Features
Each check is deterministic and explained. Here is exactly what LaTeX Formatter detects, how detection works, and what you get back.
Figure overflow detection
Figures set wider than their column extend into the margin or across the gutter, making a paper look broken even when it compiles cleanly. Learn how LaTeX Formatter's figure overflow detection detects and fixes the issue, what it outputs, and an example.
Table width detection
A tabular whose columns exceed the available width spills past the column edge or across the central gutter in two-column layouts. Learn how LaTeX Formatter's table width detection detects and fixes the issue, what it outputs, and an example.
Float placement analysis
Restrictive placement specifiers like [h] and [H] cause figures to land on the wrong page, drift from their reference, or force large blocks of whitespace. Learn how LaTeX Formatter's float placement analysis detects and fixes the issue, what it outputs, and an example.
DOI validation
Dead, mistyped, or fabricated DOIs send reviewers to broken links and undermine a submission's credibility. Learn how LaTeX Formatter's doi validation detects and fixes the issue, what it outputs, and an example.
Reference validation
Citations with no matching bibliography entry, dead DOIs, or fabricated titles compile to broken references and erode trust. Learn how LaTeX Formatter's reference validation detects and fixes the issue, what it outputs, and an example.
Journal compliance checking
Each venue has its own submission guidelines - column geometry, bibliography style, page and abstract limits, anonymity - and violating them risks desk rejection. Learn how LaTeX Formatter's journal compliance checking detects and fixes the issue, what it outputs, and an example.