unify
is a Typst package simplifying the typesetting of numbers, units, and ranges. It is the equivalent to LaTeX's siunitx
, though not as mature.
unify
allows flexible numbers and units, and still mostly gets well typeset results.
#import "@preview/unify:0.7.0": num,qty,numrange,qtyrange
$ num("-1.32865+-0.50273e-6") $
$ qty("1.3+1.2-0.3e3", "erg/cm^2/s", space: "#h(2mm)") $
$ numrange("1,1238e-2", "3,0868e5", thousandsep: "'") $
$ qtyrange("1e3", "2e3", "meter per second squared", per: "/", delimiter: "\"to\"") $
Right now, physical, monetary, and binary units are supported. New issues or pull requests for new units are welcome!
The Unify package supports multiple languages. Currently, the supported languages are English and Russian. The fallback is English. If you want to add your language, you should add two files: prefixes-xx.csv
and units-xx.csv
, and in the lib.typ
file you should fix the lang-db
state for your files.
num
uses string parsing in order to typeset numbers, including separators between the thousands. They can have the following form:
float
orinteger
number- either (
{}
stands for a number)- symmetric uncertainties with
+-{}
- asymmetric uncertainties with
+{}-{}
- symmetric uncertainties with
- exponential notation
e{}
Parentheses are automatically set as necessary. Use thousandsep
to change the separator between the thousands, and multiplier
to change the multiplication symbol between the number and exponential.
unit
takes the unit in words or in symbolic notation as its first argument. The value of space
will be inserted between units if necessary. Setting per
to symbol
will format the number with exponents (i.e. ^(-1)
), fraction
or /
using fraction, and fraction-short
or \\/
using in-line fractions.
Units in words have four possible parts:
per
forms the inverse of the following unit.- A written-out prefix in the sense of SI (e.g.
centi
). This is added before the unit. - The unit itself written out (e.g.
gram
). - A postfix like
squared
. This is added after the unit and takesper
into account.
The shorthand notation also has four parts:
/
forms the inverse of the following unit.- A short prefix in the sense of SI (e.g.
k
). This is added before the unit. - The short unit itself (e.g.
g
). - An exponent like
^2
. This is added after the unit and takes/
into account.
Note: Use u
for micro.
The possible values of the three latter parts are loaded at runtime from prefixes.csv
, units.csv
, and postfixes.csv
(in the library directory). Your own units etc. can be permanently added in these files. At runtime, they can be added using add-unit
and add-prefix
, respectively. The formats for the pre- and postfixes are:
pre-/postfix | shorthand | symbol |
---|---|---|
milli | m | upright("m") |
and for units:
unit | shorthand | symbol | space |
---|---|---|---|
meter | m | upright("m") | true |
The first column specifies the written-out word, the second one the shorthand. These should be unique. The third column represents the string that will be inserted as the unit symbol. For units, the last column describes whether there should be space before the unit (possible values: true
/false
, 1
,0
). This is mostly the cases for degrees and other angle units (e.g. arcseconds).
If you think there are units not included that are of interest for other users, you can create an issue or PR.
qty
allows a num
as the first argument following the same rules. The second argument is a unit. If rawunit
is set to true, its value will be passed on to the result (note that the string passed on will be passed to eval
, so add escaped quotes \"
if necessary). Otherwise, it follows the rules of unit
. The value of space
will be inserted between units if necessary, thousandsep
between the thousands, and per
switches between exponents and fractions.
numrange
takes two num
s as the first two arguments. If they have the same exponent, it is automatically factorized. The range symbol can be changed with delimiter
, and the space between the numbers and symbols with space
.
qtyrange
is just a combination of unit
and range
.