Hi, I have a question about the LaTeX export of images.
I wondering why we treat differently images with caption/label than the ones that do not have caption/label. I suppose that we want to make the difference between images that appear in the middle of the text and those who will appear in a float (with possibly label and caption). 1) Images in the middle of the text If I have the following example: ,---- | For this example, I will use this image [[myimage.png]] which is a very good one. `---- Then, when exported, it produces the following LaTeX code: ,---- | For this example, I will the use this image | \centerline{\includegraphics{myimage}} which is a very good one. `---- Which produces weird layout when compiled to PDF. In this case, we should just generate \includegraphics{myimage} without the centerline command. 2) Images in floats In the case of floats, the correct generated code should be something like: \begin{figure}[htb] \centering \includegraphics{myimage} \label{LABEL} \caption{CAPTION} \end{figure} and not \begin{figure}[htb] \centerline{\includegraphics{myimage}} \label{LABEL} \caption{CAPTION} \end{figure} This can also be fixed quickly I think. Now, the question is: is it correct to identify a "float" image thanks to its caption and label attributes? Can't we have a "float" image without label or caption? Thanks for your help and input. Francesco _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode