\hspace
¶Synopsis, one of:
\hspace{length} \hspace*{length}
Insert the amount length of horizontal space. The length can
be positive, negative, or zero; adding a negative amount of space is
like backspacing. It is a rubber length, that is, it may contain a
plus
or minus
component, or both (see Lengths).
Because the space is stretchable and shrinkable, it is sometimes called
glue.
This makes a line with ‘Name:’ an inch from the right margin.
\noindent\makebox[\linewidth][r]{Name:\hspace{1in}}
The *
-form inserts horizontal space that is non-discardable. More
precisely, when TeX breaks a paragraph into lines any white
space—glues and kerns—that come at a line break are discarded. The
*
-form avoids that (technically, it adds a non-discardable
invisible item in front of the space).
In this example
\parbox{0.8\linewidth}{% Fill in each blank: Four \hspace*{1in} and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new \hspace*{1in}, conceived in \hspace*{1in}, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created \hspace*{1in}.}
the 1 inch blank following ‘conceived in’ falls at the start
of a line. If you erase the *
then LaTeX discards the blank.
Here, the \hspace
separates the three graphics.
\begin{center} \includegraphics{lion.png}% comment keeps out extra space \hspace{1cm minus 0.25cm}\includegraphics{tiger.png}% \hspace{1cm minus 0.25cm}\includegraphics{bear.png} \end{center}
Because the argument to each \hspace
has minus 0.25cm
,
each can shrink a little if the three figures are too wide. But each
space won’t shrink more than 0.25cm (see Lengths).