Latex Footnote Continued on Next Page
Contents
- 1 Introduction to LaTeX's main footnote commands
- 1.1 The \footnote command
- 1.1.1 Example: using the \footnote command
- 1.2 Storing the current footnote marker value: LaTeX counters
- 1.3 The \footnotemark and \footnotetext commands
- 1.3.1 Example: using \footnotemark and \footnotetext
- 1.4 Other LaTeX footnote commands
- 1.1 The \footnote command
- 2 Examples and applications of footnotes
- 2.1 Footnotes with multiple references
- 2.2 Changing the numbering style
- 2.3 Footnotes in minipage environments
- 2.4 Changing minipage footnote markers
- 3 Footnotes in tables
- 3.1 Should you use footnotes in tables?
- 3.2 Example: \footnote does not work in the tabular environment
- 3.3 Example from LaTeX2e unofficial reference manual
- 3.4 Example: table footnotes via the tablefootnote package
- 4 Table notes: an alternative to footnotes
- 4.1 Example: creating table notes using the threeparttablex package
- 4.2 Discussions on tex.stackexchange
- 5 Further reading
Introduction to LaTeX's main footnote commands
According to Wikipedia, footnotes were invented by an English printer called Richard Jugge (c.1514–1577). This time-honoured literary device is supported by LaTeX and in this help article we explain the main footnote-related commands and provide a range of examples to demonstrate their use.
The \footnote
command
The \footnote
command is the core LaTeX command for creating footnotes and takes two forms:
-
\footnote{text for footnote}
: This inserts an (automatically-generated) superscript number, called the footnote marker, into the document text and also creates the corresponding footnote at the bottom of the page, containing the corresponding footnote marker andtext for footnote
. -
\footnote[number]{text for footnote}
: This form of the command uses the optional valuenumber
to create the superscript footnote marker; it also inserts the corresponding footnote at the bottom of the page, containing the identifying footnote marker (number
) andtext for footnote
.
Example: using the \footnote
command
Here is an example which demonstrates the two variants of \footnote
:
-
\footnote{Automatically generated footnote markers work fine!}
automatically typesets the numeric (superscript) value (1) for the footnote marker, whereas -
\footnote[42]{...is that the answer to everything?}
uses 42 as the value of the footnote marker and, as you may observe, it does not increment the integer used for auto-creation of markers: the third footnote has a marker value of 2.
I'm writing to demonstrate use of automatically-generated footnote markers\footnote {Automatically generated footnote markers work fine!} and footnotes which use a marker value provided to the command\footnote [42] {...is that the answer to everything?}. Now, I will use another automatically-generated footnote marker\footnote {Now, footnote markers are 1, 42, but then back to 2? That will be confusing if the automatically-generated number also reaches 42!}.
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Storing the current footnote marker value: LaTeX counters
LaTeX uses so-called counter variables to store the current value of footnote markers. In practice, LaTeX provides and uses two counter variables according to where the footnote is being used:
-
footnote
: the counter variable for footnotes within the main document text -
mpfootnote
: the counter variable for footnotes within aminipage
environment
Each time the \footnote{text}
version of that command is used, the corresponding counter variable is incremented by 1. With the \footnote[number]{text}
version, the corresponding counter variable is not incremented.
You can create additional counter variables and use them for producing footnotes, as demonstrated in the example below.
The \footnotemark
and \footnotetext
commands
In addition to \footnote
, LaTeX provides the commands:
-
\footnotemark
which typesets the footnote marker, and -
\footnotetext
which typesets the footnote text
Both commands take an optional argument enclosed in square brackets ([...]
):
-
\footnotemark[number]
: typesets a footnote marker at the point the command is used but does not create/typeset a corresponding footnote at the bottom of the page.-
[number]
is the optional argument, specifying that the valuenumber
should be used for the footnote marker. - If you use this command without the optional argument, writing it as
\footnotemark
, this form of the command generates the footnote marker using an internal LaTeX variable called a counter variable—which is incremented by 1 when the optionalnumber
value is not provided.
-
-
\footnotetext[number]{text for footnote}
: typesets the footnote text (text for footnote
) corresponding to the marker produced by the previous\footnotemark
.-
[number]
is the optional argument which specifies the corresponding footnote marker for thetext for footnote
. - If you use this command without the optional
number
argument, i.e. writing it as\footnotetext{text for footnote}
, this form of the command generates a footnote whose marker corresponds to the most recent\footnotemark
.
-
Example: using \footnotemark
and \footnotetext
The \footnotemark
and \footnotetext
commands are often used together to construct footnotes in tables, or other locations, where the standard \footnote
command does not work, or is not the best/optimal solution—some applications are demonstrated in this article (see here and here).
I'm writing to test the \verb|\footnotemark| and \verb|\footnotetext| commands. You can insert a footnote marker using the \verb|\footnotemark|\footnotemark {} command and later, when you're ready, typeset the footnote text by writing \verb|\footnotetext {Here's the footnote.}|. \footnotetext {Here's the footnote.} Let's do one more to see the result\footnotemark {} which I'll comment on within the footnote\footnotetext {Specifically, I'd write comments in this one.}.
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Other LaTeX footnote commands
In addition to the commands we have explored:
-
\footnote[number]{text for footnote}
-
\footnotemark[number]
-
\footnotetext[number]{text for footnote}
LaTeX provides several additional footnote-related commands that we'll list but not explore in any detail. The following descriptions are taken from the LaTeX2e source code documentation:
-
\footnotesize
: Size-changing command for footnotes. -
\footins
: Space between main text and footnotes. The rule separating footnotes from text occurs in this space. This space lies above the strut of height\footnotesep
which is at the beginning of the first footnote. -
\footnoterule
: Macro to draw the rule separating footnotes from text. It is executed right after a\vspace
of\skip\footins
. It should take zero vertical space—i.e., it should to a negative skip to compensate for any positive space it occupies. -
\footnotesep
: The height of a strut placed at the beginning of every footnote.
Examples and applications of footnotes
Footnotes with multiple references
The following example demonstrates one way to make multiple references to the same footnote. By using \footnotemark[\value{footnote}]
you can insert a superscript corresponding to the current value of the footnote
counter but without incrementing the footnote
counter value (for more information on counters, see this Overleaf help article).
I'm writing to test\footnote {Footnotes work fine!} several footnote features. You can insert the footnote marker\footnotemark {} using the \verb|\footnotemark| command and later use the \verb|\footnotetext| command to typeset the footnote text by writing \verb|\footnotetext {Text of second footnote.}| \footnotetext {Text of second footnote.}. I can use the same footnote\footnotemark {} more than once\footnotemark [\value{footnote}]. \footnotetext {A footnote with two references.}
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Changing the numbering style
The current value of the footnote number is stored in a LaTeX variable called the footnote
counter and can be typeset by the command \thefootnote
. You can change the typeset format of footnote markers by modifying the \thefootnote
command; for example, \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\roman{footnote}}
will typeset markers in lowercase Roman numerals. You can use \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{...}
in the preamble to change the numbering style of footnotes in the main document text.
Other possible marker styles are:
-
\arabic{counter variable}
: typesetcounter variable
in Arabic numerals. -
\Roman{counter variable}
: typesetcounter variable
in uppercase Roman numerals. -
\alph{counter variable}
: typesetcounter variable
in lowercase Alphabetic characters. -
\Alph{counter variable}
: typesetcounter variable
in uppercase Alphabetic characters. -
fnsymbol{counter variable}
: typesetcounter variable
using a set of 9 special symbols.
For background information on creating, using and modifying counters see this Overleaf article on counters.
Here is an example using \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\roman{footnote}}
:
I'm writing to test\footnote {Footnotes work fine!} several footnote features. You can insert the footnote marker\footnotemark {} using the \verb|\footnotemark| command and later use the \verb|\footnotetext| command to typeset the footnote text by writing \verb|\footnotetext {Text of second footnote.}| \footnotetext {Text of second footnote.}. I can use the same footnote\footnotemark {} more than once\footnotemark [\value{footnote}]. \footnotetext {A footnote with two references.} \renewcommand { \thefootnote }{ \roman {footnote}} Now a footnote marker using lowercase Roman numerals\footnote {This footnote marker uses lowercase Roman numerals.}.
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Footnotes in minipage
environments
Footnotes within a minipage
environment behave differently because the commands \footnote
and \footnotetext
are temporarily redefined so that footnotes are:
- placed at the bottom of the
minipage
, not the main document page - labled/numbered using a scheme different to in-text footnotes—in a
minipage
the footnotes use a counter calledmpfootnote
Here's an example of footnotes in a minipage
:
This is the start of a paragraph of text just before we switch to a \texttt {minipage} environment. This is an in-page footnote\footnote {Footnote before a minipage}. \vspace {10pt} \begin {minipage}{0.7\textwidth } This is text in a \texttt {minipage} environment. Here is the first \texttt {minipage} footnote\footnote {First minipage footnote.}. And another \texttt {minipage} footnote\footnote {Second minipage footnote.}. \end {minipage} \vspace {10pt} This is the start of a standard paragraph of text just after we finished a \texttt {minipage} environment. This is an in-page footnote\footnote {Footnote after a minipage}.
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Changing minipage footnote markers
As shown by the example above, within a minipage
footnote markers are lowercase letters; however, the \renewcommand
can be used to redefine how the mpfootnote
counter value is typeset. For example, to typeset minipage
footnote markers as Arabic digits:
\renewcommand { \thempfootnote }{ \arabic {mpfootnote}}
as show in the following example:
\renewcommand { \thempfootnote }{ \arabic {mpfootnote}} \begin {minipage}{0.7\textwidth } This is text in a \texttt {minipage} environment. Here is the first \texttt {minipage} footnote\footnote {First minipage footnote.}. And another \texttt {minipage} footnote\footnote {Second minipage footnote.}. \end {minipage}
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Footnotes in tables
The following sections examine a number of topics related to using footnotes in tables.
Should you use footnotes in tables?
The Frequently Asked Question List for TeX has an entry for footnotes in tables which comments that using footnotes in tables is not considered to be typographic best practice: ideally, table notes should be used instead of table footnotes. The use of table notes or table footnotes may be defined by document class/style files you are required to use, or the choice may be yours: either way, LaTeX provides a range of solutions you can use.
Example: \footnote
does not work in the tabular
environment
The \footnote
command does not work inside a tabular environment, as the following example demonstrates. Note this example uses the hologo
LaTeX package to typeset the names of various TeX engines.
\begin {table} \centering \begin {tabular}{lcc} \midrule \TeX {} engine & Native UTF-8 support & Unicode math support\\ \midrule \hologo {pdfTeX} & No\footnote {Some UTF-8 support via \LaTeX {} kernel commands.} & No\\ \Hologo {XeTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \Hologo {LuaTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \midrule \end {tabular} \caption [\TeX{} engine features] { % \TeX {} engine feature comparison\footnote {Draft version. Additional feature comparisons will be added.}.} \end {table}
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output, showing the presence of footnote marks in the table cell and caption, but there is no corresponding footnote text:
A partial solution is to place the tabular
inside a minipage
environment:
\begin {minipage}{ \textwidth } \centering \begin {tabular}{lcc} \midrule \TeX {} engine & Native UTF-8 support & Unicode math support\\ \midrule \hologo {pdfTeX} & No\footnote {Some UTF-8 support via \LaTeX {} kernel commands.} & No\\ \Hologo {XeTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \Hologo {LuaTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \midrule \end {tabular} \end {minipage}
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Note that you can also write \renewcommand{\thempfootnote}{\arabic{mpfootnote}}
to have the minipage
table footnote markers typeset as Arabic digits rather than lowercase letters.
Example from LaTeX2e unofficial reference manual
The LaTeX2e unofficial reference manual has an interesting example in the section Footnotes in a table. Normally, table footnotes within a minipage
are placed at the bottom of the minipage
, as the examples above have shown. The following example, from the LaTeX2e unofficial reference manual uses the \footnotemark
and \footnotetext
commands, together with a new counter (mpFootnoteValueSaver
) to ensure the table footnotes appear at the bottom of the document page, to be included as part of the document's standard footnotes.
When the table is typeset, the LaTeX code \setcounter{mpFootnoteValueSaver}{\value{footnote}}
sets the value of mpFootnoteValueSaver
to be the current footnote
counter value; this ensures footnotes produced within the table use marker values that are synchronized with the main document footnote sequence (numbering). After the table is typeset, note how the mpFootnoteValueSaver
is incremented by 1 through the code \stepcounter{mpFootnoteValueSaver}
.
\newcounter {mpFootnoteValueSaver} \begin {center} \begin {minipage}{ \textwidth } \setcounter {mpFootnoteValueSaver}{ \value {footnote}} \centering \begin {tabular}{l|l} \textsc {Woman} & \textsc {Relationship} \\ \hline Mona &Attached\footnotemark \\ Diana Villiers &Eventual wife \\ Christine Hatherleigh Wood &Fiance\footnotemark \end {tabular} \end {minipage} % percent sign keeps footnote text close to minipage \stepcounter {mpFootnoteValueSaver} % \footnotetext [\value{mpFootnoteValueSaver}] { % Little is known other than her death.} % \stepcounter {mpFootnoteValueSaver} % \footnotetext [\value{mpFootnoteValueSaver}] { % Relationship is unresolved in XXI.} \end {center}
Open this example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Example: table footnotes via the tablefootnote
package
One option is the tablefootnote
package which is mentioned on tex.stackexchange and referenced in the Frequently Asked Question List for TeX entry for footnotes in tables. The following example demonstrates the \tablefootnote
package:
\documentclass {article} % Using the geometry package with a small % page size to create the article graphic \usepackage[paperheight=6in, paperwidth=5in, top=10mm, bottom=20mm, left=10mm, right=10mm]{geometry} \usepackage {hologo} % for TeX engine logos \usepackage {booktabs} % for nice tables \usepackage {tablefootnote} % for table footnotes \begin {document} \begin {table} \centering \begin {tabular}{lcc} \midrule \TeX {} engine & Native UTF-8 support & Unicode math support\\ \midrule \hologo {pdfTeX} & No\tablefootnote {Some UTF-8 support via \LaTeX {} kernel commands.} & No\\ \Hologo {XeTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \Hologo {LuaTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \midrule \end {tabular} \caption [\TeX{} engine features] { % \TeX {} engine feature comparison\tablefootnote {Draft version. Additional feature comparisons will be added.}.} \end {table} \end {document}
Open this \tablefootnote
package example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output:
Table notes: an alternative to footnotes
The threeparttable
package provides a mechanism to create table notes—an alternative to using footnotes in tables. The threeparttablex
package implements a table notes facility for use with the longtable package.
Example: creating table notes using the threeparttablex
package
The threeparttable package documentation is very brief, so we won't repeat it here but instead we'll provide an example of its use:
\begin {table} \begin {threeparttable}[b] \caption [\TeX{} engine features] { \TeX {} engine feature comparison\tnote {1}} \centering \begin {tabular}{lcc} \midrule \TeX {} engine & Native UTF-8 support & Unicode math support\\ \midrule \hologo {pdfTeX} & No\tnote {2}& No\\ \Hologo {XeTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \Hologo {LuaTeX} & Yes & Yes\\ \midrule \end {tabular} \begin {tablenotes} \item [1] This is an early draft. \item [2] Some UTF-8 support via \LaTeX {} kernel commands. \end {tablenotes} \end {threeparttable} \end {table}
Open this threeparttable
example in Overleaf
This example produces the following output
Discussions on tex.stackexchange
Table footnotes are also discussed on tex.stackexchange and various solutions outlined in threads, such as the following, which readers may be interested to explore:
- footnotes for tables in LaTeX, and
- footnote in table.
Further reading
For more information see:
- Margin notes
- Page size and margins
- Headers and footers
- Hyperlinks
- Counters
- Lists
- Font sizes, families, and styles
- Bold, italics and underlining
- Font typefaces
- Line breaks and blank spaces
- Management in a large project
- Multi-file LaTeX projects
- The not so short introduction to LaTeX2 ε
schumanntandsold80.blogspot.com
Source: https://www.overleaf.com/learn/latex/Footnotes
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