Alignment: “Breaking out” of environment (enumerate / minipage)Alignment of enumerateHorizontal alignment in enumerate environmentPlace minipage next to an enumerate environmentText alignment in minipageEnumerate with in a custom environment breaksHorizontal alignment of customized label in enumerate environmentPreventing enumerate item from breaking across pagesCustom environment with incorrect line breakingNeed right-alignment of item numbers in enumerate environmentPreserving equation alignment through nested enumerate blocks

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Count Even Digits In Number

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Alignment: "Breaking out" of environment (enumerate / minipage)

Should I disclose a colleague's illness (that I should not know) when others badmouth him

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What to do when you've set the wrong ISO for your film?

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Who will lead the country until there is a new Tory leader?



Alignment: “Breaking out” of environment (enumerate / minipage)


Alignment of enumerateHorizontal alignment in enumerate environmentPlace minipage next to an enumerate environmentText alignment in minipageEnumerate with in a custom environment breaksHorizontal alignment of customized label in enumerate environmentPreventing enumerate item from breaking across pagesCustom environment with incorrect line breakingNeed right-alignment of item numbers in enumerate environmentPreserving equation alignment through nested enumerate blocks













4















I have an enumerate environment inside a minipage (the minipage might not be needed, I only included it here to show the margins). Each item has a paragraph of descriptive text and contains smaller enumerations of items with numbers, that are then summed out for each main item. Finally, the intermediate sums are summed to a total. I would like the intermediate sums to align with the right margin/total. What are my options?



Notes:



  • the amounts are in old Danish money (mark, daler, skilling) of which the summing rules vary through time.

  • the outer enumerate environment will likely span multiple pages.

In the below example, the green margins are OK, the blue ones should be moved along the red arrows to match the green ones:
example



MWE:



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84 hfill 95 % "95" needs to break out of minipage and flush to right margin
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300 hfill 304 % ditto
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total: 399

enddocument









share|improve this question
























  • why do you have the minipage?

    – David Carlisle
    8 hours ago











  • To make room so the paragraphs & intermediates dont go where the totals are supposed to be. It can be removed if there is another way.

    – meide
    8 hours ago











  • I would have use a tabular or tabularx instead of the nested enumerate. You can even use counters if you have trouble remembering your abcs.

    – John Kormylo
    1 hour ago















4















I have an enumerate environment inside a minipage (the minipage might not be needed, I only included it here to show the margins). Each item has a paragraph of descriptive text and contains smaller enumerations of items with numbers, that are then summed out for each main item. Finally, the intermediate sums are summed to a total. I would like the intermediate sums to align with the right margin/total. What are my options?



Notes:



  • the amounts are in old Danish money (mark, daler, skilling) of which the summing rules vary through time.

  • the outer enumerate environment will likely span multiple pages.

In the below example, the green margins are OK, the blue ones should be moved along the red arrows to match the green ones:
example



MWE:



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84 hfill 95 % "95" needs to break out of minipage and flush to right margin
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300 hfill 304 % ditto
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total: 399

enddocument









share|improve this question
























  • why do you have the minipage?

    – David Carlisle
    8 hours ago











  • To make room so the paragraphs & intermediates dont go where the totals are supposed to be. It can be removed if there is another way.

    – meide
    8 hours ago











  • I would have use a tabular or tabularx instead of the nested enumerate. You can even use counters if you have trouble remembering your abcs.

    – John Kormylo
    1 hour ago













4












4








4








I have an enumerate environment inside a minipage (the minipage might not be needed, I only included it here to show the margins). Each item has a paragraph of descriptive text and contains smaller enumerations of items with numbers, that are then summed out for each main item. Finally, the intermediate sums are summed to a total. I would like the intermediate sums to align with the right margin/total. What are my options?



Notes:



  • the amounts are in old Danish money (mark, daler, skilling) of which the summing rules vary through time.

  • the outer enumerate environment will likely span multiple pages.

In the below example, the green margins are OK, the blue ones should be moved along the red arrows to match the green ones:
example



MWE:



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84 hfill 95 % "95" needs to break out of minipage and flush to right margin
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300 hfill 304 % ditto
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total: 399

enddocument









share|improve this question
















I have an enumerate environment inside a minipage (the minipage might not be needed, I only included it here to show the margins). Each item has a paragraph of descriptive text and contains smaller enumerations of items with numbers, that are then summed out for each main item. Finally, the intermediate sums are summed to a total. I would like the intermediate sums to align with the right margin/total. What are my options?



Notes:



  • the amounts are in old Danish money (mark, daler, skilling) of which the summing rules vary through time.

  • the outer enumerate environment will likely span multiple pages.

In the below example, the green margins are OK, the blue ones should be moved along the red arrows to match the green ones:
example



MWE:



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84 hfill 95 % "95" needs to break out of minipage and flush to right margin
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300 hfill 304 % ditto
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total: 399

enddocument






horizontal-alignment environments enumerate






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago







meide

















asked 9 hours ago









meidemeide

37319




37319












  • why do you have the minipage?

    – David Carlisle
    8 hours ago











  • To make room so the paragraphs & intermediates dont go where the totals are supposed to be. It can be removed if there is another way.

    – meide
    8 hours ago











  • I would have use a tabular or tabularx instead of the nested enumerate. You can even use counters if you have trouble remembering your abcs.

    – John Kormylo
    1 hour ago

















  • why do you have the minipage?

    – David Carlisle
    8 hours ago











  • To make room so the paragraphs & intermediates dont go where the totals are supposed to be. It can be removed if there is another way.

    – meide
    8 hours ago











  • I would have use a tabular or tabularx instead of the nested enumerate. You can even use counters if you have trouble remembering your abcs.

    – John Kormylo
    1 hour ago
















why do you have the minipage?

– David Carlisle
8 hours ago





why do you have the minipage?

– David Carlisle
8 hours ago













To make room so the paragraphs & intermediates dont go where the totals are supposed to be. It can be removed if there is another way.

– meide
8 hours ago





To make room so the paragraphs & intermediates dont go where the totals are supposed to be. It can be removed if there is another way.

– meide
8 hours ago













I would have use a tabular or tabularx instead of the nested enumerate. You can even use counters if you have trouble remembering your abcs.

– John Kormylo
1 hour ago





I would have use a tabular or tabularx instead of the nested enumerate. You can even use counters if you have trouble remembering your abcs.

– John Kormylo
1 hour ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














You can put the text in box of fixed size hidden in a box of zero width. Here I have encapsulated this in a subtotal macro. To make this match you need the total in a corresponding box too.



Sample output



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

newlengthmytotboxwd
setlengthmytotboxwd20pt
newcommandsubtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to 0pthbox to #1hfil #2hss
newcommandtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to #1hfil #2

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84subtotal95
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300subtotal304
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total:total399

enddocument





share|improve this answer

























  • Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

    – meide
    8 hours ago












  • I have updated to improve this.

    – Andrew Swann
    8 hours ago


















3














Do you want something like this? It takes two LaTeX runs to synchronize.



documentclassarticle
usepackagemicrotype % not essential, but better typesetting

usepackagelipsum,showframe

newenvironmenttotals
%
par
addtocounterenvtotals1%
settowidthtotalswidthreftheenvtotals labelquad%
setcountertotals0%
beginlistleftmargin=0ptrightmargin=totalswidthitemrelax

par
addtocountertotals-1refstepcountertotalslabeltheenvtotals label%
noindenthfill Total:subtotalboxreftheenvtotals label%
endlist

newcommandsubtotalbox[1]makebox[0pt][l]makebox[totalswidth][r]#1
newenvironmentquantities
beginenumeratesetcountersubtotals0
unskipsubtotalboxthesubtotalsaddtocountertotalsvaluesubtotalsendenumerate
newcommandquantity[2]%
item #1dotfill#2%
addtocountersubtotals#2%

newcounterenvtotals
newcountertotals
newcountersubtotals
newlengthtotalswidth

begindocument

begintotals
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginquantities
quantitySomething11
quantitySomething84
endquantities

item lipsum[2]
beginquantities
quantitySomething4
quantitySomething300
endquantities
endenumerate
endtotals

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

    – meide
    5 hours ago











  • @meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

    – egreg
    3 hours ago











Your Answer








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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














You can put the text in box of fixed size hidden in a box of zero width. Here I have encapsulated this in a subtotal macro. To make this match you need the total in a corresponding box too.



Sample output



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

newlengthmytotboxwd
setlengthmytotboxwd20pt
newcommandsubtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to 0pthbox to #1hfil #2hss
newcommandtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to #1hfil #2

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84subtotal95
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300subtotal304
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total:total399

enddocument





share|improve this answer

























  • Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

    – meide
    8 hours ago












  • I have updated to improve this.

    – Andrew Swann
    8 hours ago















4














You can put the text in box of fixed size hidden in a box of zero width. Here I have encapsulated this in a subtotal macro. To make this match you need the total in a corresponding box too.



Sample output



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

newlengthmytotboxwd
setlengthmytotboxwd20pt
newcommandsubtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to 0pthbox to #1hfil #2hss
newcommandtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to #1hfil #2

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84subtotal95
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300subtotal304
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total:total399

enddocument





share|improve this answer

























  • Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

    – meide
    8 hours ago












  • I have updated to improve this.

    – Andrew Swann
    8 hours ago













4












4








4







You can put the text in box of fixed size hidden in a box of zero width. Here I have encapsulated this in a subtotal macro. To make this match you need the total in a corresponding box too.



Sample output



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

newlengthmytotboxwd
setlengthmytotboxwd20pt
newcommandsubtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to 0pthbox to #1hfil #2hss
newcommandtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to #1hfil #2

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84subtotal95
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300subtotal304
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total:total399

enddocument





share|improve this answer















You can put the text in box of fixed size hidden in a box of zero width. Here I have encapsulated this in a subtotal macro. To make this match you need the total in a corresponding box too.



Sample output



documentclassarticle

usepackagelipsum

newlengthmytotboxwd
setlengthmytotboxwd20pt
newcommandsubtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to 0pthbox to #1hfil #2hss
newcommandtotal[2][mytotboxwd]hbox to #1hfil #2

begindocument

beginminipage.9textwidth
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 11
item Something dotfill 84subtotal95
endenumerate

item lipsum[2]
beginenumerate
item Something dotfill 4
item Something dotfill 300subtotal304
endenumerate

endenumerate
endminipage

nullhfill Total:total399

enddocument






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 8 hours ago

























answered 8 hours ago









Andrew SwannAndrew Swann

79.5k9139337




79.5k9139337












  • Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

    – meide
    8 hours ago












  • I have updated to improve this.

    – Andrew Swann
    8 hours ago

















  • Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

    – meide
    8 hours ago












  • I have updated to improve this.

    – Andrew Swann
    8 hours ago
















Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

– meide
8 hours ago






Does that line up? The 304 and 399 don't look entirely aligned to me (304 slightly to the right of 399)

– meide
8 hours ago














I have updated to improve this.

– Andrew Swann
8 hours ago





I have updated to improve this.

– Andrew Swann
8 hours ago











3














Do you want something like this? It takes two LaTeX runs to synchronize.



documentclassarticle
usepackagemicrotype % not essential, but better typesetting

usepackagelipsum,showframe

newenvironmenttotals
%
par
addtocounterenvtotals1%
settowidthtotalswidthreftheenvtotals labelquad%
setcountertotals0%
beginlistleftmargin=0ptrightmargin=totalswidthitemrelax

par
addtocountertotals-1refstepcountertotalslabeltheenvtotals label%
noindenthfill Total:subtotalboxreftheenvtotals label%
endlist

newcommandsubtotalbox[1]makebox[0pt][l]makebox[totalswidth][r]#1
newenvironmentquantities
beginenumeratesetcountersubtotals0
unskipsubtotalboxthesubtotalsaddtocountertotalsvaluesubtotalsendenumerate
newcommandquantity[2]%
item #1dotfill#2%
addtocountersubtotals#2%

newcounterenvtotals
newcountertotals
newcountersubtotals
newlengthtotalswidth

begindocument

begintotals
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginquantities
quantitySomething11
quantitySomething84
endquantities

item lipsum[2]
beginquantities
quantitySomething4
quantitySomething300
endquantities
endenumerate
endtotals

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

    – meide
    5 hours ago











  • @meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

    – egreg
    3 hours ago















3














Do you want something like this? It takes two LaTeX runs to synchronize.



documentclassarticle
usepackagemicrotype % not essential, but better typesetting

usepackagelipsum,showframe

newenvironmenttotals
%
par
addtocounterenvtotals1%
settowidthtotalswidthreftheenvtotals labelquad%
setcountertotals0%
beginlistleftmargin=0ptrightmargin=totalswidthitemrelax

par
addtocountertotals-1refstepcountertotalslabeltheenvtotals label%
noindenthfill Total:subtotalboxreftheenvtotals label%
endlist

newcommandsubtotalbox[1]makebox[0pt][l]makebox[totalswidth][r]#1
newenvironmentquantities
beginenumeratesetcountersubtotals0
unskipsubtotalboxthesubtotalsaddtocountertotalsvaluesubtotalsendenumerate
newcommandquantity[2]%
item #1dotfill#2%
addtocountersubtotals#2%

newcounterenvtotals
newcountertotals
newcountersubtotals
newlengthtotalswidth

begindocument

begintotals
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginquantities
quantitySomething11
quantitySomething84
endquantities

item lipsum[2]
beginquantities
quantitySomething4
quantitySomething300
endquantities
endenumerate
endtotals

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

    – meide
    5 hours ago











  • @meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

    – egreg
    3 hours ago













3












3








3







Do you want something like this? It takes two LaTeX runs to synchronize.



documentclassarticle
usepackagemicrotype % not essential, but better typesetting

usepackagelipsum,showframe

newenvironmenttotals
%
par
addtocounterenvtotals1%
settowidthtotalswidthreftheenvtotals labelquad%
setcountertotals0%
beginlistleftmargin=0ptrightmargin=totalswidthitemrelax

par
addtocountertotals-1refstepcountertotalslabeltheenvtotals label%
noindenthfill Total:subtotalboxreftheenvtotals label%
endlist

newcommandsubtotalbox[1]makebox[0pt][l]makebox[totalswidth][r]#1
newenvironmentquantities
beginenumeratesetcountersubtotals0
unskipsubtotalboxthesubtotalsaddtocountertotalsvaluesubtotalsendenumerate
newcommandquantity[2]%
item #1dotfill#2%
addtocountersubtotals#2%

newcounterenvtotals
newcountertotals
newcountersubtotals
newlengthtotalswidth

begindocument

begintotals
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginquantities
quantitySomething11
quantitySomething84
endquantities

item lipsum[2]
beginquantities
quantitySomething4
quantitySomething300
endquantities
endenumerate
endtotals

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer













Do you want something like this? It takes two LaTeX runs to synchronize.



documentclassarticle
usepackagemicrotype % not essential, but better typesetting

usepackagelipsum,showframe

newenvironmenttotals
%
par
addtocounterenvtotals1%
settowidthtotalswidthreftheenvtotals labelquad%
setcountertotals0%
beginlistleftmargin=0ptrightmargin=totalswidthitemrelax

par
addtocountertotals-1refstepcountertotalslabeltheenvtotals label%
noindenthfill Total:subtotalboxreftheenvtotals label%
endlist

newcommandsubtotalbox[1]makebox[0pt][l]makebox[totalswidth][r]#1
newenvironmentquantities
beginenumeratesetcountersubtotals0
unskipsubtotalboxthesubtotalsaddtocountertotalsvaluesubtotalsendenumerate
newcommandquantity[2]%
item #1dotfill#2%
addtocountersubtotals#2%

newcounterenvtotals
newcountertotals
newcountersubtotals
newlengthtotalswidth

begindocument

begintotals
beginenumerate

item lipsum[1]
beginquantities
quantitySomething11
quantitySomething84
endquantities

item lipsum[2]
beginquantities
quantitySomething4
quantitySomething300
endquantities
endenumerate
endtotals

enddocument


enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 7 hours ago









egregegreg

744k8919473283




744k8919473283












  • Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

    – meide
    5 hours ago











  • @meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

    – egreg
    3 hours ago

















  • Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

    – meide
    5 hours ago











  • @meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

    – egreg
    3 hours ago
















Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

– meide
5 hours ago





Very cool! However, the quantities are in old Danish money (daler, mark, skilling) which makes automatic summing intractable (sometimes a daler is 6 marks, other times 4 marks, etc).

– meide
5 hours ago













@meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

– egreg
3 hours ago





@meide There should be a rule… ;-) But it's not difficult to amend the code in order to print the totals as input by hand.

– egreg
3 hours ago

















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