In my report, I'm writing some class names or variable names inside of a paragraph, and I want these names to be rendered in a monospace font.

Example:

This is my class name: \texttt{baseAdminConfiguration}.

Sometimes when the single word inside of the \texttt tag is rendered at the end of a line, the word does not go to the next line, and there is no break in it neither: the end of the word passes over the margin.

How should I handle such a case?

Cheers.

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closed as off topic by luvieere, 0A0D, svick, Michael Petrotta, Dori Sep 7 '11 at 3:05

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2 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

This hasn’t got much to do with \texttt. The word is simply too long, and LaTeX doesn’t know how to hyphenate it. You can tell it how to do this manually, by declaring hyphenation rules:

\hyphenation{base-Admin-Configuration}

The \hyphenation command may take arbitrarily many words, separated by whitespace.

Alternatively, if this doesn’t the trick, you can introduce manual hypenation hints in the text:

This is a long text that uses the word \texttt{base\-Admin\-Configuration) …

Only the actual hyphenation will be displayed – unused so-called discretionary hyphens (\-) will not be displayed so you can freely sprinkle your text with them, if necessary.

[Read more about hyphenation in LaTeX]

To prevent LaTeX from overflowing lines in principle, the whole paragraph can be wrapped in a sloppypar environment (thanks to Will for pointing this out in the comments):

\begin{sloppypar}
  Some text …
\end{sloppypar}

This manipulates the parameters of the line-breaking algorithm (in particular, \tolerance). The downside: this can lead to very ugly spacing. Alternatively, \tolerance and other internal parameters can be manipulated directly – the TeX FAQ shows how.

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@Anon: well, you can always force a line break using \` or \newline`. Or you might put the text in a flushleft environment – it won’t be justified then. But in general, no, not that I’m aware of. Perhaps it’s possible to tweak the internal parameters of the line-break algorithm. I don’t know. – Konrad Rudolph Jan 21 '10 at 20:08
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The closest you can get is wrap the paragraph with \begin{sloppypar}...\end{sloppypar} to allow poorer linebreaks. (Or write \sloppy to activate it globally.) – Will Robertson Jan 22 '10 at 1:46
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@Will: oh yes I forgot about sloppypar. \sloppy, on the other hand, is deprecated and shouldn’t be used. – Konrad Rudolph Jan 22 '10 at 10:05
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@Will: The source is l2tabu (section 1.8) from de.comp.text.tex which claims to echo a consensus among TeXperts. tug.ctan.org/tex-archive/info/l2tabu. But I won’t argue with the guy whose name appears in about every second result to LaTeX-related searches. – Konrad Rudolph Jan 22 '10 at 16:37
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Ah, thanks! l2tabu warns against \sloppy in general and gives lots of better alternatives. But that isn't to say it's deprecated as such, just to be used with care. – Will Robertson Jan 23 '10 at 12:06
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The solution is quite simple: use the url package and replace the texttt command with the path command.

I found out that here http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/299/how-to-get-long-texttt-sections-to-break in the post of Will Robertson.

Cheers

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