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How can I separate the number from the unit in argument?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowA macro that expands to the length of its argumentMeasuring the distance from text to the top of the pageHow to add a unit to a command argument?Extracting the basename from a filepath argumentWrapper for siunitx' SI macro to automatically split number and unitHow do I use an auxilliary file for my own commands?Is there an `ex` unit equivalent for the capital 'X' in LaTeXDuplicate and modify section hierarchyMultiple Choice Answer Key in exam package at the end of documentCan one use the Potrzebie unit system in (La)TeX?












2















Let us say that I have a function, in which I give a number plus a unit. I would like to get only the number, is it possible ?



Here is a MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}

newcommand{cmd}[1]{#1} % change here to capture only the number.
begin{document}
cmd{12pt} % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
end{document}









share|improve this question

























  • documentclass{article} defcmd#1pt{#1} begin{document} cmd12pt end{document}

    – marmot
    2 hours ago













  • @marmot - That'll work for pt as the unit, but for em, mm, km, etc. :-)

    – Mico
    1 hour ago













  • @Mico Yes, I know. But it does answer the question.

    – marmot
    1 hour ago
















2















Let us say that I have a function, in which I give a number plus a unit. I would like to get only the number, is it possible ?



Here is a MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}

newcommand{cmd}[1]{#1} % change here to capture only the number.
begin{document}
cmd{12pt} % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
end{document}









share|improve this question

























  • documentclass{article} defcmd#1pt{#1} begin{document} cmd12pt end{document}

    – marmot
    2 hours ago













  • @marmot - That'll work for pt as the unit, but for em, mm, km, etc. :-)

    – Mico
    1 hour ago













  • @Mico Yes, I know. But it does answer the question.

    – marmot
    1 hour ago














2












2








2








Let us say that I have a function, in which I give a number plus a unit. I would like to get only the number, is it possible ?



Here is a MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}

newcommand{cmd}[1]{#1} % change here to capture only the number.
begin{document}
cmd{12pt} % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
end{document}









share|improve this question
















Let us say that I have a function, in which I give a number plus a unit. I would like to get only the number, is it possible ?



Here is a MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}

newcommand{cmd}[1]{#1} % change here to capture only the number.
begin{document}
cmd{12pt} % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
end{document}






macros lengths unit-of-measure






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









Bernard

175k776207




175k776207










asked 3 hours ago









R. NR. N

313214




313214













  • documentclass{article} defcmd#1pt{#1} begin{document} cmd12pt end{document}

    – marmot
    2 hours ago













  • @marmot - That'll work for pt as the unit, but for em, mm, km, etc. :-)

    – Mico
    1 hour ago













  • @Mico Yes, I know. But it does answer the question.

    – marmot
    1 hour ago



















  • documentclass{article} defcmd#1pt{#1} begin{document} cmd12pt end{document}

    – marmot
    2 hours ago













  • @marmot - That'll work for pt as the unit, but for em, mm, km, etc. :-)

    – Mico
    1 hour ago













  • @Mico Yes, I know. But it does answer the question.

    – marmot
    1 hour ago

















documentclass{article} defcmd#1pt{#1} begin{document} cmd12pt end{document}

– marmot
2 hours ago







documentclass{article} defcmd#1pt{#1} begin{document} cmd12pt end{document}

– marmot
2 hours ago















@marmot - That'll work for pt as the unit, but for em, mm, km, etc. :-)

– Mico
1 hour ago







@marmot - That'll work for pt as the unit, but for em, mm, km, etc. :-)

– Mico
1 hour ago















@Mico Yes, I know. But it does answer the question.

– marmot
1 hour ago





@Mico Yes, I know. But it does answer the question.

– marmot
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2














Here's a LuaLaTeX-based solution. It sets up a LaTeX macro called cmd -- a "wrapper" -- that invokes a Lua function that does all of the work. The Lua function expects its argument to consist of two parts: the first part is numeric, i.e., consists of the digits 0 thru 9, plus possibly the characters ,, ., -, and +; the part second is alphabetic, i.e., uppercase and lowercase letters, plus possibly whitespace.



Per your typesetting objective, the function returns just the numeric, part. If the argument of cmd does not start with a numeric component, the prefix part is discarded as well. E.g., the output of arg{XX55km} is 55, and the output of cmd{km} is blank (empty).



enter image description here



% !TEX TS-program = lualatex
documentclass{article}
usepackage{luacode} % for 'luacode' environment
begin{luacode}
function get_num ( s )
tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
end
end{luacode}
newcommandcmd[1]{directlua{get_num("#1")}} % "wrapper" macro

begin{document}
cmd{12pt}, $cmd{-47km}$, cmd{+5.7in}, cmd{3,14159CM}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

































    2














    Assuming the unit consists of two characters, you can do it in an expandable way:



    documentclass{article}
    usepackage{xparse}

    ExplSyntaxOn

    NewExpandableDocumentCommand{getnumber}{m}
    {
    tl_range:nnn { #1 } { 1 } { -3 } % from the first to the last but two character
    }

    ExplSyntaxOff

    begin{document}

    getnumber{12pt}, $getnumber{-47km}$, getnumber{+5.7in}, getnumber{3,14159CM}

    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer































      1














      pgf does that without the need to invoke external programs and converts the units into points.



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{pgf}

      newcommand{cmd}[1]{pgfmathparse{#1}pgfmathresult}
      begin{document}
      cmd{12pt} cmd{1cm}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      Note that if you're bugged by the .0: this can easily be removed with pgfmathprintnumber[<your number format here>]{pgfmathresult} if you choose a number format that you like.






      share|improve this answer
























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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        2














        Here's a LuaLaTeX-based solution. It sets up a LaTeX macro called cmd -- a "wrapper" -- that invokes a Lua function that does all of the work. The Lua function expects its argument to consist of two parts: the first part is numeric, i.e., consists of the digits 0 thru 9, plus possibly the characters ,, ., -, and +; the part second is alphabetic, i.e., uppercase and lowercase letters, plus possibly whitespace.



        Per your typesetting objective, the function returns just the numeric, part. If the argument of cmd does not start with a numeric component, the prefix part is discarded as well. E.g., the output of arg{XX55km} is 55, and the output of cmd{km} is blank (empty).



        enter image description here



        % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
        documentclass{article}
        usepackage{luacode} % for 'luacode' environment
        begin{luacode}
        function get_num ( s )
        tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
        end
        end{luacode}
        newcommandcmd[1]{directlua{get_num("#1")}} % "wrapper" macro

        begin{document}
        cmd{12pt}, $cmd{-47km}$, cmd{+5.7in}, cmd{3,14159CM}
        end{document}





        share|improve this answer






























          2














          Here's a LuaLaTeX-based solution. It sets up a LaTeX macro called cmd -- a "wrapper" -- that invokes a Lua function that does all of the work. The Lua function expects its argument to consist of two parts: the first part is numeric, i.e., consists of the digits 0 thru 9, plus possibly the characters ,, ., -, and +; the part second is alphabetic, i.e., uppercase and lowercase letters, plus possibly whitespace.



          Per your typesetting objective, the function returns just the numeric, part. If the argument of cmd does not start with a numeric component, the prefix part is discarded as well. E.g., the output of arg{XX55km} is 55, and the output of cmd{km} is blank (empty).



          enter image description here



          % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{luacode} % for 'luacode' environment
          begin{luacode}
          function get_num ( s )
          tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
          end
          end{luacode}
          newcommandcmd[1]{directlua{get_num("#1")}} % "wrapper" macro

          begin{document}
          cmd{12pt}, $cmd{-47km}$, cmd{+5.7in}, cmd{3,14159CM}
          end{document}





          share|improve this answer




























            2












            2








            2







            Here's a LuaLaTeX-based solution. It sets up a LaTeX macro called cmd -- a "wrapper" -- that invokes a Lua function that does all of the work. The Lua function expects its argument to consist of two parts: the first part is numeric, i.e., consists of the digits 0 thru 9, plus possibly the characters ,, ., -, and +; the part second is alphabetic, i.e., uppercase and lowercase letters, plus possibly whitespace.



            Per your typesetting objective, the function returns just the numeric, part. If the argument of cmd does not start with a numeric component, the prefix part is discarded as well. E.g., the output of arg{XX55km} is 55, and the output of cmd{km} is blank (empty).



            enter image description here



            % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
            documentclass{article}
            usepackage{luacode} % for 'luacode' environment
            begin{luacode}
            function get_num ( s )
            tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
            end
            end{luacode}
            newcommandcmd[1]{directlua{get_num("#1")}} % "wrapper" macro

            begin{document}
            cmd{12pt}, $cmd{-47km}$, cmd{+5.7in}, cmd{3,14159CM}
            end{document}





            share|improve this answer















            Here's a LuaLaTeX-based solution. It sets up a LaTeX macro called cmd -- a "wrapper" -- that invokes a Lua function that does all of the work. The Lua function expects its argument to consist of two parts: the first part is numeric, i.e., consists of the digits 0 thru 9, plus possibly the characters ,, ., -, and +; the part second is alphabetic, i.e., uppercase and lowercase letters, plus possibly whitespace.



            Per your typesetting objective, the function returns just the numeric, part. If the argument of cmd does not start with a numeric component, the prefix part is discarded as well. E.g., the output of arg{XX55km} is 55, and the output of cmd{km} is blank (empty).



            enter image description here



            % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
            documentclass{article}
            usepackage{luacode} % for 'luacode' environment
            begin{luacode}
            function get_num ( s )
            tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
            end
            end{luacode}
            newcommandcmd[1]{directlua{get_num("#1")}} % "wrapper" macro

            begin{document}
            cmd{12pt}, $cmd{-47km}$, cmd{+5.7in}, cmd{3,14159CM}
            end{document}






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 1 hour ago

























            answered 1 hour ago









            MicoMico

            285k31388778




            285k31388778























                2














                Assuming the unit consists of two characters, you can do it in an expandable way:



                documentclass{article}
                usepackage{xparse}

                ExplSyntaxOn

                NewExpandableDocumentCommand{getnumber}{m}
                {
                tl_range:nnn { #1 } { 1 } { -3 } % from the first to the last but two character
                }

                ExplSyntaxOff

                begin{document}

                getnumber{12pt}, $getnumber{-47km}$, getnumber{+5.7in}, getnumber{3,14159CM}

                end{document}


                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer




























                  2














                  Assuming the unit consists of two characters, you can do it in an expandable way:



                  documentclass{article}
                  usepackage{xparse}

                  ExplSyntaxOn

                  NewExpandableDocumentCommand{getnumber}{m}
                  {
                  tl_range:nnn { #1 } { 1 } { -3 } % from the first to the last but two character
                  }

                  ExplSyntaxOff

                  begin{document}

                  getnumber{12pt}, $getnumber{-47km}$, getnumber{+5.7in}, getnumber{3,14159CM}

                  end{document}


                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer


























                    2












                    2








                    2







                    Assuming the unit consists of two characters, you can do it in an expandable way:



                    documentclass{article}
                    usepackage{xparse}

                    ExplSyntaxOn

                    NewExpandableDocumentCommand{getnumber}{m}
                    {
                    tl_range:nnn { #1 } { 1 } { -3 } % from the first to the last but two character
                    }

                    ExplSyntaxOff

                    begin{document}

                    getnumber{12pt}, $getnumber{-47km}$, getnumber{+5.7in}, getnumber{3,14159CM}

                    end{document}


                    enter image description here






                    share|improve this answer













                    Assuming the unit consists of two characters, you can do it in an expandable way:



                    documentclass{article}
                    usepackage{xparse}

                    ExplSyntaxOn

                    NewExpandableDocumentCommand{getnumber}{m}
                    {
                    tl_range:nnn { #1 } { 1 } { -3 } % from the first to the last but two character
                    }

                    ExplSyntaxOff

                    begin{document}

                    getnumber{12pt}, $getnumber{-47km}$, getnumber{+5.7in}, getnumber{3,14159CM}

                    end{document}


                    enter image description here







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 1 hour ago









                    egregegreg

                    731k8819293244




                    731k8819293244























                        1














                        pgf does that without the need to invoke external programs and converts the units into points.



                        documentclass{article}
                        usepackage{pgf}

                        newcommand{cmd}[1]{pgfmathparse{#1}pgfmathresult}
                        begin{document}
                        cmd{12pt} cmd{1cm}
                        end{document}


                        enter image description here



                        Note that if you're bugged by the .0: this can easily be removed with pgfmathprintnumber[<your number format here>]{pgfmathresult} if you choose a number format that you like.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          1














                          pgf does that without the need to invoke external programs and converts the units into points.



                          documentclass{article}
                          usepackage{pgf}

                          newcommand{cmd}[1]{pgfmathparse{#1}pgfmathresult}
                          begin{document}
                          cmd{12pt} cmd{1cm}
                          end{document}


                          enter image description here



                          Note that if you're bugged by the .0: this can easily be removed with pgfmathprintnumber[<your number format here>]{pgfmathresult} if you choose a number format that you like.






                          share|improve this answer


























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            pgf does that without the need to invoke external programs and converts the units into points.



                            documentclass{article}
                            usepackage{pgf}

                            newcommand{cmd}[1]{pgfmathparse{#1}pgfmathresult}
                            begin{document}
                            cmd{12pt} cmd{1cm}
                            end{document}


                            enter image description here



                            Note that if you're bugged by the .0: this can easily be removed with pgfmathprintnumber[<your number format here>]{pgfmathresult} if you choose a number format that you like.






                            share|improve this answer













                            pgf does that without the need to invoke external programs and converts the units into points.



                            documentclass{article}
                            usepackage{pgf}

                            newcommand{cmd}[1]{pgfmathparse{#1}pgfmathresult}
                            begin{document}
                            cmd{12pt} cmd{1cm}
                            end{document}


                            enter image description here



                            Note that if you're bugged by the .0: this can easily be removed with pgfmathprintnumber[<your number format here>]{pgfmathresult} if you choose a number format that you like.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 1 hour ago









                            marmotmarmot

                            113k5145275




                            113k5145275






























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