41

I am wondering how I can get the document title in LaTex, for use elsewhere in the document. I just want to be able to echo it.

3
  • I'm sure there's a way of having the header of every page have the title in it. With fancyhdr or the memoir document class. So those files will contain an answer. I don't know enough to extract the info though... (I just searched fancyhdr.sty for "title" and got no hits, though...)
    – Seamus
    Mar 27, 2010 at 23:58
  • 5
    How is this not a real question? The answer is \makeatletter \@title \makeatother. Jun 4, 2014 at 3:50
  • 4
    Indeed. If there's any problem with this question it's that it should be moved to the tex stack exchange site.
    – nedned
    Jun 4, 2014 at 8:49

4 Answers 4

30

Using \@title does not work because \maketitle clears \@title. This seems silly to me but that's the way it is. One solution is to redefine \title to save the title somewhere else. For instance,

\def\title#1{\gdef\@title{#1}\gdef\THETITLE{#1}}

then use \THETITLE.

You can do the other way around: \def\MYTITLE{...} then \title{\MYTITLE} and later use \MYTITLE again.

2
  • 2
    Thanks, that did the trick, although I had to enclose the define in \makeatletter and \makeatother, which starts to be a whole lot of effort. So since I only need to use the title one other time, there's not much point. It'd be nice if there were a more sensible solution.
    – nedned
    Mar 28, 2010 at 9:36
  • 3
    This should be in tex.stackexchange.com. This didn't work for me. I needed to use \title{My Title} \makeatletter \let\thetitle\@title \makeatother And then use \thetitle later in the text.
    – gone
    Mar 26, 2016 at 15:33
23

I had success just writing a new command.

\newcommand{\mytitle}{...}

\title{\mytitle}
0
5

There is a package called authoraftertitle that does exactly this

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{authoraftertitle}
\setlength\parindent{0 pt}

\begin{document}

\title{a good title}
\author{a better author}
\date{the best date}

\maketitle

the title is: \textbf{\MyTitle} \\
the author is: \textbf{\MyAuthor} \\
the data is: \textbf{\MyDate} \\

\end{document}
3

This is a workaround...

\let\titleoriginal\title           % save original \title macro
\renewcommand{\title}[1]{          % substitute for a new \title
    \titleoriginal{#1}%               % define the real title
    \newcommand{\thetitle}{#1}        % define \thetitle
}

\title{This is my title}

\begin{document}
\thetitle
\end{document}

The short version of the title was ignored here...

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