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Introduction To LaTeX

This document provides an introduction to the basics of LaTeX, a document formatting language. It discusses the skeleton structure of a LaTeX document and how to add elements such as titles, text formatting, lists, math expressions, Greek letters, matrices, and more. Formatting is achieved using tags prefixed with backslash characters. For example, \begin{document} marks the start of the document contents.

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Anmol Agarwal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
161 views9 pages

Introduction To LaTeX

This document provides an introduction to the basics of LaTeX, a document formatting language. It discusses the skeleton structure of a LaTeX document and how to add elements such as titles, text formatting, lists, math expressions, Greek letters, matrices, and more. Formatting is achieved using tags prefixed with backslash characters. For example, \begin{document} marks the start of the document contents.

Uploaded by

Anmol Agarwal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LaTeX

This page is about the basics of LaTeX.


LaTeX is a formatting language that helps making beautifully laid out documents with ease.

The Skeleton
This is the basic skeleton of a LaTeX document. For most cases the documentClass will be
article . The space between the \documentClass{article} and \begin{document} is called the

prologue of the document.

\documentClass{article}

\begin{document}
Hello World
\end{document}

The Title
The title defined can have several attributes. The common ones are:

\title{My first \LaTeX Document}


\author{Dhruv Kapur}
\date{April 2020}

These are written above the \begin{document} tag. The title is then injected into the document
using:

\begin{document}
\maketitle
\end{document}

Text Decoration
Bold → \textbf{}

Italic → \textit{}

Underline → \underline{}

Lists
Unordered List

\begin{itemize}
\item Item1
\item Item2
\end{itemize}

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Ordered List

\begin{enumerate}
\item Item1
\item Item2
\end{enumerate}

Math
Several Math symbols require the amsmath package. So be sure to include it in the prologue of
the document:

\usepackage{amsmath}

Inline

The mass-energy equivalence \(E=mc^2\) was stated by Albert Einstein in 1905.

Display Block

The mass-energy equivalence is described by the famous formula \[E=mc^2\]

Numbered Equations

The mass-energy equicalence is described by the famous equation \begin{equation}E=mc^2\end{equation}

Subscripts and Superscripts


Subscript is given by _ , for example a_b translates to a subscript b.

Superscript is given by ^ , for example a^b translates to a superscript b.

These can be nested, like

a^b_c gives:

abc

a^{b_c} gives:

abc

And so on.

Dots and Fractions

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Dots are very important when writing equations with unknown or even infinite terms.
Fractions also show up in several equations and should be represented properly For example:

n(n − 1)
1+2+⋯+n =
2
The above is achieved using the code:

\[1+2+\dots+n=\frac{n(n-1)}{2}\]

Vertical and Diagonal dots can also be introduced using the \vdots and \ddots tags
respectively.

Greek Letters
Greek letters can be used in LaTex by prefixing them with a \ and enclosing them in the
inline syntax, like \(\...\) (replace the dots with the name of the letter. If the name is in all
lowercase, it will get translated into a lowercase letter, while a capitalized name will get
translated into an uppercase letter. For example:

\(\sigma\)\(\Sigma\)

Gets translated to

σΣ

Mathematical Operators
Math Operators are prefixed with a \ and enclosed in the inline syntax, just like the Greek
Letters. For example, \(\log(x) ), \(\sin(\alpha)) . Or, if they are to be in a line of their own,
they can be enclosed with the display block syntax instead.

\[\log(\alpha+\beta)\]

log(α + β)

Important Math Symbols

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Sums and Products
Sums and Products are also pretty commonly used. These can be achieved in LaTex as:

\[\sum_{i=0}^{\infty}i\]


∑i
i=0

\[\prod_{i=1}^{n}i\]

n
∏i
i=1

Number Sets
The special letters for number sets can also be used in LaTeX. However firstly, add
\usepackage{amsfonts} to the prologue. Now, any number set can be enclosed in \(\mathbb{.}\)

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(replace the dot with the letter N, Z, R or C for Natural, Integers, Rational or Complex
Numbers respectively).

\(\mathbb{C}\) is the set of all complex numbers

C is the set of all complex numbers

Matrices
Here, we have several types of matrices, but we'll look at only Square Bracket and Round
Bracket matrices.

\begin{bmatrix}
1 & 2 & 3 \\
a & b & c
\end{bmatrix}

1 2 3
[ ]
a b c

\begin{pmatrix}
1 & 2 & 3 \\
a & b & c
\end{pmatrix}

1 2 3
( )
a b c

We can also show the determinant matrix:

\begin{vmatrix}
1 & 2 \\
2 & 1
\end{vmatrix}

∣1 2∣∣

∣2 1∣∣

Matrices can also be made inline using the inline syntax:

This is an inline 2\times2 matix: \(\begin{pmatrix}a&b\\c&d\end{pmatrix}\)

)
a b
T his is an inline 2 × 2 matrix :  (
c d

New Lines and Spaces

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A new line can be added to the document by physically leaving a line in between the two
lines that you want to break.

This is line 1.

This line will be on a new line.

Spaces show up as they are typed in LaTeX. However, inside the inline math block \(\) and
the display math block \[\] , regular spaces don't register, and they must be explicitly
declared using the \space tag.

LaTeX 9

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