I appreciate your concern!

I found this old blog which tries to workaround this problem editing cell 
metadata, which I think not to be a problem.
http://blog.juliusschulz.de/blog/ultimate-ipython-notebook

The problem is that it doesn't work and I can't find a good reference to 
build jinja2 template for nbconvert and fix it!
I will try your suggestion and reply with the results.

Thanks

Em quarta-feira, 22 de março de 2017 14:36:06 UTC-3, Mike Pacer escreveu:
>
> Hi Thales,
>
> I've been thinking about this and the best solution I can think of would 
> be to save the figures to disk, and explicitly invoke them with the 
> traditional 
>
> \begin{figure}
> … 
> \caption{ \label{fig:your-label} your caption.}}
> \end{figure} 
>
> I think should be able to do this with a simple markdown LaTeX invocation, 
> but it may require using a nbconvert raw cell.
>
> Note: this won't look good in the browser itself, but it will work on 
> export. 
>
> Other than that, this is something that we've been talking about how to 
> implement for a while. The current thought is that we might want to create 
> a new IPython Figure class that allows you to programmatically set this 
> kind of metadata so that it is attached directly to your outputs. 
>
> In terms of equations, you should be able to specify a label inside the 
> equation \begin{equation} \label{eq:your-label} … \end{equation}. However, 
> specifying a ref in line is somewhat more challenging. The problem is that 
> MathJax (what we use in the notebook browser to display maths) only 
> (ostensibly) surfaces math mode via its commands. As a result of that, 
> everything that is captured by LaTeX that isn't a `\begin{blah}…\end{blah}` 
> command is automatically assumed to be in math mode, and I do not believe 
> that `\ref` (or better `\autoref` since we use the `hyperref` package in 
> the default template) work inside math mode. I'll try to think about a 
> better way to solve this…maybe using something like the data-attribute 
> trick we use for citations (e.g., <a data-cite="pacer2015">(Pacer, 
> 2015)</a>), because this should be possible.
>
> Cheers,
> M
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 21, 2017 at 1:17 PM, Thales Maia <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm intending to use jupyter for all my writing needs, but I'm having lot 
>> of trouble exporting to latex for my students.
>> I've made a tplx (jinja2) template to export my notebook and is working, 
>> but I'm having trouble to cross-reference my figures when exporting.
>>
>> I need to set \label{fig:x} so latex can found it. Can someone please 
>> point a doc where I can found a solution?
>> I also have the same problem with equation and reference.
>>
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