Frequently Asked Question List for TeX
\cr
This is an error you may encounter in LaTeX when a tabular
environment is being processed. “Alignment tabs” are the
&
signs that separate the columns of a tabular
(or array
or matrix) environment; so the error message
! Extra alignment tab has been changed to \cr
could arise from a simple typo, such as:
\begin{tabular}{ll}
hello & there & jim \\
goodbye & now
\end{tabular}
where the second &
in the first line of the table is more than the
two-column ll
column specification can cope with. In this
case, an extra l
in that solves the problem. (If you
continue from the error in this case, jim
will be moved
to a row of his own.) Another simple typo that can provoke the error
is:
\begin{tabular}{ll}
hello & there
goodbye & now
\end{tabular}
where the \\
has been missed from the first line of the table.
In this case, if you continue from the error, you will find that
LaTeX has made a table equivalent to:
\begin{tabular}{ll}
hello & there goodbye\\
now
\end{tabular}
(with the second line of the table having only one cell).
Rather more difficult to spot is the occurrence of the error when
you’re using alignment instructions in a p
column:
\usepackage{array}
...
\begin{tabular}{l>{\raggedright}p{2in}}
here & we are again \\
happy & as can be
\end{tabular}
the problem here (as explained in
tabular cell alignment) is that the
\raggedright
command in the column specification has overwritten
tabular
s definition of \\
, so that
happy
appears in a new line of the second column, and the
following &
appears to LaTeX just like the second
&
in the first example above.
Get rid of the error in the way described in
tabular cell alignment — either use
\tabularnewline
explicitly, or use the \RBS
trick described
there.
The amsmath
package adds a further twist; when typesetting
a matrix (the package provides many matrix environments), it has a
fixed maximum number of columns in a matrix — exceed that maximum,
and the error will appear. By default, the maximum is set to 10, but
the value is stored in counter MaxMatrixCols
and may be
changed (in the same way as any counter):
\setcounter{MaxMatrixCols}{20}
FAQ ID: Q-altabcr