One circle's diameter is different from others within a series of circles
I want to construct a series of circles which ranks shoulder to shoulder in every page footer. The number of circles is just the number of total pages, that is to say, each circle represents a page. At the center of each circle is the current page number.
It's easy to achieve this by foreach
from pgf
if diametes of all these circles are same. However, I want the circle which represents the current page has a larger diameter.
The typeset is like the attached figure produced by the following MWE.
Anyone can help me with this?
MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,color,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
cfoot{
begin{tikzpicture}
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](0,0)circle node{1};
draw[fill=red,text=white,radius=1](1.5,0)circle node{2};
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](3,0)circle node{3};
end{tikzpicture}
}
end{document}
tikz-pgf
add a comment |
I want to construct a series of circles which ranks shoulder to shoulder in every page footer. The number of circles is just the number of total pages, that is to say, each circle represents a page. At the center of each circle is the current page number.
It's easy to achieve this by foreach
from pgf
if diametes of all these circles are same. However, I want the circle which represents the current page has a larger diameter.
The typeset is like the attached figure produced by the following MWE.
Anyone can help me with this?
MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,color,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
cfoot{
begin{tikzpicture}
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](0,0)circle node{1};
draw[fill=red,text=white,radius=1](1.5,0)circle node{2};
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](3,0)circle node{3};
end{tikzpicture}
}
end{document}
tikz-pgf
add a comment |
I want to construct a series of circles which ranks shoulder to shoulder in every page footer. The number of circles is just the number of total pages, that is to say, each circle represents a page. At the center of each circle is the current page number.
It's easy to achieve this by foreach
from pgf
if diametes of all these circles are same. However, I want the circle which represents the current page has a larger diameter.
The typeset is like the attached figure produced by the following MWE.
Anyone can help me with this?
MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,color,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
cfoot{
begin{tikzpicture}
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](0,0)circle node{1};
draw[fill=red,text=white,radius=1](1.5,0)circle node{2};
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](3,0)circle node{3};
end{tikzpicture}
}
end{document}
tikz-pgf
I want to construct a series of circles which ranks shoulder to shoulder in every page footer. The number of circles is just the number of total pages, that is to say, each circle represents a page. At the center of each circle is the current page number.
It's easy to achieve this by foreach
from pgf
if diametes of all these circles are same. However, I want the circle which represents the current page has a larger diameter.
The typeset is like the attached figure produced by the following MWE.
Anyone can help me with this?
MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,color,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
cfoot{
begin{tikzpicture}
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](0,0)circle node{1};
draw[fill=red,text=white,radius=1](1.5,0)circle node{2};
draw[fill=gray,text=white,radius=0.5](3,0)circle node{3};
end{tikzpicture}
}
end{document}
tikz-pgf
tikz-pgf
asked 4 hours ago
lyllyl
69438
69438
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Something like that?
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
Of course, one can customize the output in many ways.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,draw,thick,font=sffamilyLargebfseries,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,draw,font=sffamilybfseries,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
And if you find circles a bit dull, you could do
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikzducks,tikzlings}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning,backgrounds}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[font=sffamilyLargebfseries,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.4,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
marmot
end{scope}
else
node[font=sffamilybfseries,text=black,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.3,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
koala
end{scope}
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
1
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statementcoordinate (cn-0);
. What doescn
mean in this context.
– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmotgetrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of{1}
. I don't find further explaination inrefcount
document.
– lyl
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of thelastpage
documentation.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@lylcn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it bycute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
Something like that?
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
Of course, one can customize the output in many ways.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,draw,thick,font=sffamilyLargebfseries,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,draw,font=sffamilybfseries,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
And if you find circles a bit dull, you could do
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikzducks,tikzlings}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning,backgrounds}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[font=sffamilyLargebfseries,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.4,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
marmot
end{scope}
else
node[font=sffamilybfseries,text=black,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.3,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
koala
end{scope}
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
1
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statementcoordinate (cn-0);
. What doescn
mean in this context.
– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmotgetrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of{1}
. I don't find further explaination inrefcount
document.
– lyl
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of thelastpage
documentation.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@lylcn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it bycute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Something like that?
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
Of course, one can customize the output in many ways.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,draw,thick,font=sffamilyLargebfseries,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,draw,font=sffamilybfseries,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
And if you find circles a bit dull, you could do
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikzducks,tikzlings}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning,backgrounds}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[font=sffamilyLargebfseries,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.4,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
marmot
end{scope}
else
node[font=sffamilybfseries,text=black,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.3,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
koala
end{scope}
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
1
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statementcoordinate (cn-0);
. What doescn
mean in this context.
– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmotgetrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of{1}
. I don't find further explaination inrefcount
document.
– lyl
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of thelastpage
documentation.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@lylcn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it bycute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Something like that?
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
Of course, one can customize the output in many ways.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,draw,thick,font=sffamilyLargebfseries,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,draw,font=sffamilybfseries,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
And if you find circles a bit dull, you could do
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikzducks,tikzlings}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning,backgrounds}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[font=sffamilyLargebfseries,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.4,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
marmot
end{scope}
else
node[font=sffamilybfseries,text=black,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.3,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
koala
end{scope}
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
Something like that?
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
Of course, one can customize the output in many ways.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikz}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[circle,draw,thick,font=sffamilyLargebfseries,fill=red,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
else
node[circle,draw,font=sffamilybfseries,fill=gray,text=white,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
And if you find circles a bit dull, you could do
documentclass{article}
usepackage{fancyhdr,geometry,lastpage,refcount,lipsum,tikzducks,tikzlings}
geometry{showframe}
usetikzlibrary{positioning,backgrounds}
begin{document}
pagestyle{fancy}
fancyhf{}
renewcommand{footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
some text...
newcounter{lastpagenumber}%
setcounter{lastpagenumber}{getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}}%
cfoot{begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (cn-0);
foreach X [remember=X as LastX (initially 0)] in {1,...,thelastpagenumber}
{ifnumX=thepage
node[font=sffamilyLargebfseries,text=white,minimum size=1cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.4,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
marmot
end{scope}
else
node[font=sffamilybfseries,text=black,minimum size=0.5cm,right=0pt of cn-LastX] (cn-X) {X};
begin{scope}[scale=0.3,on background layer,shift={(cn-X.center)},yshift=-3em]
koala
end{scope}
fi
}
end{tikzpicture}
}
lipsum[1-31]
end{document}
edited 3 hours ago
answered 4 hours ago
marmotmarmot
107k5129243
107k5129243
1
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statementcoordinate (cn-0);
. What doescn
mean in this context.
– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmotgetrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of{1}
. I don't find further explaination inrefcount
document.
– lyl
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of thelastpage
documentation.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@lylcn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it bycute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statementcoordinate (cn-0);
. What doescn
mean in this context.
– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmotgetrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of{1}
. I don't find further explaination inrefcount
document.
– lyl
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of thelastpage
documentation.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@lylcn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it bycute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
1
1
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
Thank you so much for your excellent solutions! That's just what I want!
– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statement
coordinate (cn-0);
. What does cn
mean in this context.– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmot can you please explain the statement
coordinate (cn-0);
. What does cn
mean in this context.– subham soni
2 hours ago
@marmot
getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of {1}
. I don't find further explaination in refcount
document.– lyl
2 hours ago
@marmot
getrefbykeydefault{LastPage}{page}{1}
, here how to understand the function of {1}
. I don't find further explaination in refcount
document.– lyl
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of the
lastpage
documentation.– marmot
2 hours ago
@lyl I literally copied it from page 4 of the
lastpage
documentation.– marmot
2 hours ago
@lyl
cn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it by cute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)– marmot
1 hour ago
@lyl
cn
is just a random name. (In my imagination it stands for circular node, but you could replace it by cute furry rodent
, say, and it will still work.)– marmot
1 hour ago
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