\chapter{Continued captions} \label{chap:ContCaptions} Here are some funky floats using ``continued captions'', i.e. for a semantically collected group of float contents which are too numerous to fit into a single float, such as the pretty circles in the following figure: \newcommand{\circleimg}[1]{% \begin{tikzpicture} \draw[color=black,fill=#1,thick] (1,0) circle (1.5cm); \end{tikzpicture}% } \begin{figure}[hb] \subfloat[][Example 1a]{\label{fig:cc1a}\circleimg{red!80}}\quad \subfloat[][Example 1b]{\label{fig:cc1b}\circleimg{green!70!yellow}}\quad \subfloat[][Example 1c]{\label{fig:cc1c}\circleimg{blue!80}}\quad \subfloat[][Example 1d]{\label{fig:cc1d}\circleimg{orange!80!yellow}} \caption{Demonstration of \texttt{subfig} continued captions.} \label{fig:cc1} \end{figure} \begin{figure}[p] \ContinuedFloat \subfloat[][Example 1e]{\label{fig:cc1e}\circleimg{violet}}\quad \subfloat[][Example 1f]{\label{fig:cc1f}\circleimg{cyan}}\quad \subfloat[][Example 1g]{\label{fig:cc1g}\circleimg{magenta}}\quad \subfloat[][Example 1h]{\label{fig:cc1h}\circleimg{yellow}} \caption[]{Demonstration of \texttt{subfig} continued captions (continued).} \end{figure} \noindent This mechanism means that the same float label is used for both pages of floats. Note that we can refer to \FigureRef{fig:cc1} in general, or to \FigureRef{fig:cc1g} on \PageRef{fig:cc1g} in particular! \noindent Just for the hell of it, let's also refer to \SectionRef{sec:neutralmixing}.