The LaTeX-package ``fcolumn'' In financial reports, text and currency amounts are regularly put in one table, e.g., a year balance or a profit-and-loss overview. This package provides the settings for automatically typesetting such columns, including the sum line (preceded by a rule of the correct width), using the specifier ``f''. The column specifier f itself is rather simple. It is the predefined version of a generic column F. The generic version expects three arguments: |#1| is the separator, |#2| is the decimal mark, and |#3| the coding used for grouping digits of the integer part and decimal part. For example the f-column in the current version of the package is using 3.2 as #3, meaning that numbers are typeset with 2 decimal digits and grouping is done on 3 digits. The decimal separator is ``,'' and the grouping character is ``.'', thereby coding for the continental European standard. People in the Anglo-saxon world would rather code |\newcolumntype{f}{F{,}{.}{3,2}}|. To show where and how the f-column is used, let's look at a typical financial table. properties 31 dec 2014 debts 31 dec 2014 ----------------------------------------------------- house 200.000,00 equity capital 50.000,00 bank account -603,23 mortgage 150.000,00 savings 28.000,00 cash 145,85 profit 27.542,62 ---------- ---------- 227.542,62 227.542,62 The core part of the table is input as \begin{table} \begin{tabular}{lflf} house & 20000000 & equity capital & 5000000\\ bank account & -60323 & mortgage & 15000000\\ savings & 2800000\\ cash & 14585 & profit & 2754262\\ \sumline \end{tabular} \end{table} The column specifier ``f'' (for ``finance'') is able to do the typesetting. It constructs the sum line, typesets the numbers, calculates the totals, and checks whether the two columns are in balance; if not, the user is warned via a message. A special command \resetsumline exists which alllows one to restart a table, so that multiple tables in one tabular environment are possible.