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How to Skip One Bullet in ITEMIZE?
Enumerate and itemize undefined + captions not workingaligning a multiline formula with the bullet of itemizebeamer, how to explicitly call the “normal itemize icon”Making more easy the itemized of item with tabulation systemLine break after description labelpossible memoir bug with font sizes and tightlistsVertical alignment of itemize in tabularOne Itemize problemItemize colored bullet - no shadowAlign Theorem With Bullet Itemize
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{
margin-bottom:0;
}
As aforementioned, I wonder whether I can skip one bullet during itemize
. For example,
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
Though the code doesn't put the bullet in front of Item 3
, this seems to be an incorrect solution as just uses \
. Can I just remove one particular bullet in itemize
?
itemize
add a comment
|
As aforementioned, I wonder whether I can skip one bullet during itemize
. For example,
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
Though the code doesn't put the bullet in front of Item 3
, this seems to be an incorrect solution as just uses \
. Can I just remove one particular bullet in itemize
?
itemize
2
while the answer does what you ask, I wonder how the reader is supposed to know it is a new item? If it is a linebreak in an existing item,\
is better markup thanitem[]
or if it is a new paragraph in an existing item then a blank line should be used.
– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
@DavidCarlisle -- unfortunately, your markup here of\
didn't work quite correctly. (Your comment arrived just as I was about to comment on the possible relevance of a paragraph break.)
– barbara beeton
8 hours ago
@barbarabeeton I'd fixed the\
:-)
– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
As aforementioned, I wonder whether I can skip one bullet during itemize
. For example,
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
Though the code doesn't put the bullet in front of Item 3
, this seems to be an incorrect solution as just uses \
. Can I just remove one particular bullet in itemize
?
itemize
As aforementioned, I wonder whether I can skip one bullet during itemize
. For example,
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
Though the code doesn't put the bullet in front of Item 3
, this seems to be an incorrect solution as just uses \
. Can I just remove one particular bullet in itemize
?
itemize
itemize
asked 8 hours ago
Junyong KimJunyong Kim
823 bronze badges
823 bronze badges
2
while the answer does what you ask, I wonder how the reader is supposed to know it is a new item? If it is a linebreak in an existing item,\
is better markup thanitem[]
or if it is a new paragraph in an existing item then a blank line should be used.
– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
@DavidCarlisle -- unfortunately, your markup here of\
didn't work quite correctly. (Your comment arrived just as I was about to comment on the possible relevance of a paragraph break.)
– barbara beeton
8 hours ago
@barbarabeeton I'd fixed the\
:-)
– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
2
while the answer does what you ask, I wonder how the reader is supposed to know it is a new item? If it is a linebreak in an existing item,\
is better markup thanitem[]
or if it is a new paragraph in an existing item then a blank line should be used.
– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
@DavidCarlisle -- unfortunately, your markup here of\
didn't work quite correctly. (Your comment arrived just as I was about to comment on the possible relevance of a paragraph break.)
– barbara beeton
8 hours ago
@barbarabeeton I'd fixed the\
:-)
– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
2
2
while the answer does what you ask, I wonder how the reader is supposed to know it is a new item? If it is a linebreak in an existing item,
\
is better markup than item[]
or if it is a new paragraph in an existing item then a blank line should be used.– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
while the answer does what you ask, I wonder how the reader is supposed to know it is a new item? If it is a linebreak in an existing item,
\
is better markup than item[]
or if it is a new paragraph in an existing item then a blank line should be used.– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
@DavidCarlisle -- unfortunately, your markup here of
\
didn't work quite correctly. (Your comment arrived just as I was about to comment on the possible relevance of a paragraph break.)– barbara beeton
8 hours ago
@DavidCarlisle -- unfortunately, your markup here of
\
didn't work quite correctly. (Your comment arrived just as I was about to comment on the possible relevance of a paragraph break.)– barbara beeton
8 hours ago
@barbarabeeton I'd fixed the
\
:-)– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
@barbarabeeton I'd fixed the
\
:-)– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Try like this:
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
The empty optional argument of item
command will do the trick.
add a comment
|
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
You could use an unlabeled item, but the reader has no visual clue that it is a new item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a forced linebreak in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a second paragraph in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
These three markups encode three different sentence structures so only
you can say which you need with your real text.
end{document}
add a comment
|
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Try like this:
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
The empty optional argument of item
command will do the trick.
add a comment
|
Try like this:
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
The empty optional argument of item
command will do the trick.
add a comment
|
Try like this:
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
The empty optional argument of item
command will do the trick.
Try like this:
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
end{document}
The empty optional argument of item
command will do the trick.
answered 8 hours ago
koleygrkoleygr
15.2k1 gold badge10 silver badges40 bronze badges
15.2k1 gold badge10 silver badges40 bronze badges
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
You could use an unlabeled item, but the reader has no visual clue that it is a new item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a forced linebreak in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a second paragraph in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
These three markups encode three different sentence structures so only
you can say which you need with your real text.
end{document}
add a comment
|
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
You could use an unlabeled item, but the reader has no visual clue that it is a new item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a forced linebreak in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a second paragraph in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
These three markups encode three different sentence structures so only
you can say which you need with your real text.
end{document}
add a comment
|
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
You could use an unlabeled item, but the reader has no visual clue that it is a new item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a forced linebreak in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a second paragraph in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
These three markups encode three different sentence structures so only
you can say which you need with your real text.
end{document}
documentclass{article}
begin{document}
You could use an unlabeled item, but the reader has no visual clue that it is a new item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
item[] Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a forced linebreak in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2\
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
You use a second paragraph in an existing item
begin{itemize}
item Item 1
item Item 2
Item 3
item Item 4
end{itemize}
These three markups encode three different sentence structures so only
you can say which you need with your real text.
end{document}
answered 8 hours ago
David CarlisleDavid Carlisle
524k44 gold badges1187 silver badges1959 bronze badges
524k44 gold badges1187 silver badges1959 bronze badges
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
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2
while the answer does what you ask, I wonder how the reader is supposed to know it is a new item? If it is a linebreak in an existing item,
\
is better markup thanitem[]
or if it is a new paragraph in an existing item then a blank line should be used.– David Carlisle
8 hours ago
@DavidCarlisle -- unfortunately, your markup here of
\
didn't work quite correctly. (Your comment arrived just as I was about to comment on the possible relevance of a paragraph break.)– barbara beeton
8 hours ago
@barbarabeeton I'd fixed the
\
:-)– David Carlisle
8 hours ago