\clearpage & \cleardoublepage
Synopsis:
\clearpage
or
\cleardoublepage
End the current page and output all of the pending floating figures and tables (see Floats). If there are too many floats to fit on the page then LaTeX will put in extra pages containing only floats. In two-sided printing, \cleardoublepage
also makes the next page of content a right-hand page, an odd-numbered page, if necessary inserting a blank page. The \clearpage
command is robust while \cleardoublepage
is fragile (see \protect).
LaTeX’s page breaks are optimized so ordinarily you only use this command in a document body to polish the final version, or inside commands.
The \cleardoublepage
command will put in a blank page, but it will have the running headers and footers. To get a really blank page, use this command.
\let\origdoublepage\cleardoublepage \newcommand{\clearemptydoublepage}{% \clearpage {\pagestyle{empty}\origdoublepage}% }
If you want LaTeX’s standard \chapter
command to do this then add the line \let\cleardoublepage\clearemptydoublepage
.
The command \newpage
(see \newpage) also ends the current page, but without clearing pending floats. And, if LaTeX is in two-column mode then \newpage
ends the current column while \clearpage
and \cleardoublepage
end the current page.
© 2007–2018 Karl Berry
Public Domain Software
http://latexref.xyz/_005cclearpage-_0026-_005ccleardoublepage.html