Know in which column am I in [closed]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












2















it there a way to have a variable that returns in which column of my multicols environment am I in?
Thanks!










share|improve this question













closed as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Stefan Pinnow, TeXnician, Werner, Phelype Oleinik Jan 22 at 17:38


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • 4





    Can you add a bit of context for what you need to know the column number?

    – samcarter
    Jan 22 at 14:51











  • See tex.stackexchange.com/a/414638/117050 there I wrote some code to get the current column inside of a ToC.

    – Skillmon
    Jan 22 at 14:52











  • Possible duplicate of Detecting current column in multicol

    – Werner
    Jan 22 at 16:35















2















it there a way to have a variable that returns in which column of my multicols environment am I in?
Thanks!










share|improve this question













closed as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Stefan Pinnow, TeXnician, Werner, Phelype Oleinik Jan 22 at 17:38


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • 4





    Can you add a bit of context for what you need to know the column number?

    – samcarter
    Jan 22 at 14:51











  • See tex.stackexchange.com/a/414638/117050 there I wrote some code to get the current column inside of a ToC.

    – Skillmon
    Jan 22 at 14:52











  • Possible duplicate of Detecting current column in multicol

    – Werner
    Jan 22 at 16:35













2












2








2


1






it there a way to have a variable that returns in which column of my multicols environment am I in?
Thanks!










share|improve this question














it there a way to have a variable that returns in which column of my multicols environment am I in?
Thanks!







multicol programming






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 22 at 14:47









Lord NexprexLord Nexprex

1145




1145




closed as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Stefan Pinnow, TeXnician, Werner, Phelype Oleinik Jan 22 at 17:38


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









closed as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Stefan Pinnow, TeXnician, Werner, Phelype Oleinik Jan 22 at 17:38


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 4





    Can you add a bit of context for what you need to know the column number?

    – samcarter
    Jan 22 at 14:51











  • See tex.stackexchange.com/a/414638/117050 there I wrote some code to get the current column inside of a ToC.

    – Skillmon
    Jan 22 at 14:52











  • Possible duplicate of Detecting current column in multicol

    – Werner
    Jan 22 at 16:35












  • 4





    Can you add a bit of context for what you need to know the column number?

    – samcarter
    Jan 22 at 14:51











  • See tex.stackexchange.com/a/414638/117050 there I wrote some code to get the current column inside of a ToC.

    – Skillmon
    Jan 22 at 14:52











  • Possible duplicate of Detecting current column in multicol

    – Werner
    Jan 22 at 16:35







4




4





Can you add a bit of context for what you need to know the column number?

– samcarter
Jan 22 at 14:51





Can you add a bit of context for what you need to know the column number?

– samcarter
Jan 22 at 14:51













See tex.stackexchange.com/a/414638/117050 there I wrote some code to get the current column inside of a ToC.

– Skillmon
Jan 22 at 14:52





See tex.stackexchange.com/a/414638/117050 there I wrote some code to get the current column inside of a ToC.

– Skillmon
Jan 22 at 14:52













Possible duplicate of Detecting current column in multicol

– Werner
Jan 22 at 16:35





Possible duplicate of Detecting current column in multicol

– Werner
Jan 22 at 16:35










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














Out of the box multicol supports finding out if you are at a certain point in the first, the last or one of the middle columns (assuming you have more than 2 columns). That is done using docolaction which is described in the documentation (and needs to be explicitly enabled via an option). If you need more detail then perhaps the link suggested above provides that, but by default multicol distinguishes ones the 3 cases.






share|improve this answer






























    5














    The following yields the current column unexpandably. It needs at least 2 runs of LaTeX.



    documentclassarticle

    usepackage[left=2mm,right=2mm]geometry
    usepackage[colaction]multicol
    usepackageetoolbox

    makeatletter
    newcounternexprex@col@count
    newcounternexprex@current@column@call
    defnexprex@patch@last
    %
    stepcounternexprex@col@count%
    protected@write@auxout
    %
    stringdefstringnexprex@cur@colarabicnexprex@col@count%
    %

    defnexprex@patch@else
    %
    ifmc@firstcol
    setcounternexprex@col@count0%
    fi
    nexprex@patch@last

    defnexprex@patch@error
    %
    GenericError
    Patching of stringmc@col@status@writespace failed
    %
    Make sure `colaction` was set as an option for `multicol`.%
    MessageBreak
    Else you're screwed, don't use the code provided here.MessageBreak%

    No further help available.%

    pretocmdmc@lastcol@status@writenexprex@patch@lastnexprex@patch@error
    pretocmdmc@col@status@writenexprex@patch@elsenexprex@patch@error
    newcommandcurrentcolumn
    %
    stepcounternexprex@current@column@call%
    protected@write@auxout
    %
    stringexpandafter
    stringglobal
    stringexpandafter
    stringlet
    stringcsnamespace
    nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@call%
    stringendcsname
    stringnexprex@cur@col
    %
    ifcsname
    nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
    csname
    nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
    fi

    makeatother


    begindocument
    beginmulticols5
    noindent
    This is: currentcolumn
    columnbreak\
    This is: currentcolumn
    columnbreak\
    This is: currentcolumn
    columnbreak\
    This is: currentcolumn
    columnbreak\
    This is: currentcolumn
    endmulticols
    enddocument





    share|improve this answer























    • Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

      – manooooh
      Jan 22 at 16:13






    • 1





      @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

      – Skillmon
      Jan 22 at 17:05

















    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    5














    Out of the box multicol supports finding out if you are at a certain point in the first, the last or one of the middle columns (assuming you have more than 2 columns). That is done using docolaction which is described in the documentation (and needs to be explicitly enabled via an option). If you need more detail then perhaps the link suggested above provides that, but by default multicol distinguishes ones the 3 cases.






    share|improve this answer



























      5














      Out of the box multicol supports finding out if you are at a certain point in the first, the last or one of the middle columns (assuming you have more than 2 columns). That is done using docolaction which is described in the documentation (and needs to be explicitly enabled via an option). If you need more detail then perhaps the link suggested above provides that, but by default multicol distinguishes ones the 3 cases.






      share|improve this answer

























        5












        5








        5







        Out of the box multicol supports finding out if you are at a certain point in the first, the last or one of the middle columns (assuming you have more than 2 columns). That is done using docolaction which is described in the documentation (and needs to be explicitly enabled via an option). If you need more detail then perhaps the link suggested above provides that, but by default multicol distinguishes ones the 3 cases.






        share|improve this answer













        Out of the box multicol supports finding out if you are at a certain point in the first, the last or one of the middle columns (assuming you have more than 2 columns). That is done using docolaction which is described in the documentation (and needs to be explicitly enabled via an option). If you need more detail then perhaps the link suggested above provides that, but by default multicol distinguishes ones the 3 cases.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 22 at 15:53









        Frank MittelbachFrank Mittelbach

        60.9k6178248




        60.9k6178248





















            5














            The following yields the current column unexpandably. It needs at least 2 runs of LaTeX.



            documentclassarticle

            usepackage[left=2mm,right=2mm]geometry
            usepackage[colaction]multicol
            usepackageetoolbox

            makeatletter
            newcounternexprex@col@count
            newcounternexprex@current@column@call
            defnexprex@patch@last
            %
            stepcounternexprex@col@count%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringdefstringnexprex@cur@colarabicnexprex@col@count%
            %

            defnexprex@patch@else
            %
            ifmc@firstcol
            setcounternexprex@col@count0%
            fi
            nexprex@patch@last

            defnexprex@patch@error
            %
            GenericError
            Patching of stringmc@col@status@writespace failed
            %
            Make sure `colaction` was set as an option for `multicol`.%
            MessageBreak
            Else you're screwed, don't use the code provided here.MessageBreak%

            No further help available.%

            pretocmdmc@lastcol@status@writenexprex@patch@lastnexprex@patch@error
            pretocmdmc@col@status@writenexprex@patch@elsenexprex@patch@error
            newcommandcurrentcolumn
            %
            stepcounternexprex@current@column@call%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringexpandafter
            stringglobal
            stringexpandafter
            stringlet
            stringcsnamespace
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@call%
            stringendcsname
            stringnexprex@cur@col
            %
            ifcsname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            csname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            fi

            makeatother


            begindocument
            beginmulticols5
            noindent
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            endmulticols
            enddocument





            share|improve this answer























            • Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

              – manooooh
              Jan 22 at 16:13






            • 1





              @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

              – Skillmon
              Jan 22 at 17:05















            5














            The following yields the current column unexpandably. It needs at least 2 runs of LaTeX.



            documentclassarticle

            usepackage[left=2mm,right=2mm]geometry
            usepackage[colaction]multicol
            usepackageetoolbox

            makeatletter
            newcounternexprex@col@count
            newcounternexprex@current@column@call
            defnexprex@patch@last
            %
            stepcounternexprex@col@count%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringdefstringnexprex@cur@colarabicnexprex@col@count%
            %

            defnexprex@patch@else
            %
            ifmc@firstcol
            setcounternexprex@col@count0%
            fi
            nexprex@patch@last

            defnexprex@patch@error
            %
            GenericError
            Patching of stringmc@col@status@writespace failed
            %
            Make sure `colaction` was set as an option for `multicol`.%
            MessageBreak
            Else you're screwed, don't use the code provided here.MessageBreak%

            No further help available.%

            pretocmdmc@lastcol@status@writenexprex@patch@lastnexprex@patch@error
            pretocmdmc@col@status@writenexprex@patch@elsenexprex@patch@error
            newcommandcurrentcolumn
            %
            stepcounternexprex@current@column@call%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringexpandafter
            stringglobal
            stringexpandafter
            stringlet
            stringcsnamespace
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@call%
            stringendcsname
            stringnexprex@cur@col
            %
            ifcsname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            csname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            fi

            makeatother


            begindocument
            beginmulticols5
            noindent
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            endmulticols
            enddocument





            share|improve this answer























            • Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

              – manooooh
              Jan 22 at 16:13






            • 1





              @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

              – Skillmon
              Jan 22 at 17:05













            5












            5








            5







            The following yields the current column unexpandably. It needs at least 2 runs of LaTeX.



            documentclassarticle

            usepackage[left=2mm,right=2mm]geometry
            usepackage[colaction]multicol
            usepackageetoolbox

            makeatletter
            newcounternexprex@col@count
            newcounternexprex@current@column@call
            defnexprex@patch@last
            %
            stepcounternexprex@col@count%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringdefstringnexprex@cur@colarabicnexprex@col@count%
            %

            defnexprex@patch@else
            %
            ifmc@firstcol
            setcounternexprex@col@count0%
            fi
            nexprex@patch@last

            defnexprex@patch@error
            %
            GenericError
            Patching of stringmc@col@status@writespace failed
            %
            Make sure `colaction` was set as an option for `multicol`.%
            MessageBreak
            Else you're screwed, don't use the code provided here.MessageBreak%

            No further help available.%

            pretocmdmc@lastcol@status@writenexprex@patch@lastnexprex@patch@error
            pretocmdmc@col@status@writenexprex@patch@elsenexprex@patch@error
            newcommandcurrentcolumn
            %
            stepcounternexprex@current@column@call%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringexpandafter
            stringglobal
            stringexpandafter
            stringlet
            stringcsnamespace
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@call%
            stringendcsname
            stringnexprex@cur@col
            %
            ifcsname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            csname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            fi

            makeatother


            begindocument
            beginmulticols5
            noindent
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            endmulticols
            enddocument





            share|improve this answer













            The following yields the current column unexpandably. It needs at least 2 runs of LaTeX.



            documentclassarticle

            usepackage[left=2mm,right=2mm]geometry
            usepackage[colaction]multicol
            usepackageetoolbox

            makeatletter
            newcounternexprex@col@count
            newcounternexprex@current@column@call
            defnexprex@patch@last
            %
            stepcounternexprex@col@count%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringdefstringnexprex@cur@colarabicnexprex@col@count%
            %

            defnexprex@patch@else
            %
            ifmc@firstcol
            setcounternexprex@col@count0%
            fi
            nexprex@patch@last

            defnexprex@patch@error
            %
            GenericError
            Patching of stringmc@col@status@writespace failed
            %
            Make sure `colaction` was set as an option for `multicol`.%
            MessageBreak
            Else you're screwed, don't use the code provided here.MessageBreak%

            No further help available.%

            pretocmdmc@lastcol@status@writenexprex@patch@lastnexprex@patch@error
            pretocmdmc@col@status@writenexprex@patch@elsenexprex@patch@error
            newcommandcurrentcolumn
            %
            stepcounternexprex@current@column@call%
            protected@write@auxout
            %
            stringexpandafter
            stringglobal
            stringexpandafter
            stringlet
            stringcsnamespace
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@call%
            stringendcsname
            stringnexprex@cur@col
            %
            ifcsname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            csname
            nexprex@current@column@arabicnexprex@current@column@callendcsname
            fi

            makeatother


            begindocument
            beginmulticols5
            noindent
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            columnbreak\
            This is: currentcolumn
            endmulticols
            enddocument






            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jan 22 at 16:01









            SkillmonSkillmon

            22.1k11942




            22.1k11942












            • Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

              – manooooh
              Jan 22 at 16:13






            • 1





              @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

              – Skillmon
              Jan 22 at 17:05

















            • Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

              – manooooh
              Jan 22 at 16:13






            • 1





              @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

              – Skillmon
              Jan 22 at 17:05
















            Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

            – manooooh
            Jan 22 at 16:13





            Well done! Why we need at least 2 runs of LaTeX? Why should this happen?

            – manooooh
            Jan 22 at 16:13




            1




            1





            @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

            – Skillmon
            Jan 22 at 17:05





            @manooooh because the code I inject into mc@lastcol@status@write and mc@col@status@write is executed at ship out time and the counter isn't yet increased. Therefore we move the definitions of the current columns into the aux file.

            – Skillmon
            Jan 22 at 17:05


            Popular posts from this blog

            How to check contact read email or not when send email to Individual?

            Displaying single band from multi-band raster using QGIS

            How many registers does an x86_64 CPU actually have?