## LaTeX forum ⇒ Graphics, Figures & Tables ⇒ Aligning mathematical equations vertically in a table - Overleaf Topic is solved

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joeTex
Posts: 6
Joined: Mon Sep 23, 2019 11:58 pm

### Aligning mathematical equations vertically in a table - Overleaf

Hi

I would like to align equations - which are separately inserted into table cells - vertically along the red line - as shown in the figure below:

pic1.jpg (141.03 KiB) Viewed 304 times

The above is a small excerpt of a large table with multiple rows and columns (text columns to the left and right of the image too) - I have tried a multitude of methods, but have not been successful. I am using Overleaf.

Has anybody had success in implementing this? If so, I would really appreciate the assistance of the community by means of a small minimal working code example?

Thanks a lot

Bartman
Posts: 113
Joined: Fri Jan 03, 2020 2:39 pm
Why don't you show us one of your attempts using a minimal working example so that we don't have to enter the content of the table shown?

joeTex
Posts: 6
Joined: Mon Sep 23, 2019 11:58 pm
\documentclass[a4paper, 11pt, oneside]{scrbook}\usepackage{adjustbox}\usepackage{amsmath}\usepackage{multirow}\usepackage{makecell}  % ------------------- Begin the document -----------------------------\begin{document} \begin{table}[h!]    \centering    \begin{adjustbox}{center}    \begin{tabular}{c c c c c}    x   &$b_{2}$            &20.25          &\multirow{4}{5cm}{\parbox{\begin{align*}                                            0.91 \leq &\Delta x \leq 3.30 \\                                            1.50 \leq &\Delta x \leq 1.83 \\                                                      &\Delta x \leq 0.34 \\                                            2.17 \leq &\Delta x \leq 2.17                                            \end{align*}                                              }}                                          & 12 \\    x   &$r_{n}$            &55             &                                           & 10 \\    x   &$\Delta r_{n}$     &0              &                                           & 4  \\    x   &$r_{1}$            &105.45         &                                           & 8      \end{tabular}    \end{adjustbox}\end{table}% \end{document}

@Bartman; Thanks for the reply - see the MWE above. I have made it work partially; however there is an error (which I do not understand) and an offset in the table column which I cant seem to remove (most probably due to my limited experience). Is there any other method which would work better, or did I just miss the boat completely on this one?

Bartman
Posts: 113
Joined: Fri Jan 03, 2020 2:39 pm
The first required argument of the \parbox command expects a length.

My proposition:

\documentclass[%    a4paper, fontsize=11pt,% default setting    oneside]{scrbook} \usepackage{amsmath}\usepackage{siunitx}% provides S column type % Read the manual of the array package to find out, % how you can use >{} and <{} to set declarations.% siunitx loads array.\newcolumntype{C}{>{$}c<{$}} \begin{document}\begin{table}[htbp]    \centering    \begin{tabular}{        *2C        S[table-format=3.2]        C@{\;$\Delta x\leq$\;}         C        S[table-format=2]    }    x & b_2        &  20.25 & 0.91 \leq & 3.30 & 12 \\    x & r_n        &  55    & 1.50 \leq & 1.83 & 10 \\    x & \Delta r_n &   0    &           & 0.34 & 4  \\    x & r_1        & 105.45 & 2.17 \leq & 2.17 & 8      \end{tabular}\end{table}\end{document}
Last edited by Bartman on Mon Aug 03, 2020 2:49 am, edited 1 time in total.

joeTex
Posts: 6
Joined: Mon Sep 23, 2019 11:58 pm
@Bartman: Thanks a lot, I was also thinking of physically splitting the column into two separate columns then to right and left align the adjacent cells to simulate a merged & aligned column. Unless somebody else has another method to achieve the same result - I suppose this will do just fine.

joeTex
Posts: 6
Joined: Mon Sep 23, 2019 11:58 pm
I played with this a little bit. I modified the code from @Bartman a little bit, just to make it a little more simple to use (well, according to my limited experience using this platform). See below:

\documentclass[%    a4paper, fontsize=11pt,% default setting    oneside]{scrbook} \usepackage{amsmath}\usepackage{siunitx}% provides S column type % Read the manual of the array package to find out, % how you can use >{} and <{} to set declarations.% siunitx loads array.\newcolumntype{C}{>{$}c<{$}} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Bartman's method, changed a bit - below %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \begin{document}\begin{table}[htbp]    \centering    \begin{tabular}{        c        c %*2C        c %S[table-format=3.5]        C@{\;$\Delta x\leq$\;}         c %C        c %S[table-format=3]    }    x & $b_2$        &  20.25 & 0.91 \leq & 3.30 & 12 \\    x & $r_n$        &  55    & 1.50 \leq & 1.83 & 10 \\    x & $\Delta r_n$ &   0    &           & 0.34 & 4  \\    x & $r_1$        & 105.45 & 2.17 \leq & 2.17 & 8      \end{tabular}\end{table} \end{document}

I also tried to just shift the adjacent columns to "brute force" the alignment - I think I was successful (or at least partially), this will also allow for alignment between different kinds of markers, see below:

\documentclass[%    a4paper, fontsize=11pt,% default setting    oneside]{scrbook} \usepackage{amsmath}\usepackage{siunitx}% provides S column type % Read the manual of the array package to find out, % how you can use >{} and <{} to set declarations.% siunitx loads array. \newcolumntype{R}{>{\raggedright\arraybackslash}r@{\hspace{3pt}}} %New column type, change right spacing and left align\newcolumntype{L}{>{\raggedleft\arraybackslash}l} %New column type, right align, no change in left spacing  %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% My method - below %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \begin{document}\begin{table}[htbp]    \centering    \begin{tabular}{        c        c %*2C        c %S[table-format=3.5]        R %C@{\;$\Delta x\leq$\;}         L %c %C        c %S[table-format=3]    }    x & $b_2$        &  20.25 & $0.91 \leq$ & $\Delta x\leq 3.30$ & 12 \\    x & $r_n$        &  55    & $1.50 \leq$ & $\Delta x\leq 1.83$ & 10 \\    x & $\Delta r_n$ &   0    &             & $\Delta x\leq 0.34$ & 4  \\    x & $r_1$        & 105.45 & $2.17 \leq$ & $\Delta x\leq 2.17$ & 8      \end{tabular}\end{table} \end{document}

But yes, several methods to achieve the same goal - some more elegant than others, but still - thanks for the input @Bartman, it is really highly appreciated.
Last edited by joeTex on Mon Aug 03, 2020 6:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Bartman
Posts: 113
Joined: Fri Jan 03, 2020 2:39 pm
In the second example the beginning of the document environment is missing.

hankr123
Posts: 1
Joined: Sat Sep 12, 2020 7:13 pm
Much obliged, I was additionally considering truly parting the section into two separate segments at that point to both ways adjust the nearby cells to reenact a blended and adjusted segment. Except if another person has another strategy to accomplish a similar outcome - I guess this will do fine and dandy.