Table Formatting using siunitx












8














I am trying to make a table with four columns: three of the columns are to be center aligned, and one is to be aligned by decimal places ( using S[table-format=3.2]). Here is my code:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}

begin{document}

begin{tabular}{c c S[table-format=3.2] c}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
%hline hline
midrule midrule
Prefix & Symbol & Multiplication Factor & $ldots$ in Scientific Notation \
midrule
giga & G & 1000000000 & $10^9$ \
mega & M & 1000000 & $10^6$ \
kilo & k & 1000 & $10^3$ \
deca & D & 10 & $10^1$ \
rowcolor{gray!20} - & - & 1 & $10^0$ \
deci & d & 0.1 & $10^{-1}$ \
centi & c & 0.01 & $10^{-2}$ \
milli & m & 0.001 & $10^{-3}$ \
micro & $mu$ & 0.000001 & $10^{-6}$ \
nano & n & 0.000000001 & $10^{-9}$ \
bottomrule
end{tabular}

end{document}


However, here is my result:



enter image description here



The columns are overlapping, and I cannot figure out how to fix it. I can't think of a way to set the width of the third column, as that would fix the issue, but to my understanding, you can only fix the width by doing something like p{5cm}; the S type will not allow that.










share|improve this question


















  • 3




    you need {...} around the heading so it isn't parsed as a number but main issue is you have specified a format of 3.2 so 2 decimal places but your numbers are 0.000000001 which have rather more than 2 digits after the point. Use a format that matches your data
    – David Carlisle
    Jan 4 at 15:59












  • How would I format it then? Sorry, I've never used siunitx before. The max amount of digits is 9, so would I put 3.9?
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:03










  • It just hit me, the number left of . is the number of digits left of the decimal and same with the right. So I should put 10.9.
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:07






  • 1




    Slightly off-topic: The shortened form of deca (deka works too...) is da, not D.
    – Mico
    Jan 4 at 16:15










  • Good point... I was not aware of this
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:41
















8














I am trying to make a table with four columns: three of the columns are to be center aligned, and one is to be aligned by decimal places ( using S[table-format=3.2]). Here is my code:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}

begin{document}

begin{tabular}{c c S[table-format=3.2] c}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
%hline hline
midrule midrule
Prefix & Symbol & Multiplication Factor & $ldots$ in Scientific Notation \
midrule
giga & G & 1000000000 & $10^9$ \
mega & M & 1000000 & $10^6$ \
kilo & k & 1000 & $10^3$ \
deca & D & 10 & $10^1$ \
rowcolor{gray!20} - & - & 1 & $10^0$ \
deci & d & 0.1 & $10^{-1}$ \
centi & c & 0.01 & $10^{-2}$ \
milli & m & 0.001 & $10^{-3}$ \
micro & $mu$ & 0.000001 & $10^{-6}$ \
nano & n & 0.000000001 & $10^{-9}$ \
bottomrule
end{tabular}

end{document}


However, here is my result:



enter image description here



The columns are overlapping, and I cannot figure out how to fix it. I can't think of a way to set the width of the third column, as that would fix the issue, but to my understanding, you can only fix the width by doing something like p{5cm}; the S type will not allow that.










share|improve this question


















  • 3




    you need {...} around the heading so it isn't parsed as a number but main issue is you have specified a format of 3.2 so 2 decimal places but your numbers are 0.000000001 which have rather more than 2 digits after the point. Use a format that matches your data
    – David Carlisle
    Jan 4 at 15:59












  • How would I format it then? Sorry, I've never used siunitx before. The max amount of digits is 9, so would I put 3.9?
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:03










  • It just hit me, the number left of . is the number of digits left of the decimal and same with the right. So I should put 10.9.
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:07






  • 1




    Slightly off-topic: The shortened form of deca (deka works too...) is da, not D.
    – Mico
    Jan 4 at 16:15










  • Good point... I was not aware of this
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:41














8












8








8







I am trying to make a table with four columns: three of the columns are to be center aligned, and one is to be aligned by decimal places ( using S[table-format=3.2]). Here is my code:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}

begin{document}

begin{tabular}{c c S[table-format=3.2] c}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
%hline hline
midrule midrule
Prefix & Symbol & Multiplication Factor & $ldots$ in Scientific Notation \
midrule
giga & G & 1000000000 & $10^9$ \
mega & M & 1000000 & $10^6$ \
kilo & k & 1000 & $10^3$ \
deca & D & 10 & $10^1$ \
rowcolor{gray!20} - & - & 1 & $10^0$ \
deci & d & 0.1 & $10^{-1}$ \
centi & c & 0.01 & $10^{-2}$ \
milli & m & 0.001 & $10^{-3}$ \
micro & $mu$ & 0.000001 & $10^{-6}$ \
nano & n & 0.000000001 & $10^{-9}$ \
bottomrule
end{tabular}

end{document}


However, here is my result:



enter image description here



The columns are overlapping, and I cannot figure out how to fix it. I can't think of a way to set the width of the third column, as that would fix the issue, but to my understanding, you can only fix the width by doing something like p{5cm}; the S type will not allow that.










share|improve this question













I am trying to make a table with four columns: three of the columns are to be center aligned, and one is to be aligned by decimal places ( using S[table-format=3.2]). Here is my code:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}

begin{document}

begin{tabular}{c c S[table-format=3.2] c}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
%hline hline
midrule midrule
Prefix & Symbol & Multiplication Factor & $ldots$ in Scientific Notation \
midrule
giga & G & 1000000000 & $10^9$ \
mega & M & 1000000 & $10^6$ \
kilo & k & 1000 & $10^3$ \
deca & D & 10 & $10^1$ \
rowcolor{gray!20} - & - & 1 & $10^0$ \
deci & d & 0.1 & $10^{-1}$ \
centi & c & 0.01 & $10^{-2}$ \
milli & m & 0.001 & $10^{-3}$ \
micro & $mu$ & 0.000001 & $10^{-6}$ \
nano & n & 0.000000001 & $10^{-9}$ \
bottomrule
end{tabular}

end{document}


However, here is my result:



enter image description here



The columns are overlapping, and I cannot figure out how to fix it. I can't think of a way to set the width of the third column, as that would fix the issue, but to my understanding, you can only fix the width by doing something like p{5cm}; the S type will not allow that.







tables siunitx






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 4 at 15:49









Aiden KennyAiden Kenny

3106




3106








  • 3




    you need {...} around the heading so it isn't parsed as a number but main issue is you have specified a format of 3.2 so 2 decimal places but your numbers are 0.000000001 which have rather more than 2 digits after the point. Use a format that matches your data
    – David Carlisle
    Jan 4 at 15:59












  • How would I format it then? Sorry, I've never used siunitx before. The max amount of digits is 9, so would I put 3.9?
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:03










  • It just hit me, the number left of . is the number of digits left of the decimal and same with the right. So I should put 10.9.
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:07






  • 1




    Slightly off-topic: The shortened form of deca (deka works too...) is da, not D.
    – Mico
    Jan 4 at 16:15










  • Good point... I was not aware of this
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:41














  • 3




    you need {...} around the heading so it isn't parsed as a number but main issue is you have specified a format of 3.2 so 2 decimal places but your numbers are 0.000000001 which have rather more than 2 digits after the point. Use a format that matches your data
    – David Carlisle
    Jan 4 at 15:59












  • How would I format it then? Sorry, I've never used siunitx before. The max amount of digits is 9, so would I put 3.9?
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:03










  • It just hit me, the number left of . is the number of digits left of the decimal and same with the right. So I should put 10.9.
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:07






  • 1




    Slightly off-topic: The shortened form of deca (deka works too...) is da, not D.
    – Mico
    Jan 4 at 16:15










  • Good point... I was not aware of this
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:41








3




3




you need {...} around the heading so it isn't parsed as a number but main issue is you have specified a format of 3.2 so 2 decimal places but your numbers are 0.000000001 which have rather more than 2 digits after the point. Use a format that matches your data
– David Carlisle
Jan 4 at 15:59






you need {...} around the heading so it isn't parsed as a number but main issue is you have specified a format of 3.2 so 2 decimal places but your numbers are 0.000000001 which have rather more than 2 digits after the point. Use a format that matches your data
– David Carlisle
Jan 4 at 15:59














How would I format it then? Sorry, I've never used siunitx before. The max amount of digits is 9, so would I put 3.9?
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:03




How would I format it then? Sorry, I've never used siunitx before. The max amount of digits is 9, so would I put 3.9?
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:03












It just hit me, the number left of . is the number of digits left of the decimal and same with the right. So I should put 10.9.
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:07




It just hit me, the number left of . is the number of digits left of the decimal and same with the right. So I should put 10.9.
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:07




1




1




Slightly off-topic: The shortened form of deca (deka works too...) is da, not D.
– Mico
Jan 4 at 16:15




Slightly off-topic: The shortened form of deca (deka works too...) is da, not D.
– Mico
Jan 4 at 16:15












Good point... I was not aware of this
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:41




Good point... I was not aware of this
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:41










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















9














As David Carlisle has already pointed out in a comment, you must (a) change S[table-format=3.2] to S[table-format=10.9] and (b) encase the string Multiplication Factor in curly braces, to keep it from being interpreted by siunitx.



In addition, you may want to (c) write si{micro} instead of $mu$ in the second column. The text-mu and math-mu glyphs look quite different in most fonts. Finally, since you're using the siunitx package, why not (d) use the S column type for the final column as well and write e9 thru e-9 instead of $10^9$ thru $10^{-9}$?



A separate observation: the standard short form of deca (or deka) is da, not D. For sure, si{deca} (si{deka} works too...) produces da.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage[table]{xcolor}
begin{document}
noindent
begin{tabular}{l c S[table-format=10.9] S[retain-zero-exponent=true]}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
addlinespace %midrule
Prefix & Symbol & {Multiplication Factor} & {dots in Scientific Notation} \
midrule
giga & si{giga} & 1000000000 & e9 \
mega & si{mega} & 1000000 & e6 \
kilo & si{kilo} & 1000 & e3 \
deca & si{deka} & 10 & e1 \
rowcolor{gray!20} -- & -- & 1 & e0 \
deci & si{deci} & 0.1 & e-1 \
centi & si{centi}& 0.01 & e-2 \
milli & si{milli}& 0.001 & e-3 \
micro & si{micro}& 0.000001 & e-6 \
nano & si{nano} & 0.000000001& e-9 \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:46











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1 Answer
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9














As David Carlisle has already pointed out in a comment, you must (a) change S[table-format=3.2] to S[table-format=10.9] and (b) encase the string Multiplication Factor in curly braces, to keep it from being interpreted by siunitx.



In addition, you may want to (c) write si{micro} instead of $mu$ in the second column. The text-mu and math-mu glyphs look quite different in most fonts. Finally, since you're using the siunitx package, why not (d) use the S column type for the final column as well and write e9 thru e-9 instead of $10^9$ thru $10^{-9}$?



A separate observation: the standard short form of deca (or deka) is da, not D. For sure, si{deca} (si{deka} works too...) produces da.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage[table]{xcolor}
begin{document}
noindent
begin{tabular}{l c S[table-format=10.9] S[retain-zero-exponent=true]}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
addlinespace %midrule
Prefix & Symbol & {Multiplication Factor} & {dots in Scientific Notation} \
midrule
giga & si{giga} & 1000000000 & e9 \
mega & si{mega} & 1000000 & e6 \
kilo & si{kilo} & 1000 & e3 \
deca & si{deka} & 10 & e1 \
rowcolor{gray!20} -- & -- & 1 & e0 \
deci & si{deci} & 0.1 & e-1 \
centi & si{centi}& 0.01 & e-2 \
milli & si{milli}& 0.001 & e-3 \
micro & si{micro}& 0.000001 & e-6 \
nano & si{nano} & 0.000000001& e-9 \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:46
















9














As David Carlisle has already pointed out in a comment, you must (a) change S[table-format=3.2] to S[table-format=10.9] and (b) encase the string Multiplication Factor in curly braces, to keep it from being interpreted by siunitx.



In addition, you may want to (c) write si{micro} instead of $mu$ in the second column. The text-mu and math-mu glyphs look quite different in most fonts. Finally, since you're using the siunitx package, why not (d) use the S column type for the final column as well and write e9 thru e-9 instead of $10^9$ thru $10^{-9}$?



A separate observation: the standard short form of deca (or deka) is da, not D. For sure, si{deca} (si{deka} works too...) produces da.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage[table]{xcolor}
begin{document}
noindent
begin{tabular}{l c S[table-format=10.9] S[retain-zero-exponent=true]}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
addlinespace %midrule
Prefix & Symbol & {Multiplication Factor} & {dots in Scientific Notation} \
midrule
giga & si{giga} & 1000000000 & e9 \
mega & si{mega} & 1000000 & e6 \
kilo & si{kilo} & 1000 & e3 \
deca & si{deka} & 10 & e1 \
rowcolor{gray!20} -- & -- & 1 & e0 \
deci & si{deci} & 0.1 & e-1 \
centi & si{centi}& 0.01 & e-2 \
milli & si{milli}& 0.001 & e-3 \
micro & si{micro}& 0.000001 & e-6 \
nano & si{nano} & 0.000000001& e-9 \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:46














9












9








9






As David Carlisle has already pointed out in a comment, you must (a) change S[table-format=3.2] to S[table-format=10.9] and (b) encase the string Multiplication Factor in curly braces, to keep it from being interpreted by siunitx.



In addition, you may want to (c) write si{micro} instead of $mu$ in the second column. The text-mu and math-mu glyphs look quite different in most fonts. Finally, since you're using the siunitx package, why not (d) use the S column type for the final column as well and write e9 thru e-9 instead of $10^9$ thru $10^{-9}$?



A separate observation: the standard short form of deca (or deka) is da, not D. For sure, si{deca} (si{deka} works too...) produces da.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage[table]{xcolor}
begin{document}
noindent
begin{tabular}{l c S[table-format=10.9] S[retain-zero-exponent=true]}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
addlinespace %midrule
Prefix & Symbol & {Multiplication Factor} & {dots in Scientific Notation} \
midrule
giga & si{giga} & 1000000000 & e9 \
mega & si{mega} & 1000000 & e6 \
kilo & si{kilo} & 1000 & e3 \
deca & si{deka} & 10 & e1 \
rowcolor{gray!20} -- & -- & 1 & e0 \
deci & si{deci} & 0.1 & e-1 \
centi & si{centi}& 0.01 & e-2 \
milli & si{milli}& 0.001 & e-3 \
micro & si{micro}& 0.000001 & e-6 \
nano & si{nano} & 0.000000001& e-9 \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{document}





share|improve this answer












As David Carlisle has already pointed out in a comment, you must (a) change S[table-format=3.2] to S[table-format=10.9] and (b) encase the string Multiplication Factor in curly braces, to keep it from being interpreted by siunitx.



In addition, you may want to (c) write si{micro} instead of $mu$ in the second column. The text-mu and math-mu glyphs look quite different in most fonts. Finally, since you're using the siunitx package, why not (d) use the S column type for the final column as well and write e9 thru e-9 instead of $10^9$ thru $10^{-9}$?



A separate observation: the standard short form of deca (or deka) is da, not D. For sure, si{deca} (si{deka} works too...) produces da.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{siunitx}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage[table]{xcolor}
begin{document}
noindent
begin{tabular}{l c S[table-format=10.9] S[retain-zero-exponent=true]}
toprule
multicolumn{4}{c}{SI Prefixes} \
addlinespace %midrule
Prefix & Symbol & {Multiplication Factor} & {dots in Scientific Notation} \
midrule
giga & si{giga} & 1000000000 & e9 \
mega & si{mega} & 1000000 & e6 \
kilo & si{kilo} & 1000 & e3 \
deca & si{deka} & 10 & e1 \
rowcolor{gray!20} -- & -- & 1 & e0 \
deci & si{deci} & 0.1 & e-1 \
centi & si{centi}& 0.01 & e-2 \
milli & si{milli}& 0.001 & e-3 \
micro & si{micro}& 0.000001 & e-6 \
nano & si{nano} & 0.000000001& e-9 \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{document}






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 4 at 16:30









MicoMico

274k30371757




274k30371757








  • 2




    What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:46














  • 2




    What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
    – Aiden Kenny
    Jan 4 at 16:46








2




2




What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:46




What a great, comprehensive answer! Thanks!
– Aiden Kenny
Jan 4 at 16:46


















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