Math operator in specifying figure width in LaTeX

In LaTeX figures, one can use \textwidth and \columnwidth to specify sizes of the graphic relative to the size of surrounding text, e.g. \includegraphics[width=.5\textwidth]{myimage}.

I would like to easily switch from onecolumn to twocolumn template (and back) without the figure growing too large for onecolumn template. For twocolumn template (where \columnwidth is roughly half the \textwidth), I would like to have something like: \includegraphics[width=.9\columnwidth]{myimage}. and for onecolumn template (where \columnwidth and \textwidth are equal):
\includegraphics[width=.5\textwidth]{myimage}.

Now, I figured I could limit this using some kind of a min operator: \includegraphics[width=min(.5\textwidth,.9\columnwidth)]{myimage} but this is invalid syntax. Is there something like this to solve this problem, possibly through the use of LaTeX macro system?

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Although it's possible to write this sort of macro, I wouldn't want to hardcode it into each figure; how about something like this

\makeatletter
\newlength \figwidth
\if@twocolumn
\setlength \figwidth {0.9\columnwidth}
\else
\setlength \figwidth {0.5\textwidth}
\fi
\makeatother


and then use

\includegraphics[width=\figwidth]{myimage}


to insert the graphic.

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Should be \if@twocolumn, but otherwise a good answer. –  ChrisN Mar 7 '09 at 22:48
Ha, excellent! This looks much nicer than some weird answers I've found online. Thank you very much! –  mbudisic Mar 7 '09 at 23:25
Now I've tested it and it worked with two alterations: first, the already mentioned @twocolumn. Second, \linewidth needed to be changed to \textwidth, otherwise the image was shown only in twocolumn mode. For completeness, I am using IEEEtran template, used by IEEE journals an confs. Thanks! –  mbudisic Mar 7 '09 at 23:33
@mbudisic If this answer has solved your problem, please mark it as "accepted". –  ChrisN Mar 7 '09 at 23:35
Yes, I did, thanks. I'm still new to this website. –  mbudisic Mar 7 '09 at 23:37
show 1 more comment

\textwidth is the horizontal width of the page body and not really appropriate for your purposes.

\linewidth is the width of the current line; it will be updated appropriate to columns, indentation, etc.

The following paragraph produces a picture that should precisely fit the entire line width (i.e. no overful warning):

\noindent\includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{myimage}


If you prefer small margins on the left and right, you can use:

\begin{center}
\includegraphics[width=.9\linewidth]{myimage}
\end{center}


Or, if you want to specify the margins in an absolute size:

\usepackage{calc}
...
\begin{center}
\includegraphics[width=\linewidth-20pt]{myimage}
\end{center}

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\linewidth is perfect! –  firebat Sep 23 '11 at 21:45

Hmm... the code above (\if@twocolumn etc.) is not working for me at all. No idea why not. :( tetex on osX using fink. Trying to use revtex4, so perhaps that's the problem. I really like the idea of this type of change because I'm going to be dorking with widths etc. for my thesis and various journal articles, and to have these distances specified with a macro may be helpful for these types of conversions.

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What error are you getting? Are you protecting this code with \makeatletter? –  Charles Stewart Apr 22 '10 at 7:02
Yup, added it as above, and used it as per example- no love. I think it's probably revtex4 playing with me. I'll have to try an example article class I should add no error was thrown- it just ignored the command completely. I'll try again soon and post back. Thank you for asking! –  AllenH May 11 '10 at 22:57
Ok, fiddling with this again. Using revtex4, tetex and pdftex - and can't get this to work. I'm getting Undefined Control Sequence. errors. I've tried a number of different options in the size used (i.e., textwidth, columnwidth, linewidth and various ways of making the \setlength operator (with braces, without braces etc.). Just not getting this to work. :( Maybe it only works with article class? –  AllenH May 25 '11 at 2:22
To help, you would really need to post a minimum working example. You'll probably get a faster response by asking a question at the Tex Stack Exchange than here. –  Charles Stewart May 26 '11 at 17:16
Thanks for pointing me to the TexStackExchange, Charles! I appreciate it! –  AllenH Jul 11 '11 at 1:29