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What's the difference? I know that \pagebreak can take an optional argument that specifies how much a page break is desired, but is there any difference if the optional argument is not used?

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5 Answers 5

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Both commands start a new page.

If the optional argument is not used, \pagebreak will start a new page and the paragraphs of the old page will be spread out so that the old page will not look like the end of a chapter.

With \newpage, on the other hand, the old page will have the blank space at the bottom, because the paragraphs will stick together as if the chapter had ended there.

This link will be useful, and the answer to a duplicate question (that was migrated from SO to this site later) gives the following example: alt text

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  • Thanks! Not sure how I missed that SO question in my Googling, but I did… Jul 31, 2010 at 20:37
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    @Ben: even if you had seen it, it is useful to have the answer here as well!
    – Vivi
    Jul 31, 2010 at 20:39
  • @Juan: thanks... I wish I could take more of the credit, but the real work was done by the person who answer the SO question linked above :)
    – Vivi
    Aug 4, 2010 at 9:38
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    and you have the same difference between \newline and \linebreak on the line scale. Aug 10, 2010 at 11:47
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    Basically the same spacing differences exist for \linebreak vs. \newline. Jul 6, 2011 at 7:15
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\pagebreak tries to make the page the same height as other pages if it's possible (by stretching intervals between paragraphs etc) and \newpage just fills the page with empty space.

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\newpage forces a new page at the point at which it occurs.

\pagebreak without options forces a new page at the end of the line in which it occurs.

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5

If you really want the page to be changed, one of the most useful way I found so far is :

\clearpage
\pagebreak
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The multicols environment has \columnbreak, but it seems to behave more like \newpage than \pagebreak.

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