The caption package provides many ways to customise the captions in floating environments like figure and table, and cooperates with many other packages. Facilities include rotating captions, sideways captions, continued captions (for tables or figures that come in several parts). A list of compatibility notes, for other packages, is provided in the documentation.

That said, most captions are nowhere near that long or stuffed with that many hashtags. No matter the length, the important thing is for your Instagram captions to grab attention and be easy to read and follow.


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Asking a question in your Instagram caption is a sure way to spark engagement with your post. Engagement is a key component of the Instagram algorithm. It also creates a great opportunity to interact with your audience.

Thanks for the quick reply. Problem is partially solved.

However, when I highlight and delete the caption text, the caption frame remains and the text wrap is not optimal below the picture.

How can the invisible caption frame be deleted without deleting the picture?

I already use a very similar workaround (see my workaround link above). The biggest disadvantage of this approach for me, however, is that inline Markdown in the alt text will not be interpreted, so you can not use e.g. inline math in caption text.

You can add captions to figures, equations, or other objects. A caption is a numbered label, such as "Figure 1", that you can add to a figure, a table, an equation, or another object. It's comprised of customizable text ("Figure", "Table", "Equation" or something else that you type) followed by an ordered number or letter ("1, 2, 3..." or "a, b, c..." typically) which can be optionally followed by some additional, descriptive, text if you like.

On the Captions dialog box, click AutoCaption, and then select the check boxes for the items that you want Word to automatically add captions to. You can also choose which position to add captions to in the Position drop-down list.

If you want to be able to wrap text around the object and its caption, or you want to be able to move the object and the caption as one unit, you must first group the object and the caption together.

Once you've added at least one caption to your document you should see a new style displayed on the style gallery called "Caption". To change the formatting of your captions throughout your document simply right-click that style on the gallery and choose Modify. You can set font size, color, type and other options that will apply to your captions.

To delete a caption select it and press Delete. When you're finished deleting captions, you should update the remaining set of captions in your document. Press CTRL+A to select all of the text in your document and then press F9 to update all. This will ensure that your caption numbers are correct after any caption removal.

Do you have suggestions about how we can improve captions (or any other feature) of Word? If so, let us know by providing us feedback. See How do I give feedback on Microsoft Office? for more information.

I am a complete beginner in Latex. I wanted to create a table. Unfortunately it was a bit crowded and it did not fit into the page. So, I wanted to decrease font size inside the table and googled it. I found [this][1] answer and applied it. It helped me to fit the table into the page but now, I cannot add caption to my table. Whenever I try to add it I got the following error:

1 Select the picture frame by clicking on it.

2 Go to the "Properties" panel on the right side of the interface.

3 In the "Caption" section of the panel, click the checkbox to enable captions.

4 Enter the text for your caption in the "Caption text" field.


Simple I thought....

But... my eyes must be deceiving me as I can not find the proper 'properties panel', and so can't find the caption section either.

What and where am I overlooking this?

Please help me, as its driving me a little insane today

Bing Chat..... I know.... don't trust too much on AI yet. ?

But still is it possible to add a caption, or not. 

And if so, how without having to add an extra text frame under the image.


There should (must) be a consistent and repetitive way to add captions to images?

I know I can make a picture frame, group it and make it an asset. But then when you change the aspect ration of the image, the caption gets distorted. That's not what I want.

Yikes, not what I had hoped to hear.

So still work to do for the affinity development team to add this.

Any reason why Affinity/Serif didn't add this feature yet? Its common to have the need for a caption below an image.

It just depends on your setup and your workflow. If you use a Frame Text object (not Art Text) resizing the Group does affect the Picture Frame (incl. its nested image) without affecting the font in the caption. If you do not select the Group for resizing but its nested two layers you have more options for the image and still don't resize the text.

I also wanted to add captions to picture frames and I 'knew' that it could be done because the Help article on Constraints talks about captions in picture frames, including a screen shot showing one, but I could not find an explanation of how to add them. Pasting the caption as content into the picture frame did not work properly. But with a bit of trial and error, I think I have worked out a way to do it:

In the screen shot I have locked the caption to the bottom edge of the picture frame. With these settings, the caption always remains the same height but varies its width according to how I might resize the picture frame.

@Jeremy R thanks for this. I follow your good directions exactly, but problem I having: text in captions box (text frame create for caption) does not show and tells to me text is overflow. But is not overflow. Please to see screenshot. Am I do something wrong?

CaptionCall is your call captioning solution for your home phone. When you sign up for CaptionCall, we provide our complimentary CaptionCall phone as part of the service. It works like a regular phone, but has a large touchscreen that displays scrolling text of your conversation for clear caption phone calls.

All captioned call companies receive compensation from the same Telecommunications Relay Services (TRS) Fund through the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). CaptionCall by Sorenson receives compensation from the TRS Fund by the minute for captioned calls.

Internet Protocol Captioned Telephone Service (IP CTS) is a form of telecommunications relay service (TRS) that enables an individual who can speak, but who has difficulty hearing, to use a phone. They can simultaneously listen to the other person and read captions of what the other person is saying.

Anyone who qualifies for the CaptionCall service will receive a CaptionCall phone to access their call captioning. To qualify for CaptionCall, you must have hearing loss that necessitates the use of captioned telephone service. You must complete an easy self-certification process and provide other mandatory registration information.

CaptionCall uses the most advanced voice-recognition technology, captioning agents, and a fast transcription service to display written captions of what a caller is saying on a large, easy-to-read screen.

Since then, captions have opened the world of television to people who are deaf and hard-of-hearing. At first, special broadcasts of some of the more popular programs were made accessible through the Public Broadcasting Service. Today, news, public affairs, and sports programming are captioned on network, public, and cable television, on the internet, and at movie theaters. Captions are no longer a novelty: they have become a necessity. Many commercial vendors and some specialized types of software now make it easy for individuals, groups, and schools to create captions.

Closed captioning is available on digital television sets, including high-definition television sets, manufactured after July 1, 2002. Some digital captioning menus allow the viewer to control the caption display, including font style, text size and color, and background color.

Although most real-time captioning is more than 98 percent accurate, the audience will see occasional errors. The captioner may mishear a word, hear an unfamiliar word, or have an error in the software dictionary.

Electronic newsroom captions (ENR) are created from a news script computer or teleprompter and are commonly used for live newscasts. Only material that is scripted can be captioned using this technique. Therefore, spontaneous commentary, live field reports, breaking news, and sports and weather updates may not be captioned using ENR, and real-time captioning is needed.

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 requires businesses and public accommodations to ensure that individuals with disabilities are not excluded from or denied services because of the absence of auxiliary aids. Captions are considered one type of auxiliary aid. Since the passage of the ADA, the use of captioning has expanded. Entertainment, educational, informational, and training materials are captioned for deaf and hard-of-hearing audiences at the time they are produced and distributed.

The Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990 requires that all televisions larger than 13 inches sold in the United States after July 1993 have a special built-in decoder that enables viewers to watch closed-captioned programming. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 directs the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to adopt rules requiring closed captioning of most television programming. 006ab0faaa

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