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?

Is a distribution that is normal, but highly skewed, considered Gaussian?

Does Germany produce more waste than the US?

How can the PCs determine if an item is a phylactery?

Is there a rule of thumb for determining the amount one should accept for of a settlement offer?

Read/write a pipe-delimited file line by line with some simple text manipulation

How do I secure a TV wall mount?

Planeswalker Ability and Death Timing

Small nick on power cord from an electric alarm clock, and copper wiring exposed but intact

How do I keep Mac Emacs from trapping M-`?

Ising model simulation

logical reads on global temp table, but not on session-level temp table

Is a linearly independent set whose span is dense a Schauder basis?

Finitely generated matrix groups whose eigenvalues are all algebraic

What difference does it make matching a word with/without a trailing whitespace?

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

Are British MPs missing the point, with these 'Indicative Votes'?

Another proof that dividing by 0 does not exist -- is it right?

Why doesn't Shulchan Aruch include the laws of destroying fruit trees?

Why was Sir Cadogan fired?

Find a path from s to t using as few red nodes as possible

Traveling with my 5 year old daughter (as the father) without the mother from Germany to Mexico

Horror film about a man brought out of cryogenic suspension without a soul, around 1990

How seriously should I take size and weight limits of hand luggage?

Can I cast Thunderwave and be at the center of its bottom face, but not be affected by it?



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?










3















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:



documentclassarticle
usepackage[utf8]inputenc

newcommandcmd[1]#1 % change here to capture only the number.
begindocument
cmd12pt % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
enddocument









share|improve this question
























  • documentclassarticle defcmd#1pt#1 begindocument cmd12pt enddocument

    – marmot
    6 hours ago












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

    – Mico
    4 hours ago












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

    – marmot
    4 hours ago















3















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:



documentclassarticle
usepackage[utf8]inputenc

newcommandcmd[1]#1 % change here to capture only the number.
begindocument
cmd12pt % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
enddocument









share|improve this question
























  • documentclassarticle defcmd#1pt#1 begindocument cmd12pt enddocument

    – marmot
    6 hours ago












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

    – Mico
    4 hours ago












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

    – marmot
    4 hours ago













3












3








3


0






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:



documentclassarticle
usepackage[utf8]inputenc

newcommandcmd[1]#1 % change here to capture only the number.
begindocument
cmd12pt % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
enddocument









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:



documentclassarticle
usepackage[utf8]inputenc

newcommandcmd[1]#1 % change here to capture only the number.
begindocument
cmd12pt % print 12pt while I would get only 12, in a generic case.
enddocument






macros lengths unit-of-measure






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 6 hours ago









Bernard

175k776207




175k776207










asked 6 hours ago









R. NR. N

318214




318214












  • documentclassarticle defcmd#1pt#1 begindocument cmd12pt enddocument

    – marmot
    6 hours ago












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

    – Mico
    4 hours ago












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

    – marmot
    4 hours ago

















  • documentclassarticle defcmd#1pt#1 begindocument cmd12pt enddocument

    – marmot
    6 hours ago












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

    – Mico
    4 hours ago












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

    – marmot
    4 hours ago
















documentclassarticle defcmd#1pt#1 begindocument cmd12pt enddocument

– marmot
6 hours ago






documentclassarticle defcmd#1pt#1 begindocument cmd12pt enddocument

– marmot
6 hours ago














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

– Mico
4 hours ago






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

– Mico
4 hours ago














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

– marmot
4 hours ago





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

– marmot
4 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















4














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



documentclassarticle
usepackagexparse

ExplSyntaxOn

NewExpandableDocumentCommandgetnumberm

tl_range:nnn #1 1 -3 % from the first to the last but two character


ExplSyntaxOff

begindocument

getnumber12pt, $getnumber-47km$, getnumber+5.7in, getnumber3,14159CM

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer






























    3














    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 argXX55km is 55, and the output of cmdkm is blank (empty).



    enter image description here



    % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
    documentclassarticle
    usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' environment
    beginluacode
    function get_num ( s )
    tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
    end
    endluacode
    newcommandcmd[1]directluaget_num("#1") % "wrapper" macro

    begindocument
    cmd12pt, $cmd-47km$, cmd+5.7in, cmd3,14159CM
    enddocument





    share|improve this answer
































      2














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



      documentclassarticle
      usepackagepgf

      newcommandcmd[1]pgfmathparse#1pgfmathresult
      begindocument
      cmd12pt cmd1cm
      enddocument


      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























        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',
        autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
        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%2f482628%2fhow-can-i-separate-the-number-from-the-unit-in-argument%23new-answer', 'question_page');

        );

        Post as a guest















        Required, but never shown

























        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        4














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



        documentclassarticle
        usepackagexparse

        ExplSyntaxOn

        NewExpandableDocumentCommandgetnumberm

        tl_range:nnn #1 1 -3 % from the first to the last but two character


        ExplSyntaxOff

        begindocument

        getnumber12pt, $getnumber-47km$, getnumber+5.7in, getnumber3,14159CM

        enddocument


        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer



























          4














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



          documentclassarticle
          usepackagexparse

          ExplSyntaxOn

          NewExpandableDocumentCommandgetnumberm

          tl_range:nnn #1 1 -3 % from the first to the last but two character


          ExplSyntaxOff

          begindocument

          getnumber12pt, $getnumber-47km$, getnumber+5.7in, getnumber3,14159CM

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer

























            4












            4








            4







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



            documentclassarticle
            usepackagexparse

            ExplSyntaxOn

            NewExpandableDocumentCommandgetnumberm

            tl_range:nnn #1 1 -3 % from the first to the last but two character


            ExplSyntaxOff

            begindocument

            getnumber12pt, $getnumber-47km$, getnumber+5.7in, getnumber3,14159CM

            enddocument


            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer













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



            documentclassarticle
            usepackagexparse

            ExplSyntaxOn

            NewExpandableDocumentCommandgetnumberm

            tl_range:nnn #1 1 -3 % from the first to the last but two character


            ExplSyntaxOff

            begindocument

            getnumber12pt, $getnumber-47km$, getnumber+5.7in, getnumber3,14159CM

            enddocument


            enter image description here







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 4 hours ago









            egregegreg

            731k8819293245




            731k8819293245





















                3














                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 argXX55km is 55, and the output of cmdkm is blank (empty).



                enter image description here



                % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
                documentclassarticle
                usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' environment
                beginluacode
                function get_num ( s )
                tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
                end
                endluacode
                newcommandcmd[1]directluaget_num("#1") % "wrapper" macro

                begindocument
                cmd12pt, $cmd-47km$, cmd+5.7in, cmd3,14159CM
                enddocument





                share|improve this answer





























                  3














                  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 argXX55km is 55, and the output of cmdkm is blank (empty).



                  enter image description here



                  % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
                  documentclassarticle
                  usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' environment
                  beginluacode
                  function get_num ( s )
                  tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
                  end
                  endluacode
                  newcommandcmd[1]directluaget_num("#1") % "wrapper" macro

                  begindocument
                  cmd12pt, $cmd-47km$, cmd+5.7in, cmd3,14159CM
                  enddocument





                  share|improve this answer



























                    3












                    3








                    3







                    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 argXX55km is 55, and the output of cmdkm is blank (empty).



                    enter image description here



                    % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
                    documentclassarticle
                    usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' environment
                    beginluacode
                    function get_num ( s )
                    tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
                    end
                    endluacode
                    newcommandcmd[1]directluaget_num("#1") % "wrapper" macro

                    begindocument
                    cmd12pt, $cmd-47km$, cmd+5.7in, cmd3,14159CM
                    enddocument





                    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 argXX55km is 55, and the output of cmdkm is blank (empty).



                    enter image description here



                    % !TEX TS-program = lualatex
                    documentclassarticle
                    usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' environment
                    beginluacode
                    function get_num ( s )
                    tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub ( "([%d%.%,%-%+]*)([%a%s]*)" , "%1" ) ) )
                    end
                    endluacode
                    newcommandcmd[1]directluaget_num("#1") % "wrapper" macro

                    begindocument
                    cmd12pt, $cmd-47km$, cmd+5.7in, cmd3,14159CM
                    enddocument






                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 4 hours ago

























                    answered 4 hours ago









                    MicoMico

                    285k31388778




                    285k31388778





















                        2














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



                        documentclassarticle
                        usepackagepgf

                        newcommandcmd[1]pgfmathparse#1pgfmathresult
                        begindocument
                        cmd12pt cmd1cm
                        enddocument


                        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



























                          2














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



                          documentclassarticle
                          usepackagepgf

                          newcommandcmd[1]pgfmathparse#1pgfmathresult
                          begindocument
                          cmd12pt cmd1cm
                          enddocument


                          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

























                            2












                            2








                            2







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



                            documentclassarticle
                            usepackagepgf

                            newcommandcmd[1]pgfmathparse#1pgfmathresult
                            begindocument
                            cmd12pt cmd1cm
                            enddocument


                            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.



                            documentclassarticle
                            usepackagepgf

                            newcommandcmd[1]pgfmathparse#1pgfmathresult
                            begindocument
                            cmd12pt cmd1cm
                            enddocument


                            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 4 hours ago









                            marmotmarmot

                            113k5145275




                            113k5145275



























                                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.




                                draft saved


                                draft discarded














                                StackExchange.ready(
                                function ()
                                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f482628%2fhow-can-i-separate-the-number-from-the-unit-in-argument%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

                                How to create a command for the “strange m” symbol in latex? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?Writing bold small caps with mathpazo packageplus-minus symbol with parenthesis around the minus signGreek character in Beamer document titleHow to create dashed right arrow over symbol?Currency symbol: Turkish LiraDouble prec as a single symbol?Plus Sign Too Big; How to Call adfbullet?Is there a TeX macro for three-legged pi?How do I get my integral-like symbol to align like the integral?How to selectively substitute a letter with another symbol representing the same letterHow do I generate a less than symbol and vertical bar that are the same height?

                                Българска екзархия Съдържание История | Български екзарси | Вижте също | Външни препратки | Литература | Бележки | НавигацияУстав за управлението на българската екзархия. Цариград, 1870Слово на Ловешкия митрополит Иларион при откриването на Българския народен събор в Цариград на 23. II. 1870 г.Българската правда и гръцката кривда. От С. М. (= Софийски Мелетий). Цариград, 1872Предстоятели на Българската екзархияПодмененият ВеликденИнформационна агенция „Фокус“Димитър Ризов. Българите в техните исторически, етнографически и политически граници (Атлас съдържащ 40 карти). Berlin, Königliche Hoflithographie, Hof-Buch- und -Steindruckerei Wilhelm Greve, 1917Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars

                                Category:Tremithousa Media in category "Tremithousa"Navigation menuUpload media34° 49′ 02.7″ N, 32° 26′ 37.32″ EOpenStreetMapGoogle EarthProximityramaReasonatorScholiaStatisticsWikiShootMe