\hfuzz
TEX provides commands that allow you to influence its decision as to whether it
considers a box is to be overfull and reported as such—for example in the .log
file.
\hfuzz[=]
dimension:\hfuzz
specifies the amount by which the content in an\hbox
can exceed the width of that\hbox
before being considered overfull.\vfuzz[=]
dimension:\vfuzz
specifies the amount by which the content in a\vbox
can exceed the height of that\vbox
before being reported as overfull.
Note that:
- “
[=]
” means that the equals sign is optional. - dimension is an amount specified in units that TEX can understand—e.g., pt, bp, mm etc.
Usage examples
\hfuzz=0.5pt
or\hfuzz 0.5pt
(the “=” is optional)\vfuzz=0.75pt
or\vfuzz 0.75pt
(the “=” is optional)
Example
If we put the word “Overleaf” into an \hbox
and measure its width (using the
default fonts):
\setbox99=\hbox{Overleaf}\the\wd99
we see a value of 36.41675pt. If we now put “Overleaf” in an \hbox
that
is too narrow, say 36pt, and set \overfullrule
to a non-zero
value:
\overfullrule=5mm \hbox to 36pt{Overleaf}
The following graphic shows the output:
If we we set \hfuzz=0.5pt
and repeat the above exercise:
\overfullrule=5mm \hfuzz=0.5pt \hbox to 36pt{Overleaf}
the following graphic:
shows that TEX no longer treats \hbox to 36pt{Overleaf}
as overfull, thus does
not add an \overfullrule
rule, because the value of \hfuzz
(0.5pt) is
just enough to prevent that.
The behaviour of \vfuzz
is analagous to \hfuzz
—except that TEX does not display
overfull rules for vboxes.
More detail on \hfuzz
What TEX actually checks is the difference between the excess width of the material and the total (zero order) shrink glue. For example, suppose the total width of some content is 100pt and the desired box width is 95pt: the excess width that TEX needs to absorb is 5pt—it needs to shrink the available glue by 5pt. Suppose there is a total zero order glue shrink of 4pt, then TEX compares the current value of \hfuzz
with the value of 5pt\(-\)4pt\(=\)1pt.
Related commands
See also:
Overleaf guides
- Creating a document in Overleaf
- Uploading a project
- Copying a project
- Creating a project from a template
- Using the Overleaf project menu
- Including images in Overleaf
- Exporting your work from Overleaf
- Working offline in Overleaf
- Using Track Changes in Overleaf
- Using bibliographies in Overleaf
- Sharing your work with others
- Using the History feature
- Debugging Compilation timeout errors
- How-to guides
- Guide to Overleaf’s premium features
LaTeX Basics
- Creating your first LaTeX document
- Choosing a LaTeX Compiler
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References and Citations
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Field specific
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Class files
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