\documentclass[11pt]{article}
\usepackage[table]{xcolor}
\definecolor{lightgray}{gray}{0.9}
\begin{document}
\begin{table}[ht]
\caption{default}
\begin{center}
\rowcolors{1}{}{lightgray}
\begin{tabular}{r|rrrrr}
\hline
& 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 \\
\hline
1 & 2.36 & 1.08 & -0.49 & -0.82 & -0.65 \\
2 & -0.68 & -1.13 & -0.42 & -0.72 & 1.51 \\
3 & -1.00 & 0.02 & -0.54 & 0.31 & 1.28 \\
4 & -0.99 & -0.54 & 0.97 & -1.12 & 0.59 \\
5 & -2.35 & -0.29 & -0.53 & 0.30 & -0.30 \\
6 & -0.10 & 0.06 & -0.85 & 0.10 & -0.60 \\
7 & 1.28 & -0.46 & 1.33 & -0.66 & -1.80 \\
8 & 0.80 & 0.46 & 1.37 & 1.73 & 1.93 \\
9 & -0.75 & 0.28 & 0.51 & 0.19 & 0.58 \\
10 & -1.64 & -0.12 & -1.17 & -0.10 & -0.04 \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
\end{table}
\end{document}
-
Hi, can you see if this question and the @Bernard 's answer is it fine for you :-)?tex.stackexchange.com/questions/300994/… To me seem a duplicate your question.– SebastianoJun 16, 2021 at 14:35
2 Answers
I think that what you see is mostly aliasing and/or effect of the viewer antialiasing algorithms. Your code, using okular
, 1600% magnification, color picked:
If the effect annoys you, you can remove all the vertical lines and play with spaces and styles:
\documentclass[11pt]{article}
\usepackage[table]{xcolor}
\definecolor{lightgray}{gray}{0.9}
\usepackage{booktabs}
\begin{document}
\begin{table}[ht]
\caption{default}
\begin{center}
\rowcolors{1}{}{lightgray}
\begin{tabular}{>{\bfseries}rrrrrr}
\toprule
\qquad & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 \\
\midrule
1 & 2.36 & 1.08 & -0.49 & -0.82 & -0.65 \\
2 & -0.68 & -1.13 & -0.42 & -0.72 & 1.51 \\
3 & -1.00 & 0.02 & -0.54 & 0.31 & 1.28 \\
4 & -0.99 & -0.54 & 0.97 & -1.12 & 0.59 \\
5 & -2.35 & -0.29 & -0.53 & 0.30 & -0.30 \\
6 & -0.10 & 0.06 & -0.85 & 0.10 & -0.60 \\
7 & 1.28 & -0.46 & 1.33 & -0.66 & -1.80 \\
8 & 0.80 & 0.46 & 1.37 & 1.73 & 1.93 \\
9 & -0.75 & 0.28 & 0.51 & 0.19 & 0.58 \\
10 & -1.64 & -0.12 & -1.17 & -0.10 & -0.04 \\
\bottomrule
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
\end{table}
\end{document}
-
-
2Well, I teach analog electronics, and aliasing is one of my pet-peeves. If you only knew the number of papers I reviewed getting it wrong...– RmanoJun 16, 2021 at 14:54
-
ok I see the lines fluctuate as I zoom. So I guess this is nothing I can fix in my doc, just an artifact of viewing?– curiousJun 16, 2021 at 14:55
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@curious exactly. In addition, there can be also an effect of vision here: slate.com/technology/2013/12/…– RmanoJun 16, 2021 at 14:57
The package nicematrix
has tools specifically designed to solve that kind of problems.
The environment {NiceTabular}
draws the colored cells, rows and columns before the rules. The resulting PDF is much easier to interpret by the PDF viewers and you won't have the effect you see by using the package colortbl
(which is loaded by the key table
of xcolor
).
\documentclass[11pt]{article}
\usepackage{xcolor}
\definecolor{lightgray}{gray}{0.9}
\usepackage{nicematrix}
\begin{document}
\begin{table}[ht]
\caption{default}
\begin{center}
\begin{NiceTabular}{r|rrrrr}
\CodeBefore
\rowcolors{1}{}{lightgray}
\Body
\hline
& 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 \\
\hline
1 & 2.36 & 1.08 & -0.49 & -0.82 & -0.65 \\
2 & -0.68 & -1.13 & -0.42 & -0.72 & 1.51 \\
3 & -1.00 & 0.02 & -0.54 & 0.31 & 1.28 \\
4 & -0.99 & -0.54 & 0.97 & -1.12 & 0.59 \\
5 & -2.35 & -0.29 & -0.53 & 0.30 & -0.30 \\
6 & -0.10 & 0.06 & -0.85 & 0.10 & -0.60 \\
7 & 1.28 & -0.46 & 1.33 & -0.66 & -1.80 \\
8 & 0.80 & 0.46 & 1.37 & 1.73 & 1.93 \\
9 & -0.75 & 0.28 & 0.51 & 0.19 & 0.58 \\
10 & -1.64 & -0.12 & -1.17 & -0.10 & -0.04 \\
\hline
\end{NiceTabular}
\end{center}
\end{table}
\end{document}
You need several compilations (because nicematrix
uses PGF/Tikz nodes).