the height above the baseline. So you can use that to bring two rules closer together:
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
noindentruletextwidth.5pt
rule[.8baselineskip]textwidth.5pt
enddocument
The disadvantage of this approach is that the rule behaves like its own paragraph. If you want to avoid that, then the hrule
approach is better, and you can get very exact spacing. Of course in this case you would probably want to add vertical space around the rules themselves. The following example doesn't do that in order to show the difference between the two methods.
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
This is some text.
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
vspace2pt
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
This is some text.
enddocument
add a comment |
The rule
macro has an optional first parameter which specifies the height above the baseline. So you can use that to bring two rules closer together:
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
noindentruletextwidth.5pt
rule[.8baselineskip]textwidth.5pt
enddocument
The disadvantage of this approach is that the rule behaves like its own paragraph. If you want to avoid that, then the hrule
approach is better, and you can get very exact spacing. Of course in this case you would probably want to add vertical space around the rules themselves. The following example doesn't do that in order to show the difference between the two methods.
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
This is some text.
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
vspace2pt
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
This is some text.
enddocument
The rule
macro has an optional first parameter which specifies the height above the baseline. So you can use that to bring two rules closer together:
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
noindentruletextwidth.5pt
rule[.8baselineskip]textwidth.5pt
enddocument
The disadvantage of this approach is that the rule behaves like its own paragraph. If you want to avoid that, then the hrule
approach is better, and you can get very exact spacing. Of course in this case you would probably want to add vertical space around the rules themselves. The following example doesn't do that in order to show the difference between the two methods.
documentclass[11pt]article
begindocument
This is some text.
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
vspace2pt
hrule height 0.5pt depth 0pt width textwidth
This is some text.
enddocument
edited 58 mins ago
answered 1 hour ago
Alan MunnAlan Munn
162k28432708
162k28432708
add a comment |
add a comment |
Oscar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Oscar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Oscar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Oscar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Welcome to TeX-SE! According to tex.stackexchange.com/a/89424/121799 you could do
documentclass[fleqn]article begindocument noindent hrule width hsize kern 0.5mm hrule width hsize height 0.4pt enddocument
– marmot
1 hour ago