This is probably best explained with an example. I have the following table, where the "A" cell spans two rows, and the "B" cell spans two columns.
\begin{table}[htdp]
\begin{tabular}{l|r|r}
\multirow{2}{*}{A} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{B} \\
& B1 & B2 \\
a & b1 & b2 \\
a & b1 & b2 \\
\end{tabular}
\end{table}
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
|A |_ _ _ _B_ _ _ _|
|_ _ _ _|_ _B1_ |_ _B2_ |
|a | b1| b2|
|a | b1| b2|
|a | b1| b2|
|_ _ _ _| _ _ _ |_ _ _ _|
I would like to center the text in the "A" cell, only. I would like to leave the rest of the column left-aligned. Giving:
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
| A |_ _ _ _B_ _ _ _|
|_ _ _ _|_ _B1_ |_ _B2_ |
|a | b1| b2|
|a | b1| b2|
|a | b1| b2|
|_ _ _ _| _ _ _ |_ _ _ _|
I'm sure this must be simple to do, but I can't seem to put my finger on it.
\hfil
will automatically calculate the width of the cell and insert a half-width spaceTo insert a full cell-width space, which will right-justify a single cell, use
\hfill
. There are also\vfil
and\vfill
analogues.I came across a similar problem, but had to use
\multirow{specified width}{}
instead of\multirow{*}{}
. Nesting multirow inside a multicolumn does not work in this case.I found
\multirow{specified width}{\centering text}
to work instead.That is could be helpful for someone
I think you need to do that with a fake
\multicolumn
:Inspiration from this FAQ.