How to position text in the top of all columns in the upper row of a table [diagbox]











up vote
1
down vote

favorite












How can I get '1', '2', '3', '4', and 'Supply' (i.e. the entries in the first row (but in different columns)) on the same height (vertical position) as 'Destination' (i.e. at the top of the columns instead of in the middle of the columns)?
Due to using the 'diagbox' option, the vertical position of these elements is off.



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{pict2e}
usepackage{keyval}
usepackage{calc}
usepackage{fp}
usepackage{diagbox}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage{tabularx,colortbl}
begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
centering
caption[caption]{Table 1}
label{tab:table1}
begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
hline
diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}} & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
hline
$1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
$2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
$3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
$4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
hline
textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
hline
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}









share|improve this question
























  • please be so kind ans extend your code snippet to complete small document, which we can copy and test as it is in our computers! now wee need to gues which package you use for this table etc ...
    – Zarko
    Dec 1 at 23:38










  • @Zarko Done, I use relatively many packages so it was kind of difficult to select the useful ones, but I think this represents the problem well.
    – Anna
    Dec 1 at 23:48















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












How can I get '1', '2', '3', '4', and 'Supply' (i.e. the entries in the first row (but in different columns)) on the same height (vertical position) as 'Destination' (i.e. at the top of the columns instead of in the middle of the columns)?
Due to using the 'diagbox' option, the vertical position of these elements is off.



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{pict2e}
usepackage{keyval}
usepackage{calc}
usepackage{fp}
usepackage{diagbox}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage{tabularx,colortbl}
begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
centering
caption[caption]{Table 1}
label{tab:table1}
begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
hline
diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}} & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
hline
$1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
$2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
$3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
$4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
hline
textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
hline
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}









share|improve this question
























  • please be so kind ans extend your code snippet to complete small document, which we can copy and test as it is in our computers! now wee need to gues which package you use for this table etc ...
    – Zarko
    Dec 1 at 23:38










  • @Zarko Done, I use relatively many packages so it was kind of difficult to select the useful ones, but I think this represents the problem well.
    – Anna
    Dec 1 at 23:48













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











How can I get '1', '2', '3', '4', and 'Supply' (i.e. the entries in the first row (but in different columns)) on the same height (vertical position) as 'Destination' (i.e. at the top of the columns instead of in the middle of the columns)?
Due to using the 'diagbox' option, the vertical position of these elements is off.



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{pict2e}
usepackage{keyval}
usepackage{calc}
usepackage{fp}
usepackage{diagbox}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage{tabularx,colortbl}
begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
centering
caption[caption]{Table 1}
label{tab:table1}
begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
hline
diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}} & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
hline
$1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
$2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
$3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
$4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
hline
textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
hline
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}









share|improve this question















How can I get '1', '2', '3', '4', and 'Supply' (i.e. the entries in the first row (but in different columns)) on the same height (vertical position) as 'Destination' (i.e. at the top of the columns instead of in the middle of the columns)?
Due to using the 'diagbox' option, the vertical position of these elements is off.



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{pict2e}
usepackage{keyval}
usepackage{calc}
usepackage{fp}
usepackage{diagbox}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage{tabularx,colortbl}
begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
centering
caption[caption]{Table 1}
label{tab:table1}
begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
hline
diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}} & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
hline
$1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
$2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
$3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
$4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
hline
textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
hline
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}






tables diagbox






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 1 at 23:43

























asked Dec 1 at 23:10









Anna

276




276












  • please be so kind ans extend your code snippet to complete small document, which we can copy and test as it is in our computers! now wee need to gues which package you use for this table etc ...
    – Zarko
    Dec 1 at 23:38










  • @Zarko Done, I use relatively many packages so it was kind of difficult to select the useful ones, but I think this represents the problem well.
    – Anna
    Dec 1 at 23:48


















  • please be so kind ans extend your code snippet to complete small document, which we can copy and test as it is in our computers! now wee need to gues which package you use for this table etc ...
    – Zarko
    Dec 1 at 23:38










  • @Zarko Done, I use relatively many packages so it was kind of difficult to select the useful ones, but I think this represents the problem well.
    – Anna
    Dec 1 at 23:48
















please be so kind ans extend your code snippet to complete small document, which we can copy and test as it is in our computers! now wee need to gues which package you use for this table etc ...
– Zarko
Dec 1 at 23:38




please be so kind ans extend your code snippet to complete small document, which we can copy and test as it is in our computers! now wee need to gues which package you use for this table etc ...
– Zarko
Dec 1 at 23:38












@Zarko Done, I use relatively many packages so it was kind of difficult to select the useful ones, but I think this represents the problem well.
– Anna
Dec 1 at 23:48




@Zarko Done, I use relatively many packages so it was kind of difficult to select the useful ones, but I think this represents the problem well.
– Anna
Dec 1 at 23:48










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote



accepted










meanwhile when you wait on desired solution, see if the following redesign of your table is acceptable to you:



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
%usepackage{pict2e} % not needed in this mwe
%usepackage{keyval} % not needed in this mwe
%usepackage{calc} % not needed in this mwe
%usepackage{fp} % not needed in this mwe
%usepackage{diagbox} % not needed in this mwe
usepackage{booktabs,
multirow, % <--- new
tabularx} % <--- new
usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
caption[short caption]{long caption}
label{tab:table1}
centering
begin{tabular}{*{6}{>{$}c<{$}} }
toprule
multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}
& multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
& multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
cmidrule{2-5}
& 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & \
midrule
1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
midrule
textbf{Demand}
& d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}


edit: or you more prefer the following solution:



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{diagbox}
usepackage{booktabs,
multirow} % <--- new
usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
centering
caption[caption]{Table 1}
label{tab:table1}
begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
hline
multirow{2}{*}{
diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}}
}
& $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
& & & & & \
hline
$1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
$2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
$3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
$4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
hline
textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
hline
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}


which gives:



enter image description here



it's probably not difficult to guess which solution I prefer ...



addendum:



according to your new question in the comment below ... if i correctly understood it, than you looking for the following:



enter image description here



in above table for the first column is used column type S provided by the package siunitx:



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{booktabs,
multirow} % <--- new
usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- instead of colortbl
usepackage{siunitx} % <--- new

begin{document}
begin{table}[h!]
caption[short caption]{long caption}
label{tab:table1}
centering
begin{tabular}{S[table-format=1.0,
table-space-text-post={*}] % <--- new
*{5}{>{$}c<{$}}
}
toprule
{multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}}
& multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
& multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
cmidrule{2-5}
& 1 & 2 & 3^* & 4^ast & \ % two cases how to write *
midrule
1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
3* & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
4* & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
midrule
textbf{Demand}
& d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
bottomrule
end{tabular}
end{table}
end{document}


in the case that * is intended to write some notes in table, than may the threeparttable can help you in this.






share|improve this answer























  • The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 12:40










  • One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 13:03










  • @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
    – Zarko
    Dec 2 at 13:35










  • I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 14:22












  • i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
    – Zarko
    Dec 2 at 14:40


















up vote
2
down vote













It is quite possible with some raiseboxes, but I don't think it's so nice:



documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
usepackage{pict2e}
usepackage{keyval}
usepackage{calc}
usepackage{fp}
usepackage{diagbox}
usepackage{booktabs}
usepackage{tabularx,colortbl, makecell, caption}

begin{document}

begin{table}[h!]
centering
caption[caption]{Table 1}
label{tab:table1}
begin{tabular}{|l|*{4}{>{$}c<{$}}|>{$}c<{$}|}
hline
diagbox[innerwidth =40mm, height =15mm]%,innerleftsep = 12pt
{raisebox{2.5ex}{textbf{Source}}}{raisebox{-0.5ex}{textbf{Destination}}} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$1$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$2$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$3$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$4$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{textbf{Supply}} \
hline
1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
hline
textbf{Demand} & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T\
hline
end{tabular}
end{table}

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "85"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f462761%2fhow-to-position-text-in-the-top-of-all-columns-in-the-upper-row-of-a-table-diag%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted










    meanwhile when you wait on desired solution, see if the following redesign of your table is acceptable to you:



    enter image description here



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    %usepackage{pict2e} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{keyval} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{calc} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{fp} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{diagbox} % not needed in this mwe
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow, % <--- new
    tabularx} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{*{6}{>{$}c<{$}} }
    toprule
    multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & \
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    edit: or you more prefer the following solution:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{diagbox}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    centering
    caption[caption]{Table 1}
    label{tab:table1}
    begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
    hline
    multirow{2}{*}{
    diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}}
    }
    & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
    & & & & & \
    hline
    $1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
    $2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
    $3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
    $4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
    hline
    textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
    hline
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    which gives:



    enter image description here



    it's probably not difficult to guess which solution I prefer ...



    addendum:



    according to your new question in the comment below ... if i correctly understood it, than you looking for the following:



    enter image description here



    in above table for the first column is used column type S provided by the package siunitx:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- instead of colortbl
    usepackage{siunitx} % <--- new

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{S[table-format=1.0,
    table-space-text-post={*}] % <--- new
    *{5}{>{$}c<{$}}
    }
    toprule
    {multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3^* & 4^ast & \ % two cases how to write *
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3* & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4* & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    in the case that * is intended to write some notes in table, than may the threeparttable can help you in this.






    share|improve this answer























    • The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 12:40










    • One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 13:03










    • @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 13:35










    • I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 14:22












    • i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 14:40















    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted










    meanwhile when you wait on desired solution, see if the following redesign of your table is acceptable to you:



    enter image description here



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    %usepackage{pict2e} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{keyval} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{calc} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{fp} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{diagbox} % not needed in this mwe
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow, % <--- new
    tabularx} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{*{6}{>{$}c<{$}} }
    toprule
    multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & \
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    edit: or you more prefer the following solution:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{diagbox}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    centering
    caption[caption]{Table 1}
    label{tab:table1}
    begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
    hline
    multirow{2}{*}{
    diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}}
    }
    & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
    & & & & & \
    hline
    $1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
    $2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
    $3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
    $4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
    hline
    textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
    hline
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    which gives:



    enter image description here



    it's probably not difficult to guess which solution I prefer ...



    addendum:



    according to your new question in the comment below ... if i correctly understood it, than you looking for the following:



    enter image description here



    in above table for the first column is used column type S provided by the package siunitx:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- instead of colortbl
    usepackage{siunitx} % <--- new

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{S[table-format=1.0,
    table-space-text-post={*}] % <--- new
    *{5}{>{$}c<{$}}
    }
    toprule
    {multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3^* & 4^ast & \ % two cases how to write *
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3* & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4* & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    in the case that * is intended to write some notes in table, than may the threeparttable can help you in this.






    share|improve this answer























    • The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 12:40










    • One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 13:03










    • @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 13:35










    • I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 14:22












    • i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 14:40













    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    3
    down vote



    accepted






    meanwhile when you wait on desired solution, see if the following redesign of your table is acceptable to you:



    enter image description here



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    %usepackage{pict2e} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{keyval} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{calc} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{fp} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{diagbox} % not needed in this mwe
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow, % <--- new
    tabularx} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{*{6}{>{$}c<{$}} }
    toprule
    multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & \
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    edit: or you more prefer the following solution:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{diagbox}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    centering
    caption[caption]{Table 1}
    label{tab:table1}
    begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
    hline
    multirow{2}{*}{
    diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}}
    }
    & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
    & & & & & \
    hline
    $1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
    $2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
    $3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
    $4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
    hline
    textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
    hline
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    which gives:



    enter image description here



    it's probably not difficult to guess which solution I prefer ...



    addendum:



    according to your new question in the comment below ... if i correctly understood it, than you looking for the following:



    enter image description here



    in above table for the first column is used column type S provided by the package siunitx:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- instead of colortbl
    usepackage{siunitx} % <--- new

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{S[table-format=1.0,
    table-space-text-post={*}] % <--- new
    *{5}{>{$}c<{$}}
    }
    toprule
    {multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3^* & 4^ast & \ % two cases how to write *
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3* & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4* & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    in the case that * is intended to write some notes in table, than may the threeparttable can help you in this.






    share|improve this answer














    meanwhile when you wait on desired solution, see if the following redesign of your table is acceptable to you:



    enter image description here



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    %usepackage{pict2e} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{keyval} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{calc} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{fp} % not needed in this mwe
    %usepackage{diagbox} % not needed in this mwe
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow, % <--- new
    tabularx} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{*{6}{>{$}c<{$}} }
    toprule
    multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & \
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    edit: or you more prefer the following solution:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{diagbox}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- changed from colortbl

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    centering
    caption[caption]{Table 1}
    label{tab:table1}
    begin{tabular}{|l|cccc|c|}
    hline
    multirow{2}{*}{
    diagbox{textbf{Source}}{textbf{Destination}}
    }
    & $1$ & $2$ & $3$ & $4$ & textbf{Supply} \
    & & & & & \
    hline
    $1$ & $c_{11}$ & $c_{12}$ & $c_{13}$ & $c_{14}$ & $s_1$ \
    $2$ & $c_{21}$ & $c_{22}$ & $c_{23}$ & $c_{24}$ & $s_2$ \
    $3$ & $c_{31}$ & $c_{32}$ & $c_{33}$ & $c_{34}$ & $s_3$ \
    $4$ & $c_{41}$ & $c_{42}$ & $c_{43}$ & $c_{44}$ & $s_4$ \
    hline
    textbf{Demand} & $d_1$ & $d_2$ & $d_3$ & $d_4$ & $T$\
    hline
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    which gives:



    enter image description here



    it's probably not difficult to guess which solution I prefer ...



    addendum:



    according to your new question in the comment below ... if i correctly understood it, than you looking for the following:



    enter image description here



    in above table for the first column is used column type S provided by the package siunitx:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{booktabs,
    multirow} % <--- new
    usepackage[table]{xcolor} % <--- instead of colortbl
    usepackage{siunitx} % <--- new

    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h!]
    caption[short caption]{long caption}
    label{tab:table1}
    centering
    begin{tabular}{S[table-format=1.0,
    table-space-text-post={*}] % <--- new
    *{5}{>{$}c<{$}}
    }
    toprule
    {multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Source}}}
    & multicolumn{4}{c}{textbf{Destination}}
    & multirow{2.4}{*}{textbf{Supply}} \
    cmidrule{2-5}
    & 1 & 2 & 3^* & 4^ast & \ % two cases how to write *
    midrule
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3* & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4* & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    midrule
    textbf{Demand}
    & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T \
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    in the case that * is intended to write some notes in table, than may the threeparttable can help you in this.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 2 at 14:58

























    answered Dec 2 at 0:37









    Zarko

    118k865155




    118k865155












    • The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 12:40










    • One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 13:03










    • @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 13:35










    • I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 14:22












    • i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 14:40


















    • The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 12:40










    • One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 13:03










    • @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 13:35










    • I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
      – Anna
      Dec 2 at 14:22












    • i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
      – Zarko
      Dec 2 at 14:40
















    The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 12:40




    The first table is absolutely beautiful. Yeah, I think I'll go for that one, since it looks definitely better than what I first intended. Thank you.
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 12:40












    One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 13:03




    One small question remaining though: I have to include a subscript star (*) to 3 and 4 but that results in a 1 and 2 at the position of the star (center-right aligned) instead of at the position of 3 and 4 (center-left aligned). How can I fix that?
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 13:03












    @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
    – Zarko
    Dec 2 at 13:35




    @Anna, sorry, i not understand you. can you write as math expression, what is your problem, i.e. if instead of 3 and 4 you like to have 3_{} and 4_{ }(3_{ast} and 4_{ast})? if you wrote so, where you expect position of star? as 3ast?
    – Zarko
    Dec 2 at 13:35












    I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 14:22






    I have 3^{ast} and 4^{ast} instead of just 3 and 4. 1 and 2 are without superscript *. If you run the code you see that 1 and 2 are then not positioned nicely, i.e. 1 and 2 are above the *'s of 3 and 4 but not right above the actual numbers as they should be (that's what I meant with center-left aligned vs center-right aligned).
    – Anna
    Dec 2 at 14:22














    i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
    – Zarko
    Dec 2 at 14:40




    i guess that you talking about positioning of numbers in the first column. they are horizontal centered but you like to have numbers to be right aligned and * should bi right of numbers. do i'm right? for this the column type should be changed. an example i will prepare asap.
    – Zarko
    Dec 2 at 14:40










    up vote
    2
    down vote













    It is quite possible with some raiseboxes, but I don't think it's so nice:



    documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
    usepackage{pict2e}
    usepackage{keyval}
    usepackage{calc}
    usepackage{fp}
    usepackage{diagbox}
    usepackage{booktabs}
    usepackage{tabularx,colortbl, makecell, caption}

    begin{document}

    begin{table}[h!]
    centering
    caption[caption]{Table 1}
    label{tab:table1}
    begin{tabular}{|l|*{4}{>{$}c<{$}}|>{$}c<{$}|}
    hline
    diagbox[innerwidth =40mm, height =15mm]%,innerleftsep = 12pt
    {raisebox{2.5ex}{textbf{Source}}}{raisebox{-0.5ex}{textbf{Destination}}} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$1$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$2$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$3$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$4$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{textbf{Supply}} \
    hline
    1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
    2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
    3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
    4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
    hline
    textbf{Demand} & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T\
    hline
    end{tabular}
    end{table}

    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      It is quite possible with some raiseboxes, but I don't think it's so nice:



      documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
      usepackage{pict2e}
      usepackage{keyval}
      usepackage{calc}
      usepackage{fp}
      usepackage{diagbox}
      usepackage{booktabs}
      usepackage{tabularx,colortbl, makecell, caption}

      begin{document}

      begin{table}[h!]
      centering
      caption[caption]{Table 1}
      label{tab:table1}
      begin{tabular}{|l|*{4}{>{$}c<{$}}|>{$}c<{$}|}
      hline
      diagbox[innerwidth =40mm, height =15mm]%,innerleftsep = 12pt
      {raisebox{2.5ex}{textbf{Source}}}{raisebox{-0.5ex}{textbf{Destination}}} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$1$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$2$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$3$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$4$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{textbf{Supply}} \
      hline
      1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
      2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
      3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
      4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
      hline
      textbf{Demand} & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T\
      hline
      end{tabular}
      end{table}

      end{document}


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        It is quite possible with some raiseboxes, but I don't think it's so nice:



        documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
        usepackage{pict2e}
        usepackage{keyval}
        usepackage{calc}
        usepackage{fp}
        usepackage{diagbox}
        usepackage{booktabs}
        usepackage{tabularx,colortbl, makecell, caption}

        begin{document}

        begin{table}[h!]
        centering
        caption[caption]{Table 1}
        label{tab:table1}
        begin{tabular}{|l|*{4}{>{$}c<{$}}|>{$}c<{$}|}
        hline
        diagbox[innerwidth =40mm, height =15mm]%,innerleftsep = 12pt
        {raisebox{2.5ex}{textbf{Source}}}{raisebox{-0.5ex}{textbf{Destination}}} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$1$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$2$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$3$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$4$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{textbf{Supply}} \
        hline
        1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
        2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
        3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
        4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
        hline
        textbf{Demand} & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T\
        hline
        end{tabular}
        end{table}

        end{document}


        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer












        It is quite possible with some raiseboxes, but I don't think it's so nice:



        documentclass[12pt,fleqn]{article}
        usepackage{pict2e}
        usepackage{keyval}
        usepackage{calc}
        usepackage{fp}
        usepackage{diagbox}
        usepackage{booktabs}
        usepackage{tabularx,colortbl, makecell, caption}

        begin{document}

        begin{table}[h!]
        centering
        caption[caption]{Table 1}
        label{tab:table1}
        begin{tabular}{|l|*{4}{>{$}c<{$}}|>{$}c<{$}|}
        hline
        diagbox[innerwidth =40mm, height =15mm]%,innerleftsep = 12pt
        {raisebox{2.5ex}{textbf{Source}}}{raisebox{-0.5ex}{textbf{Destination}}} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$1$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$2$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$3$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{$4$} & raisebox{2.25ex}{textbf{Supply}} \
        hline
        1 & c_{11} & c_{12} & c_{13} & c_{14} & s_1 \
        2 & c_{21} & c_{22} & c_{23} & c_{24} & s_2 \
        3 & c_{31} & c_{32} & c_{33} & c_{34} & s_3 \
        4 & c_{41} & c_{42} & c_{43} & c_{44} & s_4 \
        hline
        textbf{Demand} & d_1 & d_2 & d_3 & d_4 & T\
        hline
        end{tabular}
        end{table}

        end{document}


        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 2 at 0:41









        Bernard

        164k769192




        164k769192






























            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.





            Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.


            Please pay close attention to the following guidance:


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f462761%2fhow-to-position-text-in-the-top-of-all-columns-in-the-upper-row-of-a-table-diag%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            flock() on closed filehandle LOCK_FILE at /usr/bin/apt-mirror

            Mangá

            Eduardo VII do Reino Unido