Was just rediscovering how to properly get floats to drop in where I want them in LaTeX export (right where I say vs. where LaTeX thinks is convenient). I knew I'd posted on this about a year ago and was trying to search for the thread. In the process, I came across this from the manual [1]:
,--- | To modify the placement option of the floating environment, | add something like ‘placement=[h!]’ to the attributes. `--- Now, I'm not sure what all the options are, but this didn't work for me. Only [H] properly dropped my floats in where I wanted them. Is there a reason for this? In looking in wikibooks, they seem to indicate that there are a few variants on the "here" option: [2] ,--- | h: Place the float here, i.e., approximately at the same point it occurs | in the source text (however, not exactly at the spot) | | !: Override internal parameters Latex uses for determining "good" float positions. | | H: Places the float at precisely the location in the LaTeX code. | Requires the float package,[1] e.g., \usepackage{float}. | This is somewhat equivalent to h!. `--- So, does my need for [H] mean that LaTeX just really, really, really wanted to space my images differently than I wanted? It does seem like h! *should* work based on the wikibooks description, but it didn't. Is [H] the only absolutely positive way to make sure floats are right where you want them based on the surrounding text? Thanks, John --- [1] http://orgmode.org/manual/Images-in-LaTeX-export.html [2] http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Floats,_Figures_and_Captions