Math Mode
Math Mode
28
Herbert Vo September 24, 2007
Abstract It is often said that TEX was designed for mathematical or technical purposes. This may be true when we remember the reasons why Donald Knuth created TEX. But nowadays there are many examples in which TEX is used for publications with no mathematical or technical background content. However, writing publications with such material is one of the important advantages of TEX. Because it seems impossible A to know all existing macros and options of (L )TEX and the several additional packages, especially of AMSmath. This is the reason why I have attempted to gather all the relevant facts in this paper. An advanced german version of this paper is available as a book [25].
Please report typos or any other comments to this documentation to [email protected]. This le can be redistributed and/or modied under the terms of A the L TEX Project Public License Distributed from CTAN archives in directory CTAN://macros/latex/base/lppl.txt.
Thanks for the feedback to: Hendri Adriaens; Juan Mari Alberdi; Heiko Bauke; Neal Becker; Andrea Blomenhofer; Alexander Boronka; Walter Brown; Christian Faulhammer; Jos Luis Gmez Dans; Zongbao Fang; Sabine Glaser; Sven Gleich; Azzam Hassam; Henning Heinze; Martin Hensel; Mathias Homann; Morten Hgholm; M. Kalidoss; Dan Lasley; Angus Leeming; Vladimir Lomov; Tim Love; Dan Luecking; Hendrik Maryns; Heinz Mezera; David Neuway; Luis Trucco Passadore; Joachim Punter; Carl Riehm; Will Robertson; Christoph Rumsmller; Jos Carlos Santos; Arnaud Schmittbuhl; Rainer Schpf; Jens Schwaiger; Uwe Siart; Martin Sievers; Heiko Stamer; Uwe Sthr; Carsten Thiel; Juan Luis Varona; David Weenink; Philipp Wook; Michael Zedler; Zou Yuan-Chuan; and last but not least a special thanks to Monika Hattenbach for her excellent job of proofreading.
CONTENTS
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Contents
Page
10
10 10 11 11 11 12 12 13 13 13 13 14 14 16 16 16 17 17 17 17 18 19
1 Introduction 2 The 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Inlinemode Limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fraction command . . . . . . . Math in Chapter/Section Titles Equation numbering . . . . . . Framed math . . . . . . . . . . Linebreak . . . . . . . . . . . . Whitespace . . . . . . . . . . . AMSmath for the inline mode .
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3 Displaymath mode 3.1 equation environment . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2 eqnarray environment . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.1 Short commands . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3 Equation numbering . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3.1 Changing the style . . . . . . . . . . 3.3.2 Resetting a counter style . . . . . . . 3.3.3 Equation numbers on the left side . 3.3.4 Changing the equation number style 3.3.5 More than one equation counter . . 3.4 Labels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5 Frames . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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8 Brackets, braces . . . 8.1 Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.1.1 Braces over several lines 8.1.2 Middle bar . . . . . . . 8.2 New delimiters . . . . . . . . . 8.3 Problems with parentheses . . . 9 Text in math mode
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26 28 28 29 29 30 30 31 31 31 32 32 33 34 35 35 35 36 38 39 39 40 41 41 42 42 43 44 45 46 46 47
10 Font commands 10.1 Old-style font commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.2 New-style font commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Space 11.1 Math typesetting . . . . . . . . . . . 11.2 Additional horizontal spacing . . . . 11.3 Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.4 Dot versus comma . . . . . . . . . . 11.5 Vertical whitespace . . . . . . . . . . 11.5.1 Before/after math expressions 11.5.2 Inside math expressions . . . 12 Styles 13 Dots 14 Accents 14.1 Over- and underbrackets . . . . . . . 14.1.1 Use of \underbracket{...} . 14.1.2 Overbracket . . . . . . . . . . 14.2 Vectors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Exponents and indices 16 Operators 17 Greek letters 18 Pagebreaks 19 \stackrel 20 \choose 21 Color in math expressions
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22 Boldmath 47 22.1 Bold math titles and items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 23 Multiplying numbers 24 Other macros 49 49
II
AMSmath package
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50
51 52 53 54 55 56 56 56 57 57 57 59 61 62 64 65 66 66
25 align environments 25.1 The default align environment 25.2 alignat environment . . . . . . 25.3 flalign environment . . . . . . 25.4 xalignat environment . . . . . 25.5 xxalignat environment . . . . 25.6 aligned environment . . . . . . 25.7 Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Other environments 26.1 gather environment . . . . . . 26.2 gathered environment . . . . . 26.3 multline environment . . . . . 26.3.1 Examples for multline 26.4 split environment . . . . . . . 26.5 cases environment . . . . . . . 26.6 Matrix environments . . . . . . 27 Vertical whitespace 28 Dots
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29 fraction commands 67 29.1 Standard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 29.2 Binoms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 30 Roots 69 30.1 Roots with \smash command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 31 Accents 32 \mod command 69 70
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72
35 Limits 72 35.1 Multiple limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 35.2 Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 35.3 \sideset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 36 Operator names 75
37 Text in math mode 76 37.1 \text command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 37.2 \intertext command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 38 Extensible arrows 39 Frames 40 Greek letters 41 Miscellaneous commands 42 Problems with amsmath 78 79 80 80 81
III
83
83 83 83 83 83 83 84 84 85 85 85 85 85 86 86 86 86 86 86
43 Length registers 43.1 \abovedisplayshortskip 43.2 \abovedisplayskip . . . 43.3 \belowdisplayshortskip 43.4 \belowdisplayskip . . . 43.5 \delimiterfactor . . . . 43.6 \delimitershortfall . . 43.7 \displayindent . . . . . 43.8 \displaywidth . . . . . . 43.9 \mathsurround . . . . . . 43.10\medmuskip . . . . . . . . 43.11\mkern . . . . . . . . . . . 43.12\mskip . . . . . . . . . . . 43.13\muskip . . . . . . . . . . 43.14\muskipdef . . . . . . . . 43.15\nonscript . . . . . . . . 43.16\nulldelimiterspace . . 43.17\predisplaysize . . . . . 43.18\scriptspace . . . . . . .
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43.19\thickmuskip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43.20\thinmuskip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43.21\medmuskip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Math font macros 44.1 \delcode . . . . . . 44.2 \delimiter . . . . . 44.3 \displaystyle . . . 44.4 \fam . . . . . . . . . 44.5 \mathaccent . . . . 44.6 \mathbin . . . . . . 44.7 \mathchar . . . . . . 44.8 \mathchardef . . . . 44.9 \mathchoice . . . . 44.10\mathclose . . . . . 44.11\mathcode . . . . . . 44.12\mathop . . . . . . . 44.13\mathopen . . . . . . 44.14\mathord . . . . . . 44.15\mathpunct . . . . . 44.16\mathrel . . . . . . 44.17\scriptfont . . . . 44.18\scriptscriptfont 44.19\scriptscriptstyle 44.20\scriptstyle . . . . 44.21\skew . . . . . . . . 44.22\skewchar . . . . . . 44.23\textfont . . . . . . 44.24\textstyle . . . . . 45 Math macros 45.1 \above . . . . . . . 45.2 \abovewithdelims 45.3 \atop . . . . . . . 45.4 \atopwithdelims . 45.5 \displaylimits . 45.6 \eqno . . . . . . . 45.7 \everydisplay . . 45.8 \everymath . . . . 45.9 \left . . . . . . . 45.10\leqno . . . . . . . 45.11\limits . . . . . . 45.12\mathinner . . . . 45.13\nolimits . . . . .
86 86 87 87 87 87 87 88 88 88 88 89 89 89 89 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 91 91 91 91 91 91 91 91 92 92 92 92 93 93 93 93 93 94 94 94 6
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CONTENTS
CONTENTS
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94 94 94 94 95 95 95 95 95 95 96 96 96
46 Math penalties 46.1 \binoppenalty . . . . . 46.2 \displaywidowpenalty 46.3 \postdisplaypenalty . 46.4 \predisplaypenalty . . 46.5 \relpenalty . . . . . .
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IV
Other packages
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97
97 97 98 98 98 100 100 101 102 104 104 105 106 107 107 108 109 109 109
47 List of available math packages 47.1 accents . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.2 amscd commutative diagrams 47.3 amsopn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.4 bigdel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.5 bm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.6 braket . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.7 cancel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.8 cool . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.9 delarray . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.10dotseqn . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.11empheq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.12esint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.13eucal and euscript . . . . . . 47.14exscale . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.15mathtools . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.16nicefrac . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.17relsize . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47.18xypic . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Math fonts
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111 111
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VI
Special symbols
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114 115 116 116 117
54 Integral symbols 55 Harpoons 56 Bijective mapping arrow 57 Stacked equal sign 58 Other symbols
VII
Examples
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118 119 119 119 120
59 Tuning math typesetting 60 Matrix 60.1 Identity matrix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60.2 System of linear equations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60.3 Matrix with comments on top . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
61 Cases structure 120 61.1 Cases with numbered lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 62 Arrays 62.1 Quadratic equation . . . . . . . . . 62.2 Vectors and matrices . . . . . . . . 62.3 Cases with (eqn)array environment 62.4 Arrays inside arrays . . . . . . . . 62.5 Colored cells . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62.6 Boxed rows and columns . . . . . . 121 122 123 123 124 125 126
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63 Over- and underbraces 127 63.1 Braces and roots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 63.2 Overlapping braces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 63.3 Vertical alignment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
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65 Horizontal alignment 130 65.1 Over more than one page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 65.2 Special text columns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132 65.3 Centered vertical dots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 66 Node connections 134
67 Special Placement 136 67.1 Formulas side by side . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136 67.2 Itemize environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 68 Roots 139
VIII
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142 143 144 146 155
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2 THE INLINEMODE
The following sections describe all the math commands which are available without any additional package. Most of them also work with special packages and some of them are redened. At rst some important facts for typesetting math expressions.
The Inlinemode
As the name says there are always math expressions which are in a standard b textline, like this one: f (x) = a sin x dx. There are no limitations for the x height of the math expressions, so that the layout may be very lousy if you a b c insert a big matrix in an inline mode like this: A = d e f . In this g h i case it is better to use the \smallmatrix environment A =
a b c d e f g h i
from the
AMSmath package (see section 26.6 on page 65) or the displaymath mode (section 3 on page 13). This inline mode is possible with three dierent commands:
1
= 1 n (n + 1) 2
1 = 2 n (n + 1) 1 2n
3 4 5
(n + 1)
\(\ sum _{ i =1}^{ n } i =\ frac {1}{2} n \ cdot ( n +1) \) \\[10 pt ] $\ sum _{ i =1}^{ n } i =\ frac {1}{2} n \ cdot ( n +1) $\\[10 pt ] \ begin { math } \ sum _{ i =1}^{ n } i =\ frac {1}{2} n \ cdot ( n +1) \ end { math }
1. \( ... \) , the problem is that \( is not a robust macro (see sec- \(...\) tion 2.3 on the following page). 2. $ ... $ 3. \begin{math} ... \end{math}, also not robust
$...$
\begin{math} ... In general $...$ is the best choice, but this does not work in environments \end{math}
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2.1 Limits
2 THE INLINEMODE
2.1
Limits
In the inline mode the limits are by default only in super or subscript mode and the fractions are always in the scriptstyle1 font size. For example: 1 1 x2 dx = 1, which is not too big for the textline. You can change this with the command \limits, which must follow a math operator2 like an integral (\int), a sum (\sum), a product (\prod) or a limes (\lim). But this 1 dx = 1 ($\int\limits_{1}^...) does not look very nice in a text line when x2 it appears between two lines, especially when there are multiline limits.3
1
2.2
Fraction command
For inlined formulas the fractions are by default in the scriptstyle (see tabular 8 a on page 38), which is good for typesetting y = b+1 , because the linespacing is nearly the same, but not optimal, when the formula shows some important \frac facts. There are two solutions to get a better reading: 1. choose the display mode instead of the inline mode, which is the better one; 2. set the fontstyle to \displaystyle, which makes the fraction y = a b+1 more readable but the linespacing increases which is always a bad solution and should only be used when the rst solution makes no sense.4 y=
a b+1
a b+1
2.3
All commands which appear in positions like contents, index, header, ... must be robust5 which is the case for $...$ but not for \(...\). The latest package fixltx2e denes an macro for declaring existing commands to be robust. The package itself does this already for:
1 2 3
See section 12 on page 38. To dene a new operator see page 75 3 For more information about limits see section 6.1 on page 24 or section 35 on page 72. 4 For an abbreviation see section 29 on page 67, there is a special \dfrac macro. 5 robust means that the macro is not expanded before it is moved into for example the tableofcontents le (*.toc). No robustness is often a problem, when a macro is part of another macro.
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2 THE INLINEMODE
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
\ MakeRobust \] \ MakeRobust \ makebox \ MakeRobust \ savebox \ MakeRobust \ framebox \ MakeRobust \ parbox \ MakeRobust \ rule \ MakeRobust \ raisebox
If you do not have any contents, index, a.s.o. you can write the mathstu in \chapter, \section, a.s.o without any restriction. Otherwise use \protect\( and \protect\) or the $...$ version. The whole math expression appears in the default font shape and not in bold like the other text. Section 22.1 on page 48 describes how the math expressions can be printed also in bold. \texorpdfstring There are problems with the hyperref package when there is no text part in a title. It is possible with the command \texorpdfstring to tell hyperref to use dierent commands, one for the title and another one for the bookmarks: \texorpdfstring{<TeX part>}{<hyperref part>}
1
2.4
Equation numbering
2.5
Framed math
With the \fbox macro everything of inline math can be framed, like the following one: f (x) =
n i=1
1 2i
Parameters are the width of \fboxsep and \fboxrule, the predened values from the le latex.ltx are:
1 2
\ fboxsep = 3 pt \ fboxrule = .4 pt
n i=1
1 2i
from the
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2.6 Linebreak
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
2.6
Linebreak
A L TEX can break an inline formula only when a relation symbol (=, <, >, . . .) or a binary operation symbol (+, , . . .) exists and at least one of these symbols appears at the outer level of a formula. Thus $a+b+c$ can be broken across lines, but ${a+b+c}$ not.
The default: a2 x2 + a1 x1 + a0
The same inside a group {...}: f (x) = an xn + an1 xn1 + an2 xn2 + . . . + ai xi + a2 x2 + a1 x1 + Without any symbol: f (x) = an (an1 (an2 (. . .) . . .) . . .) If it is not possible to have any mathsymbol, then split the inline formula in two or more pieces ($...$ $...$). If you do not want a linebreak for the whole document, you can set in the preamble: \relpenalty=9999 \binoppenalty=9999 which is the extreme case of grudgingly allowing breaks in extreme cases.
2.7
Whitespace
A L TEX denes the length \mathsurround with the default value of 0pt. This length is added before and after an inlined math expression (see table 1).
foo f (x) =
1 x2
dx = 1 bar
1
foo \ fbox {$ f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x =1 $} bar foo \ rule {20 pt }{\ ht \ strutbox }\ fbox {$ f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x =1 $}\ rule {20 pt }{\ ht \ strutbox } bar \ setlength {\ mathsurround }{20 pt } foo \ fbox {$ f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x =1 $} bar
foo
f (x) =
1 x2
dx = 1
bar
1
foo
f (x) =
1 x2
dx = 1
bar
2.8
Displaymath mode
This means, that every formula gets its own paragraph (line). There are some dierences in the layout to the one from the title of 2.3.
Mathmode.tex
13
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
3.1
equation environment
For example:
1
f (x) =
i=1
1 2i
(1)
3
\ begin { equation } f ( x ) =\ prod _{ i =1}^{ n }\ left (i -\ frac {1}{2 i }\ right ) \ end { equation }
The delimiters \begin{equation} ... \end{equation} are the only dierence to the inline version. There are some equivalent commands for the display-math mode: \begin{displaymath} 1. \begin{displaymath}. . . \end{displaymath}, same as \[ . . . \]
... \end{displaymath}
2. \[...\]. (see above) the short form of a displayed formula, no number \[...\]
n
f (x) =
i=1
1 2i
f (x) =
i=1
1 2i
(2)
displayed, a sequential equation number, which may be reset when starting a new chapter or section. (a) There is only one equation number for the whole environment. (b) There exists no star-version of the equation environment because \[. . . \] is the equivalent. With the tag \nonumber it is possible to suppress the equation number:
1
\nonumber
f (x) = [...]
2 3
3.2
eqnarray environment
This is by default an array with three columns and as many rows as you like. It is nearly the same as an array with a rcl column denition. \begin{eqnarray} It is not possible to change the internal behaviour of the eqnarray ... environment without rewriting the environment. It is always an implicit array \end{eqnarray} with three columns and the horizontal alignment right-center-left (rcl) 14
Mathmode.tex
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
and small symbol sizes for the middle column. All this can not be changed by the user without rewriting the whole environment in latex.ltx.
1 2
\ begin { eqnarray *} \ mathrm { left } & \ mathrm { middle } & \ mathrm { right }\\ \ frac {1}{\ sqrt { n }}= & \ frac {\ sqrt { n }}{ n }= & \ frac { n }{ n \ sqrt { n }} \ end { eqnarray *}
The eqnarray environment should not be used as an array. As seen in the above example the typesetting is wrong for the middle column. The numbering of eqnarray environments is always for every row, means, that four lines get four dierent equation numbers (for the labels see section 3.4 on page 18):
1 2
3 4 5
\ begin { eqnarray } y & = & d \ label { eq :2}\\ y & = & cx + d \\ y & = & bx ^{2}+ cx + d \\ y & = & ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d \ label { eq :5} \ end { eqnarray }
Toggling numbering o/on for all rows is possible with the starred version of eqnarray.
1 2
3 4 5
\ begin { eqnarray *} y & = & d \ label { eq :3}\\ y & = & cx + d \\ y & = & bx ^{2}+ cx + d \\ y & = & ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d \ label { eq :4} \ end { eqnarray *}
Toggling o/on for single rows is possible with the above mentioned \nonumber tag at the end of a row (before the newline command). For example:
1 2
y = d y = cx + d y = bx2 + cx + d
3 2
3 4
y = ax + bx + cx + d (7) 6
\ begin { eqnarray } y & = & d \ nonumber \\ y & = & cx + d \ nonumber \\ y & = & bx ^{2}+ cx + d \ nonumber \\ y & = & ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d \ end { eqnarray }
Mathmode.tex
15
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
3.2.1
Short commands
\ makeatletter \ newcommand {\ be }{ % \ begingroup % \ setlength {\ arraycolsep }{2 pt } \ eqnarray % \ @ifstar {\ nonumber }{} % } \ newcommand {\ ee }{\ endeqnarray \ endgroup } \ makeatother
(8)
3.3
Equation numbering
For all equations which can have one or more equation numbers (for every \nonumber line/row) the numbering for the whole equation can be disabled with switching from the unstarred to the star version. This is still for the whole formula and doesnt work for single rows. In this case use the \nonumber tag. This doc is written with the article-class, which counts the equations continuously over all parts/sections. You can change this behaviour in dierent ways (see the following subsections).
A In standard L TEX it is a problem with too long equations and the equation number, which may be printed with the equation one upon the other. In this case use the AMSmath package, where the number is set above or below of a too long equation (see equation 28 on page 28).
For counting subequations see section 33.1 on page 71. 3.3.1 Changing the style
\theequation
With the beginning of Section 25.2 on page 53 the counting changes from 44 into the new style II-51. The command sequence is
1
16
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
3.3.2
Removing a given reset is possible with the remreset.6 Write into the preamble \@removefromreset
1 2 3
or anywhere in the text. Now the equation counter is no longer reset when a new section starts. You can see this after section 26.4 on page 62. 3.3.3 Equation numbers on the left side
Choose package leqno7 or have a look at your document class, if such an option exists. 3.3.4 Changing the equation number style
The number style can be changed with a redenition of \def\@eqnnum{{\normalfont \normalcolor (\theequation)}} For example: if you want the numbers not in parentheses write
1 2 3
For AMSmath there is another macro, see section 33 on page 70. 3.3.5 More than one equation counter
You can have more than the default equation counter. With the following code you can easily toggle between roman and arabic equation counting.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 6 7
% code by Heiko Oberdiek \ makeatletter % Roman counter \ newcounter { roem } \ renewcommand {\ theroem }{\ roman { roem }} % save the original counter \ newcommand {\ c@org@eq }{} \ let \ c@org@eq \ c@equation \ newcommand {\ org@theeq }{} \ let \ org@theeq \ theequation
CTAN://macros/latex/contrib/supported/carlisle/remreset.sty CTAN://macros/latex/unpacked/leqno.sty
Mathmode.tex
17
3.4 Labels
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
% \ setroem sets roman counting \ newcommand {\ setroem }{ \ let \ c@equation \ c@roem \ let \ theequation \ theroem } % \ setarab the arabic counting \ newcommand {\ setarab }{ \ let \ c@equation \ c@org@eq \ let \ theequation \ org@theeq } \ makeatother
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
G(x) = ln x
F (x) = cos x
10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17
18
\ begin { align } f ( x ) &= \ int \ sin x \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ label { eq : arab 1}\\ g ( x ) &= \ int \ frac {1}{ x }\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ end { align } % \ setroem % \ begin { align } F ( x ) &= -\ cos x \\ G ( x ) &=\ ln x \ label { eq : rom 1} \ end { align } % \ setarab % \ begin { align } f ^{\ prime } ( x ) &= \ sin x \\ g ^{\ prime } ( x ) &= \ frac {1}{ x }\ label { eq : arab 2} \ end { align }
There can be references to these equations in the usual way, like eq.9, 12 and for the roman one eq.ii.
3.4
Labels
Every numbered equation can have a label to which a reference is possible. There is one restriction for the label names, they cannot include one of A L TEXs command characters.8 The label names are replaced by the equation number. If you do not want a reference to the equation number but to a self dened name then use the AMSmath command \tag..., which is described in section 34 on page 72.
8
\tag
$_\&%{}
Mathmode.tex
18
3.5 Frames
3 DISPLAYMATH MODE
3.5
Frames
Similiar to the inline mode, displayed equations can also be framed with the \fbox command, like equation 13. The only dierence is the fact, that the equation must be packed into a parbox or minipage. It is nearly the same for a colored box, where the \fbox{...} has to be replaced with \colorbox{yellow}{...}. The package color.sty must be loaded and important the calc package to get a correct boxwidth. 1 f (x) = dx = 1 (13) x2 1
1 2 3 4 5
\ noindent \ fbox {\ parbox {\ linewidth -2\ fboxsep -2\ fboxrule }{ % \ begin { equation }\ label { eq : frame 0} f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ dfrac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x =1 \ end { equation } % }}
If the equation number should not be part of the frame, then it is a bit complicated. There is one tricky solution, which puts an unnumbered equation just beside an empty numbered equation. The \hfill is only useful for placing the equation number right aligned, which is not the default. The following four equations 14-17 are the same, only the second one written with the \myMathBox macro which has the border and background color as optional arguments with the defaults white for background and black for the frame. If there is only one optional argument, then it is still the one for the frame color (15).
1 2 3
4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
\ makeatletter \ def \ myMathBox {\ @ifnextchar [{\ my@MBoxi }{\ my@MBoxi [ black ]}} \ def \ my@MBoxi [#1]{\ @ifnextchar [{\ my@MBoxii [#1]}{\ my@MBoxii [#1][ white ]}} \ def \ my@MBoxii [#1][#2]#3#4{ % \ par \ noindent % \ fcolorbox {#1}{#2}{ % \ parbox {\ linewidth -\ labelwidth -2\ fboxrule -2\ fboxsep }{#3} % }% \ parbox {\ labelwidth }{ % \ begin { eqnarray }\ label {#4}\ end { eqnarray } % }% \ par % } \ makeatother
f (x) = x2 + x f (x) = x2 + x
(14) (15)
Mathmode.tex
19
4 ARRAY ENVIRONMENT
f (x) = x2 + x f (x) = x2 + x
\ begin { equation }\ label { eq : frame 2} f ( x ) = x ^2 + x \ end { equation } \ myMathBox [ red ]{\[ f ( x ) = x ^2 + x \]}{ eq : frame 3} \ myMathBox [ red ][ yellow ]{\[ f ( x ) = x ^2 + x \]}{ eq : frame 4} \ myMathBox {\[ f ( x ) = x ^2 + x \]}{ eq : frame 5}
(16)
(17)
1 2 3 4 5 6
If you are using the AMSmath package, then try the solutions from section 39 on page 79.
array environment
\begin{array}
This is simply the same as the eqnarray environment only with the possibility ... of variable rows and columns and the fact, that the whole formula has \end{array} only one equation number and that the array environment can only be part of another math environment, like the equation environment or the displaymath environment. With @{} before the rst and after the last column the additional space \arraycolsep is not used, which maybe important when using left aligned equations. a) y = c (constant) b) y = cx + d (linear) Polynomes (18) 2 + cx + d c) y = bx (square) d) y = ax3 + bx2 + cx + d (cubic)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
\ begin { equation } \ left . % \ begin { array }{ @ {} r@ {\ quad } ccrr@ {}} \ textrm { a }) & y & = & c & ( constant ) \\ \ textrm { b }) & y & = & cx + d & ( linear ) \\ \ textrm { c }) & y & = & bx ^{2}+ cx + d & ( square ) \\ \ textrm { d }) & y & = & ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d & ( cubic ) \ end { array } % \ right \} \ textrm { Polynomes } \ end { equation }
The horizontal alignment of the columns is the same as the one from the tabular environment. For arrays with delimiters see section 47.9 on page 104.
Mathmode.tex
20
4 ARRAY ENVIRONMENT
4.1
Cases structure
If you do not want to use the AMSmath package then write your own cases structure with the array environment:
\begin{equation} x=\left\{ \begin{array}{cl} 3 0 & \textrm{if }A=\ldots\\ 4 1 & \textrm{if }B=\ldots\\ 5 x & \textrm{this runs with as much text as you like, but without an raggeright text.}\end{array}\right. 6 \end{equation}
1 2
0 if A = . . . 1 if B = . . . x= x this runs with as much text as you like, but without an raggeright text. (19) It is obvious, that we need a \parbox if the text is longer than the possible linewidth.
\begin{equation} x = \left\{% 3 \begin{array}{l>{\raggedright}p{.5\textwidth}}% 4 0 & if $A=\ldots$\tabularnewline 5 1 & if $B=\ldots$\tabularnewline 6 x & \parbox{0.5\columnwidth}{this runs with as much text as you like , % 7 because an automatic linebreak is given with % 8 a raggedright text. Without this % 9 \raggedright command, youll get a formatted % 10 text like the following one ... but with a parbox ... it works} 11 \end{array}% 12 \right. % 13 \end{equation}
1 2
4.2
arraycolsep
0 if A = . . . 1 if B = . . . this runs with as much text as you like, because an automatic linebreak is x= x given with a raggedright text. Without this command, youll get a formatted text like the following one ... but with a parbox ... it works
(20)
\arraycolsep
All the foregoing math environments use the array to typeset the math expression. The predened separation between two columns is the length
Mathmode.tex
21
5 MATRIX
\arraycolsep|, which is set by nearly all document classes to 5pt, which seems to be too big. The following equation is typeset with the default value and the second one with \arraycolsep=1.4pt f (x) = f (x) = sin x dx x sin x dx x
If this modication should be valid for all arrays/equations, then write it into the preamble, otherwise put it into a group or dene your own environment as done in section 3.2.1 on page 16.
1 2 3 4 5 6
\ bgroup \ arraycolsep =1.4 pt \ begin { eqnarray } f ( x ) & = & \ int \ frac {\ sin x }{ x }\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ end { eqnarray } \ egroup \ makeatletter \ newcommand {\ be }{ % \ begingroup \ setlength {\ arraycolsep }{1.4 pt } [ ... ]
1 2 3 4 5
Matrix
$\begin{matrix} A & B & C \\ 3 d & e & f \\ 4 1 & 2 & 3 \\ 5 \end{matrix}$
1 2
A TEX knows two macros and L TEX one more for typesetting a matrix:
A B C d e f 1 2 3 0 1 0 A B 1 d e 2 1 2 2 C f 3
$\bordermatrix{% & 0 & 1 & 2 \cr 3 0 & A & B & C \cr 4 1 & d & e & f \cr 5 2 & 1 & 2 & 3 \cr 6 }$
1 2
The rst two macros are listed here for some historical reason, because the array environment or especially the AMSmath package oers the same or better macros/environments. Nevertheless it is possible to redene the \bordermatrix macro to get other parentheses and a star version which takes the left top part as matrix:
Mathmode.tex
22
5 MATRIX
$\bordermatrix{% & 1 & 2 \cr 3 1 & x1 & x2 \cr 4 2 & x3 & x4 \cr 5 3 & x5 & x6 6 }$
1 2
1 2 1 x1 x2 2 x3 x4 3 x5 x6 1 2 1 x1 x2 2 x3 x4 3 x5 x6 1 2 1 x1 x2 2 x3 x4 3 x5 x6 x1 x3 x5 1 x2 1 x4 2 x6 3 2 x2 1 x4 2 x6 3 2 x2 1 x4 2 x6 3 2
$\bordermatrix[{[]}]{% & 1 & 2 \cr 3 1 & x1 & x2 \cr 4 2 & x3 & x4 \cr 5 3 & x5 & x6 6 }$
1 2
$\bordermatrix[\{\}]{% & 1 & 2 \cr 3 1 & x1 & x2 \cr 4 2 & x3 & x4 \cr 5 3 & x5 & x6 6 }$
1 2
$\bordermatrix*{% x1 & x2 & 1 \cr 3 x3 & x4 & 2 \cr 4 x5 & x6 & 3 \cr 5 1 & 2 6 }$
1 2
x1 x3 x5 1 x1 x3 x5 1
$\bordermatrix*[{[]}]{% x1 & x2 & 1 \cr 3 x3 & x4 & 2 \cr 4 x5 & x6 & 3 \cr 5 1 & 2 6 }$
1 2
$\bordermatrix*[\{\}]{% x1 & x2 & 1 \cr 3 x3 & x4 & 2 \cr 4 x5 & x6 & 3 \cr 5 1 & 2 6 }$
1 2
There is now an optional argument for the parenthesis with () as the default one. To get such a behaviour, write into the preamble:
1 2 3 4
5 6
\ makeatletter \ newif \ if@borderstar \ def \ bordermatrix {\ @ifnextchar *{ % \ @borderstartrue \ @bordermatrix@i }{\ @borderstarfalse \ @bordermatrix@i *} % } \ def \ @bordermatrix@i *{\ @ifnextchar [{\ @bordermatrix@ii }{\ @bordermatrix@ii [() ]}}
Mathmode.tex
23
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27
\ def \ @bordermatrix@ii [#1]#2{ % \ begingroup \ m@th \ @tempdima 8.75\ p@ \ setbox \ z@ \ vbox { % \ def \ cr {\ crcr \ noalign {\ kern 2\ p@ \ global \ let \ cr \ endline }} % \ ialign {$##$\ hfil \ kern 2\ p@ \ kern \ @tempdima & \ thinspace % \ hfil $##$\ hfil && \ quad \ hfil $##$\ hfil \ crcr \ omit \ strut % \ hfil \ crcr \ noalign {\ kern -\ baselineskip }#2\ crcr \ omit % \ strut \ cr }} % \ setbox \ tw@ \ vbox {\ unvcopy \ z@ \ global \ setbox \ @ne \ lastbox } % \ setbox \ tw@ \ hbox {\ unhbox \ @ne \ unskip \ global \ setbox \ @ne \ lastbox } % \ setbox \ tw@ \ hbox { % $\ kern \ wd \ @ne \ kern -\ @tempdima \ left \ @firstoftwo #1 % \ if@borderstar \ kern 2 pt \ else \ kern -\ wd \ @ne \ fi % \ global \ setbox \ @ne \ vbox {\ box \ @ne \ if@borderstar \ else \ kern 2\ p@ \ fi } % \ vcenter {\ if@borderstar \ else \ kern -\ ht \ @ne \ fi % \ unvbox \ z@ \ kern -\ if@borderstar 2\ fi \ baselineskip } % \ if@borderstar \ kern -2\ @tempdima \ kern 2\ p@ \ else \ ,\ fi \ right \ @secondoftwo #1 $ % }\ null \;\ vbox {\ kern \ ht \ @ne \ box \ tw@ } % \ endgroup } \ makeatother
The matrix environment macro cannot be used together with the AMSmath package, it redenes this environment (see section 26.6 on page 65).
Writing amin and amax gives the same depth for the subscript, but writing them in upright mode with \mbox gives a dierent depth: amin and amax . The problem is the dierent height, which can be modied in several ways $a_{\mbox{\vphantom{i}max}}: amin and amax ; $a_{\mathrm{max}}: amin and amax ; $a_{\max}: amin and amax . Both are predened operators (see section 16 on page 43).
6.1
Multiple limits
\atop
For general information about limits read section 2.1 on page 11. With the TEX command \atop multiple limits for a \sum or \prod are possible. The syntax is: above below
1
which is nearly the same as a fraction without a rule. This can be enhanced to a\atop b\atop c and so on. For equation 21 do the following steps:
Mathmode.tex
24
6.2 Problems
1 2
7 ROOTS
\begin{equation}\label{eq:atop} \sum_{{1\le j\le p\atop {% 3 {1\le j\le q\atop 1\le k\le r}}}% 4 }a_{ij}b_{jk}c_{ki} 5 \end{equation}
(21)
which is not the best solution because the space between the lines is too big. The AMSmath package provides several commands for limits (section 35 on page 72) and the \underset and \overset commands (see section 41 on page 80).
\shortstack
6.2
Problems
aij bjk cki
1jp 1jq 1kr
(22)
The equation 22 shows that the horizontal alignment is not optimal, because the math expression on the right follows at the end of the limits which are a unit together with the sum symbol. There is an elegant solution with AMSmath, described in subsection 35.2 on page 73. If you do not want to use AMSmath, then use \makebox. But there is a problem when the general fontsize is increased, \makebox knows nothing about the actual math font size. Equation 23a shows the eect and equation 23b the view without the boxes. aij bjk cki
1jp 1jq 1kr
(23a)
(23b)
1 2 3 4 5 6
\ begin { equation } \ sum _{\ makebox [0 pt ]{$ % {{\ scriptscriptstyle 1\ le j \ le p \ atop { % {1\ le j \ le q \ atop 1\ le k \ le r }}}} % $}} a _{ ij } b _{ jk } c _{ ki } \ end { equation }
Roots
A The square root \sqrt is the default for L TEX and the n-th root can be inserted with the optional parameter \sqrt[n]{...}. . \sqrt
\sqrt{x} \sqrt[3]{x}
x 3 x
Mathmode.tex
25
8 BRACKETS, BRACES . . .
There is a dierent typesetting in roots. Equation 24 has dierent heights for the roots, whereas equation 25 has the same one. This is possible with the \vphantom command, which reserves the vertical space (without a horizontal \vphantom one) of the parameter height.
\begin{equation} \sqrt{a}\,% 3 \sqrt{T}\,% 4 \sqrt{2\alpha k_{B_1}T^i}\label{eq:root1} 5 \end{equation}
1 2
a T
2kB1 T i (24)
2kB1 T i (25)
The typesetting looks much better, especially when the formula has dierent roots in a row, like equation 24. Using AMSmath with the \smash command9 gives some more possibilities for the typesetting of roots (see section 30 on page 69).
This is one of the major problems inside the math mode, because there is often a need for dierent brackets, braces and parentheses in dierent size. At rst we had to admit, that there is a dierence between the characters ()[]/\ {} | and their use as an argument of the \left and \leftX A \right command, where L TEX stretches the size in a way that everything \rightX between the pair of left and right parentheses is smaller than the parentheses themselves. In some cases10 it may be useful to choose a xed height, which is possible with the \big-series. Instead of writing \leftX or \rightX one of the following commands can be chosen: default \bigX \BigX \biggX \BiggX ()[]/\{}|
\bigX \BigX \biggX \BiggX
A The \smash command exists also in L TEX but without an optional argument, which makes the use for roots possible. 10 See section 8.1.1 on page 28 for example.
Mathmode.tex
26
8 BRACKETS, BRACES . . .
Only a few commands can be written in a short form like \big(. The X has to be replaced with one of the following characters or commands from table 3 on the next page, which shows the parentheses character, its code for the use with one of the big commands and an example with the code for that. \biglX For all commands there exists a left/right version \bigl, \bigr, \Bigl \bigrX and so on, which only makes sense when writing things like: a b a b
\begin{align} \biggl)\times \frac{a}{b} \times\biggr( 3 \end{align} 4 \begin{align} 5 \bigg)\times \frac{a}{b} \times\bigg( 6 \end{align}
1 2
(26)
(27)
A L TEX takes the \biggl) as a mathopen symbol, which has by default another horizontal spacing. In addition to the above commands there exist some more: \bigm, \Bigm, \biggm and \Biggm, which work as the standard ones (without the addtional m) but add some more horizontal space between the delimiter and the \bigmX \bigmX formula before and after (see table 2).
1 3 3 4 1 3 3 4
Table 2: Dierence between the default \bigg and the \biggm command Char () [] /\ {} | Code () [] /\backslash \{\} | \Vert \lfloor \rfloor
Mathmode.tex
Example 3 a2 + b
c2
2
3 a2 + bc
3 a2 + bc 3 a2 + bc 3 a2 + bc
3 a2 + bc
8 BRACKETS, BRACES . . . Code 3\Big\lceil a2+b{c2} \Big\rceil 3\Big\langle a2+b{c2}\Big\rangle 3\Big\uparrow a2+b{c2}\Big\Uparrow 3\Big\downarrow a2+b{c2} \Big\Downarrow 3\Big\updownarrow a2+b{c2} \Big\Updownarrow
2 3 a2 + bc
2 3 a2 + bc
2 3a2 + bc
8.1
8.1.1
Examples
Braces over several lines
The following equation in the single line mode looks like 1 (fij f ij ) = 2 2
i<j
ij (i j )2 + f ij
i (f )
k fij
k ij
f + f ij f k [2
i Rjk
k Rij ]
(28) and is too long for the text width and the equation number has to be placed under the equation.11 With the array environment the formula can be split in two smaller pieces:
1 ij 2 (fij f )
= 2 +
i<j
ij (i j )2 + f ij
k f ij
i (f )+
(29)
k fij
+ f ij f k [2
i Rjk
k Rij ]
It is obvious that there is a problem with the right closing parentheses. Because of the two pairs \left( ... \right. and \left. ... \right) they have a dierent size because every pair does it in its own way. Using the Bigg command changes this into a better typesetting:
A In standard L TEX the equation and the number are printed one over the other for too long formulas. Only AMSmath puts it one line over (left numbers) or under (right numbers) the formula. 11
Mathmode.tex
28
8 BRACKETS, BRACES . . .
1 ij 2 (fij f )
=2
i<j
ij (i j )2 + f ij
k f ij
i (f )+
(30)
i Rjk
k fij
+ f ij f k [2
k Rij ]
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
{\ arraycolsep =2 pt \ begin { equation } \ begin { array }{ rcl } \ frac {1}{2}\ Delta ( f _{ ij } f ^{ ij }) & = & 2\ Bigg ({\ displaystyle \ sum _{ i < j }}\ chi _{ ij }(\ sigma _{ i } -\ sigma _{ j }) ^{2}+ f ^{ ij } % \ nabla _{ j }\ nabla _{ i }(\ Delta f ) +\\ & & +\ nabla _{ k } f _{ ij }\ nabla ^{ k } f ^{ ij }+ f ^{ ij } f ^{ k }[2 \ nabla _{ i } R _{ jk } -\ nabla _{ k } R _{ ij }]\ Bigg ) \ end { array } \ end { equation } }
Section 26.3.1 on page 61 shows another solution for getting the right size for parentheses when breaking the equation in smaller pieces. r +
m=1
1 2 3
B(r, , ) =
n=2 n
Re r Re r
n
4 5
\ begin { align *} B (r ,\ phi ,\ lambda ) = & \ ,\ dfrac {\ mu }{ r } \ Bigg [\ sum _{ n =2}^{\ infty } \ Bigg ( \ left ( \ dfrac { R _ e }{ r } \ right ) ^ n J _ nP _ n ( s \ phi ) \\ & +\ sum _{ m =1}^ n \ left ( \ dfrac { R _ e }{ r } \ right ) ^ n ( C _{ nm }\ cos m \ lambda + S _{ nm }\ sin m \ lambda ) P _{ nm }( s \ phi ) \ Bigg ) \ Bigg ] \ end { align *}
8.1.2
Middle bar
See section 47.6 on page 100 for examples and the use of package braket.
8.2
New delimiters
The default delimiters are dened in the le fontmath.ltx which is stored in general in [TEXMF]/tex/latex/base/fontmath.ltx. If we need for example a thicker vertical symbol than the existing \vert symbol we can dene in the preamble:
Mathmode.tex
29
1 2
The character number 3E16 (decimal 62) from the cmex10 font is the small thick vertical rule. Now the new delimiter \Norm can be used in the usual way: 1 $\left\Norm *BLA* \right\Norm$ BLA BLA 2 3 $\left\Norm \dfrac{*BLA*}{*BLUB*} \right\Norm$ BLU B
8.3
\delimitershortfall
It is obvious that the following equation has not the right size of the paren- \delimiterfactor thesis in the second integral, the inner one should be a bit smaller than the outer one. F (z)dz =
F ((t)) (t)dt
The problem is that TEX controlls the height of the parenthesis with \delimitershortfall and \delimiterfactor, with the default values \delimitershortfall=5pt \delimiterfactor=901 \delimiterfactor/1000 is the relative size of the parenthesis for a given formula environment. They could be of \delimitershortfall too short. These values are valid at the end of the formula, the best way is to set them straight before the math environment or globally for all in the preamble. F (z)dz =
(t) (t)dt
Standard text in math mode should be written in upright shape and not in the italic one. This shape is reserved for the variable names: I am text inside math. (see also Zable 7 on page 33). There are dierent ways to write text inside math. \textstyle \mathrm. It is like math mode (no spaces), but in upright mode \textrm. Upright mode with printed spaces (real textmode)
Mathmode.tex
\mbox \mathrm
30
10 FONT COMMANDS
\mbox. The font size is still the one from \textstyle (see section 12 on page 38), so that you have to place additional commands when you use \mbox in a super- or subscript for limits. Inserting long text is possible with a \parbox, which can be aligned as usual to the top, bottom or center, e.g., a + b + c + d + ef = g+h+i+j+k this is a very long (31) description of a formula
1 2 3 4 5 6
\ begin { eqnarray } a + b + c + d + ef & = & g + h + i + j + k % \ qquad \ textrm {\ parbox [ t ]{.25\ linewidth }{ % this is a very long description of a formula } % } \ end { eqnarray }
Additional commands for text inside math are provided by AMSmath (see section 37 on page 76).
10
10.1
Font commands
Old-style font commands
A Should never be used, but are still present and supported by L TEX. The default syntax for the old commands is
1
{\ XX test }
Table 4 shows what has to be replaced for the XX. The major dierence to the new style is that these \XX are toggling the actual math mode into the XX one, whereas the new commands start which, at its end, switches back to the previous mode. \bf test \cal T EST \it test \rm test \tt test
10.2
\mathrm \mathfrak \mathcal 1 \ mathXX { test } \mathsf Table 5 shows what has to be replaced for the XX. See section 47.13 on \mathbb \mathtt page 107 for additional packages. \mathit \mathbf
Mathmode.tex
31
11 SPACE
Command default \mathfrak \mathcala \mathsf \mathbba \mathtt \mathit \mathrm \mathbf \mathdsb
Table 5: Fonts in math mode Test ABCDEF GHIJKLM N OP QRST U V W XY Z abcdef ghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJ KLMN OPQRST UVWX YZ ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
a Not available for lower letters. For mathcal exists a non free font for lower letters (http://www.pctex.com) b Needs package dsfont
11
11.1
Space
Math typesetting
\thinmuskip \medmuskip \thickmuskip
A L TEX denes the three math lengths12 with the following values13 :
1 2 3
These lengths can have all glue and are used for the horizontal spacing in math expressions where TEX puts spaces between symbols and operators. The meaning of these dierent horizontal skips is shown in table 6. For a A better typesetting L TEX inserts dierent spaces between the symbols. \thinmuskip space between ordinary and operator atoms
12 13
Mathmode.tex
32
11 SPACE
f (x) = x2 + 3x0 sinx f (x) = x2 +3x0 sin x f (x)=x2 +3x0 sinx f (x)=x2 + 3x0 sin x
Table 6: The meaning of the math spaces \medmuskip space between ordinary and binary atoms in display and text styles \thickmuskip space between ordinary and relation atoms in display and text styles
11.2
Positive Space $ab$ $a b$ $a\ b$ $a\mbox{\textvisiblespace}b$ $a\,b$ ($a\thinspace b$) $a\: b$ ($a\medspace b$) $a\; b$ ($a\thickspace b$ $a\quad b$ $a\qquad b$ $a\hspace{0.5cm}b$ $a\kern0.5cm b$ $a\hphantom{xx}b$ $axxb$
a b ab ab
Table 7: Spaces in math mode LaTeX denes the following short commands: \def\>{\mskip\medmuskip} \def\;{\mskip\thickmuskip} \def\!{\mskip-\thinmuskip}
Mathmode.tex
33
11.3 Problems
11 SPACE
In math mode there is often a need for additional tiny spaces between di di looks nicer: variables, e.g., L written with a tiny space between L and dt dt di L . Table 7 shows a list of all commands for horizontal space which can be dt used in math mode. The space is seen between the boxed a and b. For all examples a is \boxed{a} and b is \boxed{b}. The short forms for some spaces may cause problems with other packages. In this case use the long \hspace \hphantom form of the commands.
\kern
11.3
Problems
Using \hphantom in mathmode depends to on object. \hphantom reserves only the space of the exact width without any additional space. In the following example the second line is wrong: & \hphantom{\rightarrow} b\\. It does not reserve any additional space.
\begin{align*} a & \rightarrow b\\ 3 & \hphantom{\rightarrow} b\\ 4 & \mkern\thickmuskip\hphantom{\rightarrow}\mkern\thickmuskip b\\ 5 & \mathrel{\hphantom{\rightarrow}} b 6 \end{align*}
1 2
ab b b b
This only works when the math symbol is a mathrel one, otherwise you have to change the horizontal space to \medmuskip or \thinmuskip or to use an empty group after the \hphantom command. For more informations about the math objects look into fontmath.ltx or amssymb or use the \show macro, which prints out the type of the mathsymbol, e.g., \show\rightarrow with the output:
1 2
The 0: 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: 6: 7:
rst digit represents the type: ordinary large operator binary operation relation opening closing punctuation variable family
Grouping a math symbol can change the behaviour in horizontal spacing. Compare 50 1012 and 501012 , the rst one is typeset with $50\times10^{12}$
Mathmode.tex
34
11 SPACE
and the second one with $50{\times}10^{12}$. Another possibilty is to use the numprint package.14
\mathpunct In dierence to a decimal point and a comma as a marker of thousands a lot \mathord
11.4
of countries prefer it vice versa. To get the same behaviour the meaning of dot and comma has to be changed:
1, 234, 567.89 default 1.234.567, 89 vice versa, wrong spacing 1. 234. 567,89 correct spacing
1 2 3
1 ,234 ,567.89 & \ textrm { default }\\ 1.234.567 ,89 & \ textrm { vice versa , wrong spacing }\\ 1\ mathpunct {.}234\ mathpunct {.}567{ ,}89 & \ textrm { correct spacing }
The original denitions from fontmath.ltx15 are \DeclareMathSymbol{,}{\mathpunct}{letters}{"3B} \DeclareMathSymbol{.}{\mathord}{letters}{"3A} \mathord and \mathpunct can be changed for a documentwide other behaviour. In the above equation 34 the comma is only set in a pair of braces A {,}, which is the same as writing \mathord{,} because L TEX handles everything inside of parenthises as a formula, which gets the same spacing. It is also possible to use the package icomma16 for a documentwide correct spacing.
11.5
11.5.1
Vertical whitespace
Before/after math expressions
There are four predened lengths, which control the vertical whitespace of displayed formulas: \abovedisplayskip=12pt plus 3pt \abovedisplayshortskip=0pt plus \belowdisplayskip=12pt plus 3pt \belowdisplayshortskip=7pt plus
14 15
Mathmode.tex
35
11 SPACE
The short skips are used if the formula starts behind the end of the foregoing last line. Only for demonstration the shortskips are set to 0pt in the following examples and the normal skips to 20pt without any glue: sin x dx x The line doesnt end before the formula. f (x) = f (x) = sin x dx x The line ends before. (35)
(36)
And the next line starts as usual with some text ...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
\ above displa yshor tskip =0 pt \ below displa yshor tskip =0 pt \ abovedisplayskip =20 pt \ belowdisplayskip =20 pt \ noindent The line ends before . \ begin { equation } f ( x ) = \ int \ frac {\ sin x }{ x }\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ end { equation } \ noindent The line doesn t end before the formula . \ begin { equation } f ( x ) = \ int \ frac {\ sin x }{ x }\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ end { equation } \ noindent And the next line starts as usual with some text ...
fleqn class
When using the fleqn classoption for left aligned equations the math option environments equation and \[. . . \] are typeset as a list. This is the reason why the vertical space is dened by the length registers for a list, especially \topsep, instead of \abovedisplayskip and \belowdisplayskip. This doesnt eect the eqnarray environment. 11.5.2 Inside math expressions
\\[<length>] This works inside the math mode in the same way as in the text mode.
\jot
\jot The vertical space between the lines for all math expressions which allow multiple lines can be changed with the length \jot, which is predened as \newdimen\jot \jot=3pt The following three formulas show this for the default value, \setlength\jot{0pt} and \setlength\jot{10pt}.
Mathmode.tex
36
11 SPACE
y = d y = d 1 y = c +d x 1 y = b 2 + cx + d x y = d 1 +d x 1 y = b 2 + cx + d x y = c y = c y = b 1 +d x 1 + cx + d x2
Dening a new environment with a parameter makes things easier, because changes to the length are locally.
1 2 3 4 5 6
\arraystretch
\arraystretch The vertical space between the lines for all math expressions which contain an array environment can be changed with the command \arraystretch, which is predened as \renewcommand\arraystretch{1} Renewing this denition is global to all following math expressions, so it should be used in the same way as \jot. \vskip Another spacing for single lines is possible with the \vskip macro:
\[ \begin{pmatrix} 3 0 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 1 \\ 4 1 & 0 & 0 & 1 & 1 & 0 \\ 5 \noalign{\vskip2pt} 6 0 & 1 & 1 & 0 & \dfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}} & 1\\
1 2
0 1 0 1
1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0
0 1 0 0 1 0 1
0 1 1 2 1 0
1 0 1 0 1
\noalign{\vskip2pt} 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\ 9 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 1 \\ 10 \end{pmatrix} 11 \]
7 8
Package setspace To have all formulas with another vertical spacing, one can choose the package setspace and redening some of the math macros, e.g.,
1 2
\ newcommand *\ Array [2][1]{\ setstretch {#1}\ array {#2}} \ let \ endArray \ endarray
Mathmode.tex
37
12 STYLES
\[ \begin{Array}[2]{cc} 3 a =&b\\ 4 a =&b\\ 5 a =&b 6 \end{Array} 7 \]
1 2 8
a= b a= b a= b a= b text a = b text a= b
12
Styles
Inline f (t) =
T 2
Mode default
Displayed
1 sin t
dt
T f (t) = 2 T f (t) = 2
T f (t)= 2
1 dt sin t 1 dt sin t
dt
f (t) = f (t) =
T f (t)= 2
T 2
T 2
1 dt sin t
1 sin t
dt
1 sin t
1 dt sin t
T f (t)= 2
f (t) =
T 2
1 dt sin t
1 sin t
dt
f (t) =
T 2
1 sin t
dt
Table 8: Math styles This depends on the environment in which they are used. An inline formula has a default math fontsize called \textstyle, which is smaller than the one for a display formula (see section 3), which is called \displaystyle. Beside this predenition there are two other special fontstyles for math, \scriptstyle and \scriptscriptstyle. They are called style in dierence to size, because they have a dynamic character, their real fontsize belongs to the environment in which they are used. A fraction for example is by default in scriptstyle when it is in an inline formula like this a , which can be changed b a to . This may be in some cases useful but it looks in general ugly because b the line spacing is too big. These four styles are predened and together in a logical relationship. It is no problem to use the other styles like large, \Large, . . . outside the math environment. For example a fraction written with
Mathmode.tex
38
14 ACCENTS
\Huge:
a (\Huge$\frac{a}{b}$). This may cause some problems when b you want to write a displayed formula in another fontsize, because it also
aects the interline spacing of the preceding part of the paragraph. If you end the paragraph, you get problems with spacing and page breaking above the equations. So it is better to declare the font size and then restore the baselines:
2
x2
dx = 0.5
(37)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
\ makeatletter \ newenvironment { smallequation }[1]{ % \ skip@ =\ baselineskip #1 % \ baselineskip =\ skip@ \ equation }{\ endequation \ ignorespacesafterend } \ makeatother \ begin { smallequation }{\ tiny } \ int _1^2\ ,\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x =0.5 \ end { smallequation }
If you use this the other way round for huge fontsizes, dont forget to load package exscale (see section 47.14 on page 107). Also see this section for dient symbol sizes.
13
Dots
\cdots In addition to the above decorations there are some more dierent dots which \dots are single commands and not by default over/under a letter. It is not easy \dotsb to see the dierences between some of them. Dots from lower left to upper \dotsc \dotsi . right are possible with \reflectbox{$\ddots$} . . \dotsm \dotso .. . \dotsb \dotsc . . . \dotsi \ldots \cdots \ddots \vdots .
\dotsm
\dotso
...
\ldots
...
\vdots
. .
14
Accents
The letter a is only for demonstration. The table 10 shows all in standard A L TEX available accents and also the ones placed under a character. With package amssymb it is easy to dene new accents. For more information see section 31 on page 69 or other possibilities at section 47.1 on page 97.
Mathmode.tex
39
14 ACCENTS a a a a a a a a
\acute \bar \check \dot \mathring \overleftrightarrow \tilde \underleftarrow \underrightarrow \widetilde
Table 10: Accents in math mode The letters i and j can be substituted with the macros \imath and \jmath when an accents is placed over these letters and the dot should disappear: ... ($\vec{\imath}\ \dddot{\jmath}$). Accents can be used in dierent ways, e.g., strike a single character with a horizontal line like $\mathaccent-A$: A or $\mathaccent\mathcode-A$: In section 47.7 on page 101 is a better solution for more than one character. A.
14.1
There are no \underbracket and \overbracket commands in the list of accents. They can be dened in the preamble with the following code.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17
\ makeatletter \ def \ underbracket { % \ @ifnextchar [{\ @underbracket }{\ @underbracket [\ @bracketheight ]} % } \ def \ @underbracket [#1]{ % \ @ifnextchar [{\ @under@bracket [#1]}{\ @under@bracket [#1][0.4 em ]} % } \ def \ @under@bracket [#1][#2]#3{ % \ message { Underbracket : #1 ,#2 ,#3} \ mathop {\ vtop {\ m@th \ ialign {##\ crcr $\ hfil \ displaystyle {#3}\ hfil $ % \ crcr \ noalign {\ kern 3\ p@ \ nointerlineskip }\ upbracketfill {#1}{#2} \ crcr \ noalign {\ kern 3\ p@ }}}}\ limits } \ def \ upbracketfill #1#2{$\ m@th \ setbox \ z@ \ hbox {$\ braceld $} \ edef \ @bracketheight {\ the \ ht \ z@ }\ bracketend {#1}{#2} \ leaders \ vrule \ @height #1 \ @depth \ z@ \ hfill \ leaders \ vrule \ @height #1 \ @depth \ z@ \ hfill \ bracketend {#1}{#2}$} \ def \ bracketend #1#2{\ vrule height #2 width #1\ relax } \ makeatother
Mathmode.tex
40
14 ACCENTS
1. \underbrace{...} is an often used command: x2 + 2x + 1 = f (x) (x + 1)2 2. Sometimes an underbracket is needed, which can be used in more ways than \underbrace{...}. An example for \underbracket{...}: (38)
Hate Science
14.1.1
Use of \underbracket{...}
The \underbracket{...} command has two optional parameters: the line thickness in any valid latex unit, e.g., 1pt the height of the edge brackets, e.g., 1em using without any parameters gives the same values for thickness and height as predened for the \underbrace command. 1. 2. 3. $\underbracket{foo~bar}$ $\underbracket[2pt]{foo~bar}$ $\underbracket[2pt][1em] {foo~bar}$ f oo bar f oo bar f oo bar
14.1.2
Overbracket
In addition to the underbracket an overbracket is also useful, which can be used in more ways than \overbrace{...}. For example:
Hate Science
The \overbracket{...} command has two optional parameters: the line thickness in any valid latex unit, e.g., 1pt
Mathmode.tex
41
14.2 Vectors
the height of the edge brackets, e.g., 1em using without any parameters gives the same values for thickness and height as predened for the \overbrace command.
1. 2. 3.
$\overbracket {foo\ bar}$ $\overbracket[2pt] {foo\ bar}$ $\overbracket[2pt] [1em] {foo\ bar}$
14.2
Vectors
Especially for vectors there is the package esvect17 package, which looks better than the \overrightarrow, e.g., \vv{...} # a # abc # # Ax \overrightarrow{...} a abc Ax
Table 11: Vectors with package esvec (in the right column the default one A from L TEX) Look into the documentation for more details about the package esvect.
15
The two active characters _ and ^ can only be used in math mode. The following character will be printed as an index ($y=a_1x+a_0$: y = a1 x+a0 ) or as an exponent ($x^2+y^2=r^2$: x2 + y 2 = r2 ). For more than the next character put it inside of {}, like $a_{i-1}+a_{i+1}<a_i$: ai1 + ai+1 < ai . Especially for multiple exponents there are several possibilities. For example: ((x2 )3 )4 = ((x2 ) ) =
1 2 3
3 4
x2
3 4
(39)
(( x ^2) ^3) ^4 = {({( x ^2) }^3) }^4 = {\ left ({\ left ( x ^2\ right ) }^3\ right ) }^4
17
CTAN://macros/latex/contrib/esvect/
Mathmode.tex
42
16 OPERATORS
For variables with both exponent and indice index the order is not important, $a_1^2$ is exactly the same than $a^2_1$: a2 = a2 . By default 1 1 all exponents and indices are set as italic characters. It is possible to change this behaviour to get upright characters. The following example shows this for the indices.
1 2
$A_{abc_{xyz}123def}^{abc123def}aa$
$A_{abc_{xyz}123def}^{abc123def}aa$
16
Operators
They are written in upright font shape and are placed with some additional space before and after for a better typesetting. With the AMSmath package it is possible to dene ones own operators (see section 36 on page 75). Table 12 and 13 on the following page show a list of the predened ones for standard A L TEX. \coprod \biguplus \intop \sum \bigodot \bigsqcup \bigvee \bigcap \int \bigotimes \ointop \smallint \bigwedge \bigcup \prod \bigoplus \oint
Table 12: The predened operators of fontmath.ltx The dierence between \intop and \int is that the rst one has by default over/under limits and the second subscript/superscript limits. Both can be changed with the \limits or \nolimits command. The same behaviour happens to the \ointop and \oint Symbols. For more predened operator names see table 20 on page 99. It is easy to dene a new operator with
1 2 3
foo2 = x2 1
\[ \foo_1^2 = x^2 \]
Mathmode.tex
43
17 GREEK LETTERS log lim sin cos tan cot csc sup ker det gcd (mod a) lg lim sup arcsin arccos arctan coth max inf dim exp deg ln lim inf sinh cosh tanh sec min arg hom Pr mod
\log \lim \sin \cos \tan \cot \csc \sup \ker \det \gcd \pmod{a}
\lg \limsup \arcsin \arccos \arctan \coth \max \inf \dim \exp \deg
\ln \liminf \sinh \cosh \tanh \sec \min \arg \hom \Pr \bmod
Table 13: The predened operators of latex.ltx In this example \foo is dened with \nolimits, means that limits are placed in superscript/subscript mode and not over under. This is still possible with \limits in the denition or the equation: foo = x2
1 2
1
\[ \foo\limits_1^2 = x^2 \]
AMSmath has an own macro for a denition, have a look at section 36 on page 75.
17
Greek letters
The AMSmath package simulates a bold font for the greek letters, it writes a greek character twice with a small kerning. The \mathbf{<character>} doesnt work with lower greek character. See section 40 on page 80 for the \pmb macro, which makes it possible to print bold lower greek letters. Not all upper case letters have own macro names. If there is no dierence to the roman font, then the default letter is used, e.g., A for the upper case of . Table 14 shows only those upper case letters which have own macro names. Some of the lower case letters have an additional var option for an alternative. lower default upper \alpha \beta \gamma \Gamma \delta \Delta \epsilon \varepsilon
Mathmode.tex
44
18 PAGEBREAKS lower \zeta \eta \theta \vartheta \iota \kappa \lambda \mu \nu \xi \pi \varpi \rho \varrho \sigma \varsigma \tau \upsilon \phi \varphi \chi \psi \omega default \Sigma upper default \mathbf \mathit
\Theta
\Lambda
\Xi \Pi
\Upsilon \Phi
\Psi \Omega
Bold greek letters are possible with the package bm (see section 47.5 on page 100) and if they should also be upright with the package upgreek: $\bm{\upalpha}, \bm{\upbeta} ... $ , ... A useful denition maybe:
1 2 3 4
18
Pagebreaks
\allowdisplaybreaks
By default a displayed formula cannot have a pagebreak. This makes some sense, but sometimes it gives a better typesetting when a pagebreak is possible.
Mathmode.tex
45
20 \CHOOSE
\allowdisplaybreaks \allowdisplaybreaks enables TEX to insert pagebreaks into displayed formulas whenever a newline command appears. With the command \displaybreak it is also possible to insert a pagebreak at any place.
19
\stackrel
\stackrel puts a character on top of another one which may be important if a used symbol is not predened. For example = (\stackrel{\wedge}{=}). The syntax is \stackrel
1
Such symbols may be often needed so that a macro denition in the preamble makes some sense:
1 2 3 4 5
With the \ensuremath command we can use the new \eqdef command in A text and in math mode, L TEX switches automatically in math mode, which saves some keystrokes like the following command, which is written without def the delimiters ($...$) for the math mode = , only \eqdef with a space at the end. In math mode together with another material it may look like def x = (x1 , . . . , xn ) and as command sequence
1
The fontsize of the top is one size smaller than the one from the base, but it is no problem to get both the same size, just increase the top or decrease the base.
20
\choose
\choose is like \atop with delimiters or like \frac without the fraction line and also with delimiters. It is often used for binomial coecients and has the following syntax: \choose
1
The two braces are not really important but it is safe to use them. m+1 n = m m + n k1 (40)
Mathmode.tex
46
22 BOLDMATH
See section 29.2 on page 68 for the AMSmath equivalents and enhancements.
21
There is no dierence in using colored text and colored math expressions. With \usepackage{color} in the preamble the macro \textcolor{<color>}{<text or math>} exists.
f (x) =
1
1 dx = 1 x2
(41)
\textcolor
1 2
\ begin { equation } \ textcolor { blue }{ f ( x ) } = \ int \ limits _1^{\ infty }\ textcolor { red }{\ frac {1}{ x ^2}}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x =1 \ end { equation }
If all math expressions should be printed in the same color, then it is better to use the everydisplay macro (section 24 on page 49).
22
Boldmath
\mathversion Writing a whole formula in bold is possible with the command sequence \boldmath \boldmath ... \unboldmath, which itself must be written in textmode (out- \unboldmath
side the formula) or with the command {\mathversion{bold} ... }. aij bjk cki
1jp 1jq 1kr
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
\ boldmath \[ \ sum _{ % \ makebox [0 pt ]{$ % {{\ scriptscriptstyle 1\ le j \ le p \ atop { % {1\ le j \ le q \ atop 1\ le k \ le r }}}} % $} % } a _{ ij } b _{ jk } c _{ ki } \] \ unboldmath
Mathmode.tex
47
22 BOLDMATH
The \mathversion macro denes a math style which is valid for all following math expressions. If you want to have all math in bold then use this macro instead of \boldmath. But it is no problem to put \mathversion inside a group to hold the changes locally. y(x) = ax3 + bx2 + cx + d (42)
1 2 3 4
Single characters inside a formula can be written in bold with \mathbf, but only in upright mode, which is in general not useful as shown in equation 43. It is better to use package bm (see section 47.5 on page 100). aij bjk cki
1jp 1jq 1kr
(43)
22.1
By default the titles in sections, subsections, a.s.o. are printed in bold. Same for the description environment. The problem is that a math expression in one of these environments is printed in default font shape, like the following example for a section and description environment:
22 Function f (x) = x2
This is y = f (x) Only a demonstration. And z = f (x, y) Another demonstration. With a redenition of the \section and \item macros it is possible to get everything in bold font.
22 Function f (x) = x2
This is y = f (x) Only a demonstration. And z = f (x, y) Another demonstration.
1 2 3 4 5
\ let \ itemOld \ item \ makeatletter \ renewcommand \ item [1][]{ % \ def \ @tempa {#1} \ ifx \ @tempa \ @empty \ itemOld \ else \ boldmath \ itemOld [#1]\ unboldmath \ fi %
Mathmode.tex
48
24 OTHER MACROS
6 7 8 9 10 11
} \ makeatother \ let \ sectionOld \ section \ renewcommand \ section [2][\ empty ]{ % \ boldmath \ sectionOld [#1]{#2}\ unboldmath % }
23
Multiplying numbers
When the dot is used as the decimal marker as in the United States, the preferred sign for the multiplication of numbers or values of quantities is a cross (\times ), not a half-high and centered dot (\cdot ). When the comma is used as the decimal marker as in Europe, the preferred sign for the multiplication of numbers is the half-high dot. The multiplication of quantity symbols (or numbers in parentheses or values of quantities in parentheses) may be indicated in one of the following ways: ab, a b, a b. For more information see Nist Guide to SI Units -More on Printing and Using Symbols and Numbers in Scientic and Technical Documents 18 or the German DIN 1304, Teil 1.
24
Other macros
\everymath There are some other macros which are not mentioned in the foregoing text. \everydisplay \underline Here comes a not really complete list of these macros.
\everymath puts the argument before any inlined math expression, e.g., \everymath{\displaysize}. Using this macro doesnt really make sense, when one is using footnotes because the footnote number is printed as superscript in inline mathmode and an \everymath will be valid, too. \everydisplay puts the argument before any displayed math expression, e.g., \everydisplay{\color{blue}}. \underline underlines a math expression and has to be used inside the math mode. F (x) = f (x) dx
18
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec10.html
Mathmode.tex
49
Part II
AMSmath package
1. amsmath.sty 2. amssymb.sty 3. amsfonts.sty
In general the AMS packages are at least a collection of three dierent ones:
In the following only the rst one is described in detail. The AMSmath has the following options: centertags tbtags (default) For a split equation, place equation numbers vertically centered on the total height of the equation. Top-or-bottom tags For a split equation, place equation numbers level with the last (resp. rst) line, if numbers are on the right (resp. left). (default) Place the subscripts and superscripts of summation symbols above and below, in displayed equations. This option also aects other symbols of the same type , , , , and so forth but excluding integrals (see below). Always place the subscripts and superscripts of summationtype symbols to the side, even in displayed equations. Like sumlimits, but for integral symbols. (default) Opposite of intlimits. (default) Like sumlimits, but for certain operator names such as det, inf, lim, max, min, that traditionally have subscripts placed underneath when they occur in a displayed equation. Opposite of namelimits.
sumlimits
nonamelimits
To use one of these package options, put the option name in the optional argument, e.g., \usepackage[intlimits]{amsmath}. The AMSmath also recognises the following options which are normally selected (implicitly or explicitly) through the documentclass command, and thus need not be repeated in the option list of the \usepackage{amsmath} statement. leqno reqno fleqn Place equation numbers on the left. (default) Place equation numbers on the right. Position equations at a xed indent from the left margin rather than centered in the text column. AMSmath denes the length \mathindent and uses it when the equations have only one tabbing character (&). 50
Mathmode.tex
25 ALIGN ENVIRONMENTS
All math environments are displayed ones, so there is no special inline math.
25
align environments
There are four dierent align environments, described in the following subsections. Their behaviour is shown in table 15. The symbolic code for all align environments is:
1 2 3 4
\ begin { < name >} < name > &= x & x &= x \\ < name > &= x & x &= x \ end { < name >}
Table 15: Comparison between the dierent align environments with the same code, where the rst three can have an equation number
align align
= =
x x
x x
= =
x x
alignat = alignat =
x x
x x
= =
x x
align align
= =
x x
x x
= =
x x
xalignat = xalignat =
x x
x x
= =
x x
xxalignat = xxalignat =
x x
x x
= =
x x
A In dierence to the eqnarray environment from standard L TEX (section 3.2), the three parts of one equation expr.-symbol-expr. are divided
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25 ALIGN ENVIRONMENTS
by only one ampersand in two parts. In general the ampersand should be before the symbol to get the right spacing, e.g., y &= x. Compare the following three equations, the second one has a wrong spacing.
1 2 3
The eqnarray environment has a not so good spacing between the cells. Writing the equations no. 3 to 6 with the align environment gives:
\ begin { align } y & = d \ label { eq : IntoSection }\\ y & = cx + d \\ y _{12} & = bx ^{2}+ cx + d \\ y ( x ) & = ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d \ end { align }
The align environment has an implicit {rlrl...} horizontal alignment with a vertical column-alignment, e.g.,
\begin{align*} 1 & 2 & 3 3 \end{align*}
1 2
12
A nonumber-version \begin{align*}...\end{align*} exists. Unnumbered single rows are possible with \nonumber. The align environment takes the whole horizontal space if you have more than two columns: y=d y = cx + d y12 = bx + cx + d y(x) = ax + bx + cx + d
Mathmode.tex
3 2 2
25 ALIGN ENVIRONMENTS
\ begin { align } y & = d & z & =1\\ y & = cx + d & z & = x +1\\ y _{12} & = bx ^{2}+ cx + d & z & = x ^{2}+ x +1\ nonumber \\ y ( x ) & = ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d & z & = x ^{3}+ x ^{2}+ x +1 \ end { align }
25.2
alignat environment
\begin{align} ... >From now the counting of the equation changes. It is introduced \end{align}
with a foregoing command, which doesnt really make sense, it is only for demonstration: \renewcommand{\theequation}{\thepart-\arabic{equation}}. This means align at several places and is something like more than two align environment side by side. Parameter is the number of the align environments, which is not important for the user. The above last align example looks like:
y=d y = cx + d y12 = bx + cx + d
3 2 2
i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22 For this example the code is:
1 2 3 4 5
\ begin { alignat }{3} i _{11} & =0.25 & i _{12} & = i _{21} & i _{13} & = i _{23}\ nonumber \\ i _{21} & =\ frac {1}{3} i _{11} & i _{22} & =0.5 i _{12}& i _{23} & = i _{31}\\ i _{31} & =0.33 i _{22}\ quad & i _{32} & =0.15 i _{32}\ quad & i _{33} & = i _{11} \ end { alignat }
With the alignat environment one can easily align equations vertically at more than one marker:
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25 ALIGN ENVIRONMENTS
abc = xxx
= xxxxxxxxxxxx = aaaaaaaaa = ab
(II-56) (II-57)
ab = yyyyyyyyyyyyyyy = yyyy
1 2 3 4
\ begin { alignat }{3} abc &= xxx &&= xxxxxxxxxxxx &&= aaaaaaaaa \\ ab &= yyyyyyyyyyyyyyy &&= yyyy &&= ab \ end { alignat }
The alignat environment has an implicit {rlrl...rlrl} horizontal alignment with a vertical column alignment. A nonumber-version \begin{alignat*}...\end{alignat*} exists. Unnumbered single rows are possible with \nonumber.
25.3
flalign environment
\begin{flalign}
This is the new replacement for the xalignat and xxalignat environments. ... It is nearly the same as the xalignat environment, only more out spaced \end{flalign} and left aligned. i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22
\begin{flalign} i_{11} & =0.25\nonumber \\ 3 i_{21} & =\frac{1}{3}i_{11}\\ 4 i_{31} & =0.33i_{22} 5 \end{flalign}
1 2
(II-58) (II-59)
As seen, the equations are not really left aligned, when they have only one ampersand. In this case flalign has the same behaviour as the align environment. When there are more than one tabbing characters (&), then the equations are really left aligned. This is also an easy way to get an equation with only one ampersand left aligned, see equation II-63 below. i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22 The code looks like:
1 2 3 4 5
\ begin { flalign } i _{11} & =0.25 & i _{12} & = i _{21} & i _{13} & = i _{23}\ nonumber \\ i _{21} & =\ frac {1}{3} i _{11} & i _{22} & =0.5 i _{12}& i _{23} & = i _{31}\\ i _{31} & =0.33 i _{22}\ quad & i _{32} & =0.15 i _{32}\ quad & i _{33} & = i _{11} \ end { flalign }
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25 ALIGN ENVIRONMENTS
This environment can be used to mix centered and left aligned equations without using the document wide valid option fleqn. 1 f (x) = dx (II-62) x2 f (x) = 1 dx x2
(II-63)
Equation II-63 is left aligned in fact of the second tabbing character &.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
\ begin { align }\ label { eq : centered } f ( x ) & = \ int \ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ end { align } \ begin { flalign }\ label { eq : leftaligned } f ( x ) & = \ int \ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ ,\ mathrm { d } x & \ end { flalign }
Another case is placing text left aligned, whereas the formulas should be right aligned. 12(x 1) + 20(y 3) + 14(z 2) = 0 6x + 10y + 7z = 0
same as
1 2 3 4
\ begin { flalign *} && 12( x -1) +20( y -3) +14( z -2) &= 0\\ \ text { same as } && 6 x +10 y +7 z &= 0 \ end { flalign *}
25.4
xalignat environment
\begin{xalignat}
This is an obsolete macro but still supported by the AMSmath package. ... \end{xalignat} Same as alignat environment, only a little more out spaced. i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22 The same code looks like:
1 2 3 4 5
\ begin { xalignat }{3} i _{11} & =0.25 & i _{12} & = i _{21} & i _{13} & = i _{23}\ nonumber \\ i _{21} & =\ frac {1}{3} i _{11} & i _{22} & =0.5 i _{12}& i _{23} & = i _{31}\\ i _{31} & =0.33 i _{22}\ quad & i _{32} & =0.15 i _{32}\ quad & i _{33} & = i _{11} \ end { xalignat }
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25 ALIGN ENVIRONMENTS
25.5
xxalignat environment
\begin{xxalignat}
Like xalignat an obsolete macro but still supported by the AMSmath ... package. Same as align environment, only extremely out spaced, therefore \end{xxalignat} no equation number! i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22 The same code looks like:
1 2 3 4 5
\ begin { xxalignat }{3} i _{11} & =0.25 & i _{12} & = i _{21} & i _{13} & = i _{23}\ nonumber \\ i _{21} & =\ frac {1}{3} i _{11} & i _{22} & =0.5 i _{12}& i _{23} & = i _{31}\\ i _{31} & =0.33 i _{22} & i _{32} & =0.15 i _{32} & i _{33} & = i _{11} \ end { xxalignat }
25.6
aligned environment
\begin{aligned}
In dierence to the split environment (section 26.4 on page 62), the aligned ... environment allows more than one horizontal alignment but has also only \end{aligned} one equation number: 2x + 3 = 7 2x + 3 3 = 7 3 2x 4 2x = 4 = 2 2 x=2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
(II-66)
\ begin { equation } \ begin { aligned } 2 x +3 &= 7 & 2 x +3 -3 &= 7 -3 \\ 2x &= 4 & \ frac {2 x }2 &= \ frac 42\\ x &= 2 \ end { aligned } \ end { equation }
The aligned environment is similar to the array environment, there exists no starred version and it has only one equation number and has to be part of another math environment, which should be equation environment. The advantage of aligned is the much better horizontal and vertical spacing.
25.7
Problems
When using one of the align environments, there should be no \\ at the end of the last line, otherwise youll get another equation number for this empty line:
Mathmode.tex
56
26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
2x + 3 = 7
(II-67) (II-68)
2x + 3 = 7
(II-69)
26
26.1
Other environments
gather environment
\begin{gather}
This is like a multi line environment with no special horizontal alignment. ... \end{gather} All rows are centered and can have an own equation number: i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22 For this example the code looks like:
1 2 3 4 5
(II-70)
(II-71)
\ begin { gather } i _{11} = 0.25\\ i _{21} = \ frac {1}{3} i _{11}\ nonumber \\ i _{31} =0.33 i _{22} \ end { gather }
The gather environment has an implicit {c} horizontal alignment with no vertical column alignment. It is just like an one column array/table. A nonumber-version \begin{gather*}...\end{gather*} exists. Look at section 26.4 on page 62 for an example.
26.2
gathered environment
\begin{gathered}[c]
The gathered environment is like the aligned or alignedat environment. ... They use only so much horizontal space as the widest line needs. In dierence \end{gathered} to the gather environment it must be itself inside the math mode. i11 = 0.25 1 i21 = i11 3 i31 = 0.33i22
(II-72)
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57
26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
\ begin { align } \ rule {2 cm }{1 pt } \ begin { gathered } \ quad i _{11}=0.25\\ \ quad i _{21}=\ frac {1}{3} i _{11}\\ \ quad i _{31}=0.33 i _{22} \ end { gathered } \ rule {2 cm }{1 pt } \ end { align }
The optional argument can be used for setting the vertical alignment which is by default c (centered). It can also be t for top or b for bottom. A=a A=a A=a B=b C=c
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
B=b C=c
\ begin { align } \ rule {1 cm }{1 pt } \ begin { gathered }[ t ] \ quad A = a \\ \ quad B = b \\ \ quad C = c \ end { gathered } % \ begin { gathered }[ c ] \ quad A = a \\ \ quad B = b \\ \ quad C = c \ end { gathered } % \ begin { gathered }[ b ] \ quad A = a \\ \ quad B = b \\ \ quad C = c \ end { gathered } \ \ rule {1 cm }{1 pt } \ end { align }
When using a square bracket as rst character inside the environment, then everything is ignored by AMS until a following closing bracket, because AMS takes this as an optional argument: A=a [B] B = b [C] C = c (II-74)
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26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
\ begin { align } \ begin { gathered } [ A ]\ quad A = a \\ [ B ]\ quad B = b \\ [ C ]\ quad C = c \ end { gathered } \ end { align }
The [A] is completely ignored, which can be avoided by using the optional argument [c] or at least an empty one directly after the \begin{gather}. Another possibility is using the package empheq, which xes this behaviour by default. [A] A = a [B] B = b [C] C = c
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
(II-75)
\ begin { align } \ begin { gathered }[] [ A ]\ quad A = a \\ [ B ]\ quad B = b \\ [ C ]\ quad C = c \ end { gathered } \ end { align }
26.3
multline environment
\begin{multline}
This is also like a multi line19 environment with a special vertical alignment. ... The rst row is left aligned, the second and all following ones except the \end{multline} last one are centered and the last line is right aligned. It is often used to write extremely long formulas:
1 2
3 4 5 6 7
8 9
\ begin { multline } A = \ lim _{ n \ rightarrow \ infty }\ Delta x \ left ( a ^{2}+\ left ( a ^{2}+2 a \ Delta x +\ left ( \ Delta x \ right ) ^{2}\ right ) \ right .\\ +\ left ( a ^{2}+2\ cdot 2 a \ Delta x +2^{2}\ left ( \ Delta x \ right ) ^{2}\ right ) \\ +\ left ( a ^{2}+2\ cdot 3 a \ Delta x +3^{2}\ left ( \ Delta x \ right ) ^{2}\ right ) \\ + \ ldots \\ \ left .+\ left ( a ^{2}+2\ cdot (n -1) a \ Delta x +( n -1) ^{2}\ left ( \ Delta x \ right ) ^{2}\ right ) \ right ) \\ = \ frac {1}{3}\ left ( b ^{3} - a ^{3}\ right ) \ end { multline }
19
Mathmode.tex
59
26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
x x x x x x (II-77)
Figure 1: multline Alignment demo (the fourth row is shifted to the right with \shoveright)
Figure 2: Demonstration of \multlinegap (default is 0pt) A nonumber-version \begin{multline*}...\end{multline*} exists. By default only the last line (for right equation numbers) or the rst line (for left equation numbers) gets a number, the others cant. The alignment of a single line can be changed with the command \shoveright (gure 1) The rst line and the last line have a small gap to the text border.20 See gure 2, where the length of \multlinegap is set to 0pt for the right one.
When the rst (numbers left) or last line (numbers right) has an equation number then \multlinegap is not used for these ones, only for the line without a number.
20
Mathmode.tex
60
26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
26.3.1
With the multline environment the equation 28 on page 28 looks like: 1 (fij f ij ) = 2 2
i<j
ij (i j )2 + f ij +
k fij k ij
i (f )+
f + f ij f k [2
i Rjk
k Rij ]
(II-80)
which is again a bad typesetting because of the two unequal parentheses. Each one has a size which is correct for the line but not for the whole formula. A L TEX accepts only pairs of parentheses for one line and has an empty parentheses, the dot \left. or \right. to get only one of the pair. There are dierent solutions to get the right size of the parentheses. One of them is to use the \vphantom command, which reserves the vertical space without any horizontal one, like a vertical rule without any thickness. The sum symbol from the rst line is the biggest one and responsible for the height, so this one is the argument of \vphantom which has to be placed anywhere. 1 (fij f ij ) = 2 2
i<j
ij (i j )2 + f ij +
k fij k ij
i (f )+
f + f ij f k [2
i Rjk
k Rij ]
(II-81)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
\ begin { multline } \ frac {1}{2}\ Delta ( f _{ ij } f ^{ ij }) = 2\ left (\ sum _{ i < j }\ chi _{ ij }(\ sigma _{ i } \ sigma _{ j }) ^{2}+ f ^{ ij }\ nabla _{ j }\ nabla _{ i }(\ Delta f ) +\ right .\\ \ left .+\ nabla _{ k } f _{ ij }\ nabla ^{ k } f ^{ ij }+ f ^{ ij } f ^{ k }\ left [2\ nabla _{ i } R _{ jk } \ nabla _{ k } R _{ ij }\ right ]\ vphantom {\ sum _{ i < j }}\ right ) \ end { multline }
Instead of using the \vphantom command it is also possible to use xed-width parentheses, which is described in section 8 on page 26. A math expression with a very long fraction like the following one, which runs out of the margin could be written as a multiplication to avoid the fraction line. dG = dn [1 epn ] [Q (n) pR (n) + R (n)] epn Q(n)e p (1 epn )2
pn
Q(0) p
=0
(II-82) 61
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26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
1 2 3 4 5 6
\ begin { equation } \ frac {\ mathrm { d } G _\ infty }{\ mathrm { d } n }=\ frac {\ left [1 - e ^{ - pn }\ right ] \ left [ Q \ left ( n \ right ) - pR \ left ( n \ right ) +R \ left ( n \ right ) \ right ] e ^{ - pn } -\ left [ -\ frac { Q \ left ( n \ right ) e ^{ - pn }}{ p }+\ frac { Q \ left (0\ right ) }{ p }+ R \ left ( n \ right ) e ^{ - pn } - A \ right ] pe ^{ - pn }}{\ left ({1 - e ^{ - pn }}\ right ) ^2} = 0 \ end { equation }
With the multline environment it can then be split into two or more parts: dG 1 = 1 epn Q (n) pR (n) + R (n) epn dn (1 epn )2 Q (n) epn Q (0) + + R (n) epn A pepn = 0 (II-83) p p
\begin{multline} \frac{\mathrm{d}G_\infty}{\mathrm{d}n} = 3 \frac{1}{\left( {1-e^{-pn}} \right)^2 }\cdot 4 \left\{\vphantom{\frac{Q}{p}}% >>>> to get the correct height <<<<< 5 \left[ 1-e^{-pn} \right] \left[ Q \left( n \right) - pR 6 \left( n \right) + R\left( n \right) \right]e^{-pn}\right.\\ 7 - \left.\left[-\frac{Q \left( n \right) e^{-pn}}{p} + 8 \frac{Q \left( 0 \right)}{p} + R \left( n \right) e^{-pn} 9 - A\right] pe^{-pn}\right\} = 0 10 \end{multline}
1 2
26.4
split environment
\begin{split} ... From now on the counting of the equations changes. It is introduced \end{split}
with a foregoing command, which doesnt really make sense, it is only for demonstration:
1 2 3
The split environment is like the multline or array environment for equations longer than the column width. Just like the array environment and in contrast to multline, split can only be used as part of another environment. split itself has no own numbering, this is given by the other environment. Without an ampersand all lines in the split environment are right-aligned and can be aligned at a special point by using an ampersand. In dierence to the aligned environment (section 25.6 on page 56), the split environment permits more than one horizontal alignment. It is important that the split environment has another behaviour when A used inside one of the old L TEX environments \[...\] or \begin{equation}
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26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
... \end{equation}, in this case more than one horizontal alignment tabs are possible. x x x x
\[ \begin{split} \framebox[0.35\columnwidth]{x}\\ \framebox[0.75\columnwidth]{x}\\ \framebox[0.65\columnwidth]{x}\\ \framebox[0.95\columnwidth]{x} \end{split} \] \[ \begin{split} \vec{a} = {}&\framebox[0.35\columnwidth]{x}\\ &\framebox[0.75\columnwidth]{x}\\ &\framebox[0.65\columnwidth]{x}\\ &\framebox[0.95\columnwidth]{x} \end{split} \]
a=
x x x x
The following example shows the split environment as part of the equation environment: A1 =
1
x3
(II-84)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
\ begin { equation } \ begin { split } A _{1} & = \ left | \ int _{0}^{1}( f ( x ) -g ( x ) ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | +\ left | \ int _{1}^{2}( g ( x ) -h ( x ) ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | \\ & = \ left | \ int _{0}^{1}( x ^{2} -3 x ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | +\ left | \ int _{1}^{2}( x ^{2} -5 x +6) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | \\ & = \ left | \ frac { x ^{3}}{3} -\ frac {3}{2} x ^{2}\ right | _{0}^{1}+ \ left | \ frac { x ^{3}}{3} \ frac {5}{2} x ^{2}+6 x \ right | _{1}^{2}\\ & = \ left | \ frac {1}{3} -\ frac {3}{2}\ right | +\ left | \ frac {8}{3} -\ frac {20}{2}+12 \ left ( \ frac {1}{3} -\ frac {5}{2}+6\ right ) \ right | \\ & = \ left | -\ frac {7}{6}\ right | +\ left | \ frac {14}{3} -\ frac {23}{6} \ right | =\ frac {7}{6}+\ frac {5}{6}=2\ , \ textrm { FE } \ end { split } \ end { equation }
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26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
The same using the array environment with {rl}-alignment instead of split gives same horizontal alignment, but another vertical spacing21 and the symbols are only in scriptsize and not textsize:22 2 0 (f (x) g(x)) dx + 1 (g(x) h(x)) dx 1 2 2 2 0 (x 3x) dx + 1 (x 5x + 6) dx 1 2 x3 3 2 x3 5 2 3 2 x 0 + 3 2 x + 6x 1 3 8 20 1 5 1 3 2 + 3 2 + 12 3 2 + 6 7 14 23 7 5 6 + 3 6 = 6 + 6 = 2 FE 1
A1 = = = = =
(II-85)
Compare the following two examples for typesetting the minus sign. In the rst case it is typeset similiar to the plus character, and in the second example it is typeset without the additional space for a binary math atom.
1 2 3
a= b+c
d+e
(II-86)5
6 7 8
a = b + c
d + e
(II-87)
10 11 12 13
\ begin { align } \ begin { split } a = {} & -b + & -d + \ end { split } \ end { align } % \ begin { align } \ begin { split } a = {} & { -} b & { -} d \ end { split } \ end { align }
c \\ e
+ c \\ + e
26.5
cases environment
This gives support for an often used mathematical construct. You can also choose the more than once described way to convert some text into math, like
$x=\begin{cases} 0 & \text{if A=...}\\ 1 & \text{if B=...}\\ x & \textrm{this runs with as much text as you like, but without an automatic linebreak, it runs out of page....} \end{cases}$
21 22
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26 OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
which gives equation II-88. It is obvious what the problem is. 0 if A=... x = (II-88) 1 if B=... x this runs with as much text as you like, but without a linebreak, it runs out of page.... In this case it is better to use a parbox for the text part with a flushleft command for a better view. 0 if A=... 1 if B=... (II-89) x= this runs with as much text as x you like, but without an automatic linebreak, it runs out of page....
\ begin { equation } x =\ begin { cases } 0 & \ text { if A =...}\\ 1 & \ text { if B =...}\\ x & \ parbox {5 cm }{ % \ flushleft % this runs with as much text as you like , but without an automatic linebreak , it runs out of page ....} % \ end { cases } \ end { equation }
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
From now on the counting of the equations changes. It is introduced with a foregoing command, which doesnt really make sense, it is only for demonstration:
1
26.6
Matrix environments
a b c d a b c d \Bmatrix \bmatrix a b c d a b c d \matrix \pmatrix \smallmatrix Table 16: Matrix environments a b c d a b c d
a b c d
\Vmatrix \vmatrix
Mathmode.tex
65
28 DOTS
All matrix environments can be nested and an element may also contain any other math environment, so that very complex structures are possible. By default all cells have a centered alignment, which is often not the best when having dierent decimal numbers or plus/minus values. Changing the alignment to right (not for the smallmatrix) is possible with matrix
1 2 3 4 5
\ makeatletter \ def \ env@matrix {\ hskip -\ arraycolsep \ let \ @ifnextchar \ new@ifnextchar \ array {*\ c@MaxMatrixCols r }} \ makeatother
The special matrix environment smallmatrix, which decreases horizontal and vertical space is typeset in scriptstyle. The smallmatrix environment makes some sense in the inline mode to decrease the line height. For dots over several columns look for \hdotsfor in the following section.
27
Vertical whitespace
See section 11.5 on page 35 for the lengths which control the vertical whitespace. There is no dierence to AMSmath.
28
Dots
In addition to section 13 on page 39 AMSmath has two more commands for dots: \dddot{...}23 and \ddddot{...} ... $\dddot{y}$: y .... $\ddddot{y}$: y Another interesting dot command is \hdotsfor with the syntax:
1
With the spacing factor the width of the dots can be stretched or shrinked. The number of columns allows a continuing dotted line over more columns. Equation 90 shows the denition of a tridiagonal matrix.
23
Mathmode.tex
66
29 FRACTION COMMANDS
A= 0 0 0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
a11 a12 0 ... ... ... 0 a21 a22 a23 0 ... ... 0 0 a32 a33 a34 0 ... 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..................................................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ... ... 0 ... ... an2,n3 an2,n2 an2,n1 0 0 qn1,n2 an1,n1 an1,n ... 0 an,n1 ann
(90)
8 9 10 11 12
\ begin { equation } \ underline { A }=\ left [\ begin { array }{ ccccccc } a _{11} & a _{12} & 0 & \ ldots & \ ldots & \ ldots & 0\\ a _{21} & a _{22} & a _{23} & 0 & \ ldots & \ ldots & 0\\ 0 & a _{32} & a _{33} & a _{34} & 0 & \ ldots & 0\\ \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots \\ \ hdotsfor {7}\ cr \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots & \ vdots \\ 0 & \ ldots & 0 & a _{ n -2 ,n -3} & a _{ n -2 ,n -2} & a _{ n -2 ,n -1} & 0\\ 0 & \ ldots & \ ldots & 0 & q _{ n -1 ,n -2} & a _{ n -1 ,n -1} & a _{ n -1 , n }\\ 0 & \ ldots & \ ldots & \ ldots & 0 & a _{ n ,n -1} & a _{ nn } \ end { array }\ right ] \ end { equation }
29
29.1
fraction commands
Standard
Additional to the font size problem described in subsection 2.2 on page 11 AMSmath supports some more commands for fractions. The \frac command described in [7], does no more exist in AMSmath. The global fraction denition has ve parameters
1
\ genfrac { < left delim >}{ < right delim >}{ < thickness >}{ < mathstyle >}{ < nominator >}{ < denominator >}
where thickness can have any length with a valid unit like 2 +x+1 genfrac{}{}{1pt}{}{x^2+x+1}{3x-2} x 3x2 \cfrac (continued fraction) which is by default set in the display
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29.2 Binoms
29 FRACTION COMMANDS
(92)
where the mathstyle decreases for every new level in the fraction. The \cfrac command can be called with an optional parameter which denes the placing of the nominator, which can be [l]eft, [r]ight or [c]enter (the default - see equation 91): 1 1 2+ 1 1 4+ 1 ... 2+ 1 3+ 1 1 4+ ...
3+
\dfrac which takes by default the displaystyle, so that fractions in 1 inline mode have the same size than in display mode. 2 \tfrac (vice versa to \dfrac) which takes by default the scriptstyle, so that fractions in display mode have the same size than in inline mode.
2 3
\tfrac{2}{3} \frac{2}{3}
2 3
\binom They are like fractions without a rule and its syntax is dierent to the \choose \dbinom A command from standard L TEX (see section 2.2 on page 11). AMSmath \tbinom
29.2
Binoms
provides three dierent commands for binoms just like the ones for fractions.
Mathmode.tex
68
Displaymath m n m n
m n
m n
m n
30
Roots
The typesetting for roots is sometimes not the best. Some solutions for A better typesetting are described in section 7 on page 25 for standard L TEX. \leftroot \uproot AMSmath has some more commands for the n-th root:
1
\ sqrt [\ leftroot { < number >}\ uproot { < number >} < root >]{ < ... >}
<number> indicates a value for the points24 of which the root can be adjusted to the left and/or to the top, e.g., kn a ($\sqrt[k_n]{a}$) has a too deep exponent, whereas kn a $\sqrt[\uproot{2}k_n]{a}$ looks nicer.
30.1
\smash
The default for a root with ki as root argument looks like ki , which may be not the best typesetting. It is possible to reduce the lowest point of the with \smash root to the baseline with the \smash command: ki k i The syntax of the \smash command25 renewed by the AMSmath package is
1
The optional argument for the position can be: t keeps the bottom and annihilates the top b keeps the top and annihilates the bottom tb annihilates top and bottom (the default)
31
Accents
With the macro \mathaccent it is easy to dene new accent types, for example
1
In PostScript units (bp Big Points). In latex.ltx \smash is dened without an optional argument.
Mathmode.tex
69
33 EQUATION NUMBERING Overwriting of two symbols is also possible: In this case the second symbol has to be shifted to the left for a length of 5mu (mu: math unit).
1 2 3
4 5
For other possibilities to dene new accents see section 47.1 on page 97.
32
\mod command
A In standard L TEX the modulo command is not an operator, though it is often used in formulas. AMSmath provides two (three) dierent commands for modulo, which are listed in tabular 18.
They all insert some useful space before and behind the mod-operator. a\mod{n2}=b a\pmod{n2}=b a\pod{n2}=b a mod n2 = b a (mod n2 ) = b a (n2 ) = b
33
Equation numbering
See section 3.3 on page 16 for equation numbering. It is mostly the same, \numberwithin only one command is new to AMSmath. If you want a numbering like 44 then write either in the preamble or like this example anywhere in your doc:
1
From now on the numbering looks like equation 44 on page 52. For the book-class you can get the same for chapters. If you want to get rid of the parentheses then write in the preamble:
1 2
\ makeatletter \ def \ tagform@ #1{\ maketag@@@ {\ ignorespaces #1\ unskip \ @@italiccorr }} \ makeatother
70
33.1 Subequations
33 EQUATION NUMBERING
33.1
Subequations
Amsmath supports this with the environment subequation. For example: y=d y = cx + d y = bx + cx + d y = ax + bx + cx + d
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
\ begin { subequations } \ begin { align } y & = d \\ y & = cx + d \\ y & = bx ^{2}+ cx + d \\ y & = ax ^{3}+ bx ^{2}+ cx + d \ end { align } \ end { subequations }
...
1 2 3
Inside of subequations only complete other environments (\begin{...} \end{...}) are possible.
A ref to a subequation is possible like the one to equation 33.94-2. The environment chooses the same counter equation but saves the old value into parentequation. It is also possible to place two equations side by side with counting as subgures: y = f (x) (33.95a) y = f (z) (33.95b) In this case, the AMSmath internal subgure counter cannot be used and an own counter has to be dened:
1 2 3 4 5
\ newcounter { mySubCounter } \ newcommand {\ twocoleqn }[2]{ \ setcounter { mySubCounter }{0} % \ let \ OldTheEquation \ theequation % \ renewcommand {\ theequation }{\ OldTheEquation \ alph { mySubCounter }} % \ noindent %
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35 LIMITS
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
\ begin { minipage }{.49\ textwidth } \ begin { equation }\ refstepcounter { mySubCounter } #1 \ end { equation } \ end { minipage }\ hfill % \ addtocounter { equation }{ -1} % \ begin { minipage }{.49\ textwidth } \ begin { equation }\ refstepcounter { mySubCounter } #2 \ end { equation } \ end { minipage } % \ let \ theequation \ OldTheEquation } [ ... ] \ twocoleqn { y = f ( x ) }{ y = f ( z ) }
34
For the \label command see section 3.4 on page 18, it is just the same \tag behaviour. AMSmath allows to dene own single equation numbers with the \tag command. f (x) = a g(x) = dx + cx + b h(x) = sin x
1 2 3
(linear)
2
(quadratic) trigonometric
4 5
\ begin { align } f ( x ) & = a \ tag { linear }\ label { eq : linear }\\ g ( x ) & =\ ,\ mathrm { d } x ^{2}+ cx + b \ tag { quadratic }\ label { eq : quadratic }\\ h ( x ) & =\ sin x \ tag *{ trigonometric } \ end { align }
A The \tag command is also possible for unnumbered equations, L TEX changes the behaviour when a tag is detected.
There exists a starred version \tag{*}{...}, which supresses any annotations like parentheses for equation numbers. There exist two package options for tags, ctagsplit and righttag (look at the beginning of this part on page 50).
35
Limits
By default the sum/prod has the limits above/below and the integral at the side. To get the same behaviour for all symbols which can have limits load the package AMSmath in the preamble as
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72
35 LIMITS
There exist also options for the vice versa (see page 50). See also Section 41 for the additional commands \underset and \overset.
35.1
Multiple limits
For general information about limits read section 2.1 on page 11. Standard A L TEX provides the \atop command for multiple limits (section 6.1 on page 24). AMSmath has an additional command for that, which can have several lines \substack with the following syntax: \begin{Sb}
1
\ substack {...\\...\\...}
are obsolete and no more part of AMSmath. The example equation 21 on page 25 with the \substack command looks like: aij bjk cki
1ip 1jq 1kr
(35.1)
35.2
Problems
There are still some problems with limits and the following math expression. For example: X=
1ijn
1 2 3
Xij
\[ X = \ sum _{1\ le i \ le j \ le n } X _{ ij } \]
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73
35.3 \sideset
35 LIMITS
does not look nice because of the long limit. Using a \makebox also does not really solve the problem, because \makebox is in TEX horizontal mode and knows nothing about the appropriate math font size, because limits have a smaller font size. It is better to dene a \mathclap macro, similiar to the two macros \llap and \rlap and uses the also new dened \mathclap macro:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
\ def \ mathllap {\ mathpalette \ mathllapinternal } \ def \ mathllapinternal #1#2{ % \ llap {$\ mathsurround =0 pt #1{#2}$} % $ } \ def \ clap #1{\ hbox to 0 pt {\ hss #1\ hss }} \ def \ mathclap {\ mathpalette \ mathclapinternal } \ def \ mathclapinternal #1#2{ % \ clap {$\ mathsurround =0 pt #1{#2}$} % } \ def \ mathrlap {\ mathpalette \ mathrlapinternal } \ def \ mathrlapinternal #1#2{ % \ rlap {$\ mathsurround =0 pt #1{#2}$} % $ }
Now we can write limits which have a boxwidth of 0pt and the right font size and the following math expression appears just behind the symbol: X=
1 2 3
Xij
1ijn
Another problem occurs when having operators with stacked limits in braces:
i,j i>j
This case is not easy to handle when some other math expressions are around the braces which should be on the same baseline. However, the following may help in some cases to get better looking braces.
\begin{align} foo \left[\begin{array}{@{}c@{}} 3 \displaystyle\sum_{\substack{i,j\\i>j}} \dots 4 \end{array}\right] bar 5 \end{align}
1 2
...
(35.2)
f oo
...
i,j i>j
bar
(35.3)
35.3
\sideset
This is a command for a very special purpose, to combine over/under limits with superscript/subscripts for the sum-symbol. For example: it is not \sideset
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74
36 OPERATOR NAMES
possible to place the prime for the equation 35.4 near to the sum symbol, because it becomes an upper limit when writing without an preceeding {}. nEn
n<k n odd
(35.4)
U pperRight LowerRight
\[ \ sideset {_{ LowerLeft }^{ UpperLeft }}{_{ LowerRight }^{ UpperRight }}\ sum _{ B }^{ T } \]
Now it is possible to write the equation 35.4 in a proper way with the command \sideset{}{} before the sum symbol: nEn
n<k n odd
(35.5)
36
Operator names
\operatorname
By default variables are written in italic and operator names in upright mode, like y = sin(x).26 This happens only for the known operator names, but creating a new one is very easy with:
1
Now \mysin is also written in upright mode y = mysin(x) and with some additional space before and behind. It is obvious, that only those names can be dened as new operator names which are not commands in another way. Instead of using the new denition as an operator, it is also possible to use the text mode. But it is better to have all operators of the same type, so that changing the style will have an eect for all operators. \operatornamewithlimi The new dened operator names cannot have limits, only superscript/subscript is possible. amsopn.sty has an additional command \operatornamewithlimits, which supports over/under limits like the one from \int or \sum. \mathop
A See section 16 on page 43, where all the standard L TEX known operator names are listed. Package AMSmath has some more (see documentation). 26
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75
It is also possible to use the macro \mathop to declare anything as operator, like
1B
1
With this denition it is possible to use \sideset for a forgoing index, which is only possible for an operator. A For a real L TEX denition have a look at section 16 on page 43.
37
If you need complex structures between formulas, look also at section 65.
37.1
\text command
\text
This is the equivalent command to \mathrm or \mbox from the standard \mbox A L TEX (section 9 on page 30) with the exception, that \mathrm always uses \textnormal the roman font and \text the actual one and that the font size is dierent \mathrm when used in super- and subscript. For example: f (x) = x this was math .
$\ boxed { f ( x ) = x \ quad \ text { this was math }}$ {\ sffamily \ huge $ A ^{\ mbox { text }}_{\ mbox { text }}$\ quad $ A ^{\ text { text }}_{\ text { text }}$\ quad $ A ^{\ textnormal { text }}_{\ textnormal { text }}$\ quad $ A ^{\ mathrm { text }}_{\ mathrm { text }}$ }
The \text macro can be used at any place and can be in some cases a better solution as \intertext (see section 37.2). 12(x 1) + 20(y 3) + 14(z 2) = 0 6x + 10y + 7z = 0
and
and
(37.1) (37.2)
6x + 10y + 7z = 0
Mathmode.tex
76
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
\ begin { flalign *} && 12( x -1) + 20( y -3) + 14( z -2) & = 0 &&\\ \ text { and } && 6 x + 10 y + 7 z & = 0 && \ end { flalign *} \ begin { align } && 12( x -1) + 20( y -3) + 14( z -2) & = 0\\ \ text { and } && 6 x + 10 y + 7 z & = 0 \ end { align }
37.2
\intertext command
This is useful when you want to place some text between two parts of math stu without leaving the math mode, like the name intertext says. For example we write the equation II-84 on page 63 with an additional command after the second line. 2 (f (x) g(x)) dx + (g(x) h(x)) dx 0 1 1 2 2 = (x 3x) dx + (x2 5x + 6) dx
1 0 1
A1 =
Now the limits of the integrals are used = x3 5 2 x3 3 2 x + x + 6x 3 2 0 3 2 1 1 3 8 20 1 5 = + + 12 +6 3 2 3 2 3 2 7 14 23 7 5 = + = + = 2 FE 6 3 6 6 6 The code looks like:
1 2 3
5 6
7 8
\ begin { equation } \ begin { split } A _{1} & = \ left | \ int _{0}^{1}( f ( x ) -g ( x ) ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | +\ left | \ int _{1}^{2}( g ( x ) -h ( x ) ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | \\ & = \ left | \ int _{0}^{1}( x ^{2} -3 x ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | +\ left | \ int _{1}^{2}( x ^{2} -5 x +6) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x \ right | \\ \ intertext { Now the limits of the integrals are used } & = \ left | \ frac { x ^{3}}{3} -\ frac {3}{2} x ^{2}\ right | _{0}^{1}+\ left | \ frac { x ^{3}}{3} \ frac {5}{2} x ^{2}+6 x \ right | _{1}^{2}\\ & = \ left | \ frac {1}{3} -\ frac {3}{2}\ right | +\ left | \ frac {8}{3} -\ frac {20}{2}+12 -
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77
38 EXTENSIBLE ARROWS
9 10
11 12 13
\ left ( \ frac {1}{3} -\ frac {5}{2}+6\ right ) \ right | \\ & = \ left | -\ frac {7}{6}\ right | +\ left | \ frac {14}{3} -\ frac {23}{6}\ right | =\ frac {7}{6}+ \ frac {5}{6}=2\ , \ textrm { FE } \ end { split } \ end { equation }
Writing very long text is possible by using a parbox, see section 9 on page 30 for an example with \textrm, which behaves in the same way as \text.
38
Extensible arrows
above the arrow below
To write something like you can use the following macro $\xrightarrow[\text{below}]{\text{above the arrow}}$ and the same with \xleftarrow. You can dene your own extensible arrow macros if you need other than these two predened ones. To get a doublelined extensible arrow like $\Longleftrightarrow$ () but with the same behaviour as an extensible one, write in the preamble
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
\ newcommand \ xLongLeftRightArrow [2][]{ % \ ext@arrow 0055{\ L on g Le ft Ri g ht Ar ro w fi ll @ }{#1}{#2}} \ def \ Lo n gL ef t Ri gh tA r ro wf il l @ { % \ arrowfill@ \ Leftarrow \ Relbar \ Rightarrow } \ newcommand \ xlongleftrightarrow [2][]{ % \ ext@arrow 0055{\ l on g le ft ri g ht ar ro w fi ll @ }{#1}{#2}} \ def \ lo n gl ef t ri gh ta r ro wf il l @ { % \ arrowfill@ \ leftarrow \ relbar \ rightarrow }
The three parts \Leftarrow\Relbar\Rightarrow dene left|middle|right of the arrow, where the middle part would be stretched in a way that the arrow is at least as long as the text above and/or below it. This macro has one optional and one standard parameter. The optional one is written below and the standard one above this arrow. Now we can write $\xLongLeftRightArrow[\text{below}]{\text{above the arrow}}$ $\xlongleftrightarrow[\text{below}]{\text{above the arrow}}$ to get = = = = or . The number 0055 after \ext@arrow = = = =
below below above the arrow above the arrow
denes the position relative to the extended error and is not a number but four parameters for additional space in the math unit mu.
1 2 3 4
\ def \ mapstofill@ { % \ arrowfill@ {\ mapstochar \ relbar }\ relbar \ rightarrow } \ newcommand *\ xmapsto [2][]{ % \ ext@arrow < four digits >\ mapstofill@ {#1}{#2}}
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78
39 FRAMES
$\ext@arrow 0000$
$\ext@arrow 9000$
$\ext@arrow 0900$
$\ext@arrow 0009$
$\ext@arrow 0090$
$\ext@arrow 0099$
over under over under over under over under over under over under over under
2nd digit: space right 3rd digit: space left and right 4th digit: space relativ to the tip of the arrow The two macros \xrightarrow and \xleftarrow are dened as:
1
\ newcommand {\ xrightarrow }[2][]{\ ext@arrow 0359\ rightarrowfill@ {#1}{#2}} \ newcommand {\ xleftarrow }[2][]{\ ext@arrow 3095\ leftarrowfill@ {#1}{#2}}
39
Frames
\boxed
AMSmath knows the macro \boxed which can be used for inline a b + c and displayed math expressions: f (x) =
1
1 dt = 1 x2
(39.1)
Mathmode.tex
79
41 MISCELLANEOUS COMMANDS
1 2 3
\ begin { align } \ boxed { f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ , dt =1} \ end { align }
For coloured boxes use package empheq. For an example see section 47.11 on page 105.
40
Greek letters
\pmb
The AMSmath package simulates a bold font for the greek letters by writing \boldsymbol a greek character twice with a small kerning. This is done with the macro \pmb{<letter>}. The \mathbf{<character>} doesnt work with lower greek character. However, using the \boldsymbol macro from AMSmath is the better way when the font has a bold symbol. Uppercase greek letters are by default in upright mode. AMSmath supports also such letters in italic mode with a preceeding var e.g., \varGamma letter ... \pmb{letter} ... \boldsymbol{letter} ... letter italic
41
Miscellaneous commands
\overset \underset
There are several commands which can be used in math mode: Some examples are shown in table 19. $\underset{under}{baseline}$ $\overset{over}{baseline}$ \boldsymbol{\Omega} baseline
under over
baseline
Mathmode.tex
80
\underset is a useful macro for having limits under non-operators (see page 98). \boldsymbol can be used for a math symbol that remains unaected by \mathbf if the current math font set includes a bold version of that symbol.
42
AMSmath is an excellent package with some funny features. When using an align environment inside a gather environment, it should be centered just like the other lines. This is only true, when there is a number/tag or an additional ampersand: m2 = m2 + m2 = m2 v2 = V V2 + V2 v2 v2 V2 V + 2 v2 v2
m2 = m2 + m2 = V V2 + 2 v2 v2 v2 v2
m2 v2 = V V2 + V2
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14
\ begin { gather *} \ begin { align *} m _2 &= m _2 + m _2 \\ &= \ frac { V _2 }{ v _2 } \ end { align *}\\ \ Rightarrow m _2 v _2 = V _2 }\\ \ end { gather *} \ begin { gather *} \ begin { align *} m _2 &= m _2 + m _2 \\ &= \ frac { V _2 }{ v _2 } \ end { align *}\\ \ Rightarrow m _2 v _2 = V _2 }\\ \ end { gather *}
+ \ frac { V _2 }{ v _2 } V _2 + V _2 \ frac { v _2 }{ v
This eect depends to the horizontal width, which is wrong in the rst example, in fact of a missing tag or number the right whitespace is cut, but
Mathmode.tex
81
the left one is still there. The additional ampersand prevents AMSmath to change the right margin. Another kind of curiousity is the following example, which depends to the same problem of cutting whitespace only on one side.
\ bigskip \ noindent \ fbox { % \ begin { minipage }{10 cm } \ begin { align *} a &= b \\ c &= d \ end { align *} \ end { minipage }} \ noindent \ fbox { % \ begin { minipage }{10 cm } \ noindent \ begin { align *} a &= b \\ c &= d \ end { align *} \ end { minipage }}
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82
43 LENGTH REGISTERS
Part III
43
43.1
Length registers
\abovedisplayshortskip
43.2
\abovedisplayskip
43.3
\belowdisplayshortskip
43.4
\belowdisplayskip
43.5
\delimiterfactor
The height of a delimiter is often not optimally calculated by TEX. In some cases it is too short. With \delimiterfactor one can correct this height. The delimiterheight is < calculated height > < #1 > /1000 where #1 is the parameter of \delimiterfactor. The default value is 901.
\[ y = \left\{% 3 \begin{array}{ll} 4 x^2+2x &\textrm{if }x<0,\\ 5 x^3 &\textrm{if }0\le x<1,\\ 6 x^2+x &\textrm{if }1\le x<2,\\ 7 x^3-x^2 &\textrm{if }2\le x. 8 \end{array}% 9 \right. 10 \]
1 2
2 x + 2x 3 x y= x2 + x 3 x x2
if if if if
Mathmode.tex
83
43.6 \delimitershortfall
1 2
43 LENGTH REGISTERS
\[ \delimiterfactor=1500 3 y = \left\{% 4 \begin{array}{ll} 5 x^2+2x &\textrm{if }x<0,\\ 6 x^3 &\textrm{if }0\le x<1,\\ 7 x^2+x &\textrm{if }1\le x<2,\\ 8 x^3-x^2 &\textrm{if }2\le x. 9 \end{array}% 10 \right. 11 \]
2 x + 2x 3 x y= x2 + x 3 x x2
if if if if
43.6
\delimitershortfall
Additionally to the forgoing \delimiterfactor one can modify the height of the delimiter with another value. TEX makes the delimiter larger than the values of < calculated height > < delimiterfactor > /1000 and < calculated height > < delimitershortfall >. This makes it possible to always get dierent heights of a sequence of delimiters.
1
x x
x2 y 2 3 x2 y 2 3
$x\cdot\left(\left(x^2-y^2\right)-3\right)$\\[7 pt]
$ \delimitershortfall-1pt 5 x\cdot\left(\left(x^2-y^2\right)-3\right)$
3 4
(((A))) (A)
1 2 3 4
43.7
\displayindent
This is the left shift amount of a line holding displayed equation. By default it is 0pt but gets the value of an indented paragraph when there is an environment like the quotation one. The following formula is typeset in the usual way without modifying anything. sin x f (x) = dx x Now we start a quotation environment which sets \labelwidth to new values for a greater left margin. The following formula is typeset in the usual way without modifying anything. f (x) =
Mathmode.tex
sin x dx x 84
43.8 \displaywidth
43 LENGTH REGISTERS
Now we write the same equation, but now with modifying displayindent, it is set to the negative \labelwidth: f (x) =
1 2 3 4
sin x dx x
43.8
\displaywidth
The width of the line holding a displayed equation, which is by default \linewidth. In the second example the formula is centered for a display width of 0.5\linewidth. sin x f (x) = dx x sin x f (x) = dx x
1 2 3 4 5
\[ f ( x ) = \ int \ frac {\ sin x }{ x }\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \] \[ \ displaywidth =0.5\ linewidth f ( x ) = \ int \ frac {\ sin x }{ x }\ ,\ mathrm { d } x \]
43.9
\mathsurround
Extra space added when switching in and out of the inline math mode (see section 2.7).
43.10
\medmuskip
43.11
\mkern
Similiar to \kern, but adds a math kern item to the current math list. Length must be a math unit.
43.12
\mskip
Similiar to \skip, but adds math glue to the current math list. Length must be a math unit.
Mathmode.tex
85
43.13 \muskip
43 LENGTH REGISTERS
43.13
\muskip
Assigns a length with a math unit to one of the 256 \muskip register.
43.14
\muskipdef
43.15
\nonscript
Ignores immediately following glue or kern in script and scriptscript styles, which makes a redenition of \mathchoice superuous.
43.16
\nulldelimiterspace
This is the width of a null or missing delimiter, e.g., \right. or for the left one.
43.17
\predisplaysize
Is the eective width of the line preceeding a displayed equation, whether \abovedisplayskip or abovedisplayshortskip is used for the vertical skip.
43.18
\scriptspace
43.19
\thickmuskip
43.20
\thinmuskip
The short version for positive skip is dened as \def\,{\mskip\thinmuskip} and the one for a negative skip as \def\!{\mskip-\thinmuskip} (see also Section 11.1). 2x 2 x log x log x P (1/ n) P (1/ n ) [0, 1) [ 0, 1) x2 /2 x2/2
$\sqrt 2 x$ -- $\sqrt 2\,x$\\ $\sqrt{\log x}$ -- $\sqrt{\,\log x}$\\ 3 $P\left({1/\sqrt n}\right)$ -- $P\left({1/ \ sqrt n}\,\right)$\\[8pt] 4 $[0,1)$ -- $[\,0,1)$\\ 5 $x^2/2$ -- $x^2\!/2$\\
1 2
Mathmode.tex
86
dx dy
D D
dx dy
D D
dx dy dx dy
D
dx dy
D
dx dy
\[\int\int_D \mathrm{d}x\mathrm{d}y \quad \int\!\int_D \mathrm{d}x\,\mathrm{d}y\] 3 \[\int\!\!\int_D \mathrm{d}x\,\,\mathrm{d}y \quad 4 \int\!\!\!\int_D \mathrm{d}x\,\,\,\mathrm{ d}y\] 5 \[\int\!\!\!\!\int_D \mathrm{d}x\,\,\,\,\ mathrm{d}y \quad 6 \int\!\!\!\!\!\int_D \mathrm{d}x\,\,\,\,\,\ mathrm{d}y\] 7 \[\int\!\!\!\int_D \mathrm{d}x\,\mathrm{d}y \]
1 2
43.21
\medmuskip
44
44.1
Each character has not only a \catcode and \mathcode but also a \delcode which denes for a single chracter how it should look when used as a math delimiter.
44.2
\delimiter
Every character can be declared as a delimiter, but TEX must know which A characters should be used for the default and the big size. For L TEX the macro \DeclareMathDelimiter should be used (see section 8.2 on page 29). In the following example \tdela is the character 0x22 () from font number 2 (csmy) and character 0x78 from font number 3 (cmex) for the big version. \tdelb is the same vice versa (). x y(x + y) = x2 y 2
1 2 3
\def\tdela{\delimiter"4222378\relax} \def\tdelb{\delimiter"5223379\relax} $\tdela x-y\tdelb(x+y)=x^2-y^2$ \[\tdela\sum_{n=0}^\infty {1\over2^n}\tdelb ^2 = 4\] \[\left\tdela\sum_{n=0}^\infty {1\over2^n}\ right\tdelb^2 = 4\]
n=0
1 2 =4 2n 2 1 =4 2n
4 5 6
7 8
44.3
n=0
\displaystyle
87
44.4 \fam
44.4
\fam
When TEX switches into the math mode, it typesets everything using one of the 16 possible families of fonts. \fam in an internal register where other macros can check which font is the actual one. At the beginning TEX starts with \fam=-1.
\fam=-1 \fam=0 \fam=1 \fam=2 \fam=3 \fam=4 \fam=5
1
ABC
$\mathrm{123abcABC\alpha\beta\gamma (\the\fam) }$\\[5pt] 2 $\mathbf{123abcABC\alpha\beta\gamma (\the\fam) }$\\[5pt] 3 $\mathit{123abcABC\alpha\beta\gamma (\the\fam) }$\\[5pt] 4 $\mathtt{123abcABC\alpha\beta\gamma (\the\fam) }$\\[5pt] 5 $\mathsf{123abcABC\alpha\beta\gamma (\the\fam) }$\\[5pt] 6 $\mathnormal{123abcABC\alpha\beta\gamma (\the\ fam)}$
44.5
\mathaccent
Requires three parameter as one number, the class, the font family and the character.
A
44.6 \mathbin
1 2
Declares a following character as a binary symbol with another spacing before and behind such a symbol.
a|b a | b
44.7 \mathchar
1 2
Declares a math character by three integer numbers as Parameters, giving its class, font family, and font position. In the following example \mathchar
Mathmode.tex
88
44.8 \mathchardef
denes a character of class 1 (big operators), font family 3 (math extension font) and number 58 (big sum character).
i=1
b a
i=1
44.8
\mathchardef
This is in principle the same as \mathchar, it only allows to make such denitions permanent. a a
i+1
i=1 i=1
i+1
$a\sum\limits_{i=1}^{\infty}\sqrt{i+1}$
44.9
\mathchoice
Species specic subformula sizes for the 4 main styles: \displaystyle \textstyle \scriptstyle \scriptscriptstyle.
\Large \def\myRule{{% 3 \color{red}% 4 \mathchoice{\rule{2pt}{20pt}}{\rule{1pt}{10pt}}% 5 {\rule{0.5pt}{5pt}}{\rule{0.25pt}{2.5pt}}% 6 \mkern2mu}} 7 $\myRule\sum\limits_{\myRule i=1}^{\myRule\infty}% 8 \myRule\frac{\myRule\sqrt{\myRule i+1}}{\myRule i^2}$
1 2
i=1
i+1 i2
44.10
\mathclose
Assigns class 5 (closing character) to the following parameter, which can hold a single character or a subformula.
A:
B :D C A: B :D C
44.11
\mathcode
A math font is far dierent from a text font. A lot of the characters has to be dened with \mathcode, which denes the character with its class, font family and character number, e.g., \mathcode\<="313C. It denes the character < as a realtion symbol (class 3) from the font family 1 and the character number 0x3C, which is 60 decimal.
Mathmode.tex
89
44.12 \mathop
44.12
\mathop
Assigns class 1 (large operator) to the parameter, which can be a single character or a subformula. A i=1
i=1
1 2
\[ A_{i=1}^{\infty} \] \[ \mathop{A}_{i=1}^{\infty} \]
44.13
\mathopen
44.14
\mathord
Assigns class 0 (ordinary character) to the following parameter, which can be a single character or a subformula.
\mathpunct
Assigns class 6 (punctuation) to the following parameter, which can be a single character or a subformula (see section 11.4 for an example).
44.16
\mathrel
Assigns class 3 (relation) to the following parameter, which can be a single character or a subformula.
\scriptfont
A1 A1
44.18
\scriptscriptfont
90
44.19 \scriptscriptstyle
45 MATH MACROS
44.19
\scriptscriptstyle
44.20
\scriptstyle
44.21
\skew
Especially for italic characters double accents are often misplaced. \skew has three arguments horizontal shift: A value in math units for the additional shift of the accent. the accent: The symbol which is placed above the character. the character: This is in general a single character, but can also include itself an accent. AMSmath redenes the setting of double accents. This is the reason why there are only a few cases where someone has to use \skew when the package amsmath is loaded, like in this document.
i i 44.22
A A
\skewchar
Is -1 or the character (reference symbol) used to ne-tune the positioning of math accents.
44.23
\textfont
44.24
\textstyle
45
45.1
Math macros
\above
Mathmode.tex
91
45.2 \abovewithdelims
a b a b a b
45 MATH MACROS
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
a b
45.2
\abovewithdelims
1
a b a b a b
$a\abovewithdelims()0pt b$\\[8pt] \def\fdelimA{\abovewithdelims\{)1.0pt} ${a\fdelimA b}$\\[8pt] \def\fdelimB{\abovewithdelims[]2.0pt} ${a\fdelimB b}$\\[8pt] \def\fdelimC{\abovewithdelims\{.0pt} $\displaystyle{a\fdelimC b}$
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
a b
45.3
\atop
a b
1 2 3 4 5
(n) = k
n! k!(nk)!
a b
45.4
\atopwithdelims
a b
1 2
n k
n! k!(nk)!
a b
4 5
45.5
\displaylimits
Resets the conventions for using limits with operators to the standard for the used environment.
Mathmode.tex
92
45.6 \eqno
45 MATH MACROS
45.6
\eqno
Puts an equation number at the right margin, the parameter can hold anything. \eqno places only the parameter, but doesnt increase any equation counter.
1
\[ y=f(x) \eqno{(A12)} \]
y = f (x)
(A12)
45.7
\everydisplay
Inserts the parameter at the start of every switch to display math mode. f (x) = g(x) = sin x dx x sin2 x dx x2
\everydisplay{\color{red} } 3 \[ f(x) = \int \frac{\sin x}{x}\,\mathrm{ d}x \] 4 \[ g(x) = \int \frac{\sin^2 x}{x^2}\,\ mathrm{d}x \]
1 2
45.8
\everymath
Same as \everydisplay, but now for the inline mode. In the following example the displaystyle is used (besides using color red) for every inline math expression. f (x) = Instead of sin x dx x
\everymath{\color{red}% \displaystyle} 3 \[ f(x) = \int \frac{\sin x}{x}\,\ mathrm{d}x \] 4 Instead of $\frac{\sin x}{x}$ 5 now with $\frac{\cos x}{x}$: 6 \[ g(x) = \int \frac{\cos x}{x}\,\ mathrm{d}x \]
1 2
Pay attention for side eects on footnotes and other macros which use the math mode for superscript and other math related modes. In this case youll get the footnotes also in red.
45.9
\left
TEX calculates the size of the following delimiter needed at the left side of a formula. Requires an additional right.
45.10
\leqno
93
45.11 \limits
45 MATH MACROS
45.11
\limits
Typesets limits above and/or below operators (see section 6 on page 24).
45.12
\mathinner
45.13
\nolimits
The opposit of \limits, instead of above/below limits are placed to the right of large operators (class 1).
45.14
\over
A Is equivalent to the fraction macro of L TEX and equivalent to the \overwithdelims, see section 45.16. a b m n
m n
a+b
1 2
a+b
45.15
\overline
Puts a line over the following character or subformula and has the same problems with dierent heights as underlines (see section 45.19). x+y =z x+A=z x+A=z
$\overline{x}+\overline{y}=\overline{z}$\\ \let\ol\overline 3 $ \ol{x} + \ol{A} = \ol{z} $\\[5pt] 4 \def\yPh{\vphantom{A}} 5 $ \ol{x\yPh} + \ol{A} = \ol{z\yPh} $
1 2
45.16
\overwithdelims
a+b
a+b
45.17
\radical
Makes a radical atom from the delimiter (27-bit number) and the math eld.
Mathmode.tex
94
45.18 \right
1 2 3
46 MATH PENALTIES
\def\mySqrt{\radical"0270371\relax} $ \mySqrt{\frac{1}{7}} $\\[5pt] \def\mySqrt{\radical"0270372\relax} $ \mySqrt{\frac{1}{7}} $\\[5pt] \def\mySqrt{\radical"0270373\relax} $ \mySqrt{\frac{1}{7}} $\\[5pt] \def\mySqrt{\radical"0270374\relax} $ \mySqrt{\frac{1}{7}} $\\[5pt]
1 7 1 7 1 7 1 7
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
45.18
\right
Opposite to \left, makes TEX calculate the size of the delimiter needed at the right of a formula.
45.19
\underline
When there is a combination of variables with and without an index, the underlines are typeset with a dierent depth. Using \vphantom in this case is a good choice.
1 2
$\underline{x}+\underline{y}=\underline{z}$\\
x+y =z x+y =z x 1 + y2 = z3
45.20
\vcenter
46
46.1
Math penalties
\binoppenalty
A penalty for breaking math expressions between lines in a paragraph. TeX breaks lines only when the binary symbol is not the last one and when the penalty is below 10,000.
46.2
\displaywidowpenalty
The penalty which is added after the penultimate line immediately preceeding a display math formula.
Mathmode.tex
95
46.3 \postdisplaypenalty
46 MATH PENALTIES
46.3
\postdisplaypenalty
46.4
\predisplaypenalty
46.5
\relpenalty
The penalty for a line break after a relation symbol (if a break is possible).
Mathmode.tex
96
Math packages
Part IV
Other packages
The following sections are not a replacement for the package documentation!
47
accents amsbsy amslatex amsppt1 amstex (Plain TeX) biteld cases doublestroke eqnarray icomma mathematica numprint
47.1
accents
M M M
If you want to write for example an underlined M, then you can do it by \underline{$M$} \underbar{$M$} \underaccent{\bar}{M}
Mathmode.tex
97
Math packages
As seen, there is no dierence between \underline and \underbar. For some reasons it may be better to use the accent package with the \underaccents macro.
47.2
The amscd package is part of the AMSmath bundle or available at CTAN27 and has no options for the \usepackage command. amscd does not support diagonal arrows but is much easier to handle than the complex pstricks package or the xypic package. On the other hand simple diagrams can be written with the array environment or look at [23]. RST ST proj proj RS
inclusion restriction
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
\[ \ begin { CD } R \ times S \ times T @ >\ text { restriction } > > S \ times T \\ @VprojVV @VVprojV \\ R \ times S @ < <\ text { inclusion } < S \ end { CD } \]
47.3
amsopn
With the amsopn package it is very easy to declare new math operators, which are written in upright mode: Res versus Res
s=p s=p
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
\ documentclass [10 pt ]{ article } \ usepackage { amsmath } \ usepackage { amsopn } \ DeclareMathOperator {\ Res }{ Res } \ begin { document } $\ underset { s = p }{ Res }\ quad \ underset { s = p }{\ Res }$ \ end { document }
47.4
bigdel
This is a very useful package together with the multirow package. In the following example we need additional parentheses for a dierent number of
27
CTAN://macros/latex/required/amslatex/math/amscd.dtx
Mathmode.tex
98
47.4 bigdel arccos arg cot deg exp inf lg lim sup max proj lim sinh tanh arcsin cos coth det gcd inj lim lim ln min sec sup
Math packages arctan cosh csc dim hom ker lim inf log Pr sin tan
\arccos \arg \cot \deg \exp \inf \lg \limsup \max \projlim \sinh \tanh
\arcsin \cos \coth \det \gcd \injlim \lim \ln \min \sec \sup
\arctan \cosh \csc \dim \hom \ker \liminf \log \Pr \sin \tan
Table 20: The predened operators of amsopn.sty rows. This is also possible with the array environment, but not as easy as with the bigdelim package. The trick is that you need one separate column for a big delimiter, but with empty cells in all rows, which the delimiter spans. x11 x21 . . . x12 x22 ... ... x1p x2p some text
text xn1 1 xn1 2 ... xn1 p xn1 +1,1 xn1 +1,2 . . . xn1 +1,p . some more text . . xn1 +n2 ,1 xn1 +n2 ,2 . . . xn1 +n2 ,p . . .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
\[ \ begin { pmatrix } & x _{11} & x _{12} & \ dots & x _{1 p } & \ rdelim \}{4}{3 cm }[ some text ]\\ \ ldelim [{5}{1 cm }[ text ] & x _{21} & x _{22} & \ dots & x _{2 p } \\ & \ vdots \\ & x _{ n _1 1}& x _{ n _1 2} & \ dots & x _{ n _1 p }\\ & x _{ n _1+1 ,1}& x _{ n _1+1 ,2} & \ dots & x _{ n _1+1 , p } & \ rdelim \}{3}{3 cm }[ some more text ]\\ & \ vdots \\ & x _{ n _1+ n _2 , 1} & x _{ n _1+ n _2 ,2} & \ dots & x _{ n _1+ n _2 , p }\\ & \ vdots \\ \ end { pmatrix } \]
As seen in the above listing the left big delimiter is placed in the rst column, all other rows start with second column. It is possible to use all
Mathmode.tex
99
47.5 bm
Math packages
columns above and below the delimiter. For the array environment there must be two more columns dened, in case of a big delimiter left and right. The syntax of \ldelim and \rdelim is: \ldelim<delimiter>{<n rows>}{<added horizontal space>}[<text>] \rdelim<delimiter>{<n rows>}{<added horizontal space>}[<text>] Any delimiter which is possible for the \left or \right command is allowed, e.g., ()[]{}|. The text is an optional argument and always typeset in text mode.
47.5
bm
By default the math macro \mathbf writes everything in bold and in upright mode y = f (x) ($\mathbf{y=f(x)}$), but it should be in italic mode especially for variables y = f (x) ($\bm{y=f(x)}$), which is possible with the package bm. For writing a whole formula in bold have a look at section 22 on page 47.
47.6
braket
It is available at CTAN://macros/latex/contrib/other/misc/braket.sty and provides several styles for writing math expressions inside brakets. For example: x R|0 < |x| <
1
5 3
looks not quit right and it is not really easy to get the rst vertical line in the same size as the outer braces. Some solution may be using \vphantom: x R 0 < |x| <
1 2
5 3
\[ \ left \{\ vphantom {\ frac {5}{3}} x \ in \ mathbf { R } \ right |\ left . 0 <{| x |} <\ frac {5}{3}\ right \} \]
\ Bra { < math expression >} \ Ket { < math expression >} \ Braket { < math expression >} \ Set { < math expression >}
Mathmode.tex
100
47.7 cancel
Math packages
and the same with a leading lower letter, which are not really interesting. x R|0 < |x| < x R|0 < |x| < 5 3
5 3 5 3 5 3 5 3
\[ \[ \[ \[ \[
\ Bra { x \ in \ mathbf { R } | 0 <| x | <\ frac {5}{3}} \] \ Ket { x \ in \ mathbf { R } | 0 <| x | <\ frac {5}{3}} \] \ Braket { x \ in \ mathbf { R } | 0 <| x | <\ frac {5}{3}} \] \ Braket { x \ in \ mathbf { R } | 0 <\ vert x \ vert <\ frac {5}{3}} \] \ Set { x \ in \ mathbf { R } | 0 <| x | <\ frac {5}{3}} \]
The dierence between the \Set and the \Braket macro is the handling of the vertical lines. In \Set only the rst one gets the same size as the braces and in \Braket all.
1 2
2 t2 2 | t2
\[\ Braket {\ phi | \ frac {\ partial ^2}{\ partial t ^2} | \ psi }\] \[\ Set {\ phi | \ frac {\ partial ^2}{\ partial t ^2} | \ psi }\]
47.7
cancel
This is a nice package for canceling anything in mathmode with a slash, backslash or a X. To get a horizontal line we can dene an additional macro called \hcancel with an optional argument for the line color (requires package color):
1 2
\ newcommand \ hcancel [2][ black ]{\ setbox 0=\ hbox {#2} % \ rlap {\ raisebox {.45\ ht 0}{\ textcolor {#1}{\ rule {\ wd 0}{1 pt }}}}#2}
Mathmode.tex
101
47.8 cool
Math packages
It is no problem to redene the \cancel macros to get also colored lines. A horizontal line for single characters is also decribed in section 14 on page 39. \cancel: f (x) = \bcancel: 3 e \xcancel: 3 e \hcancel: 3
1
$ x2 + 1 $$$ (x 1) $ (x $ $$ 1)(x + 1)
1234567
2 3 4
$ f ( x ) =\ dfrac {\ left ( x ^2+1\ right ) \ cancel {( x -1) }}{\ cancel {( x -1) }( x +1) }$\\[0.5 cm ] $\ bcancel {3}\ qquad \ bcancel {1234567}$\\[0.5 cm ] $\ xcancel {3}\ qquad \ xcancel {1234567}$\\[0.5 cm ] $\ hcancel {3}\ qquad \ hcancel [ red ]{1234567}$
47.8
cool
The cool package denes a lot of special mathematical expressions to use them by the macro name. The following list shows only some of them, for more informations look at the example le, which comes with the package. \Sin{x} \Cos{x} \Tan{x} \Csc{x} \Sec{x} \Cot{x} sin(x) cos(x) tan(x) csc(x) sec(x) cot(x)
\Style{ArcTrig=inverse} (default) \ArcSin{x} \ArcCos{x} \ArcTan{x} sin1 (x) cos1 (x) tan1 (x)
\Style{ArcTrig=arc} \ArcSin{x} \ArcCos{x} \ArcTan{x} \ArcCsc{x} \ArcSec{x} \ArcCot{x} arcsin(x) arccos(x) arctan(x) csc1 (x) sec1 (x) cot1 (x) 102
Mathmode.tex
47.8 cool n! n!! n k (10; 1, 2, 3, 4) (x) (a, x) (a, x, y) Q(a, x) Q1 (a, x) Q(a, x, y) Q1 (a, x, y) (a)n log(x)
0 F0 (; ; x) 0 F1 (; b; x)
Math packages
\GammaFunc{x} \IncGamma{a}{x} \GenIncGamma{a}{x}{y} \RegIncGamma{a}{x} \RegIncGammaInv{a}{x} \GenRegIncGamma{a}{x}{y} \GenRegIncGammaInv{a}{x}{y} \Pochhammer{a}{n} \LogGamma{x} \Hypergeometric{0}{0}{}{}{x} \Hypergeometric{0}{1}{}{b}{x}
\RegHypergeometric{0}{0}{}{}{x} \RegHypergeometric{0}{1}{}{b}{x}
0 F 1 (; b; x)
0 F 0 (; ; x)
\MeijerG[a,b]{n}{p}{m}{q}{x} a1 , . . . , an , an+1 , . . . , ap Gm,n x p,q b1 , . . . , bm , bm+1 , . . . , bq \MeijerG{1,2,3,4}{5,6}{3,6,9}{12,15,18,21,24}{x} 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 G3,4 x 6,8 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24 \RiemannZeta{s} \Zeta{s} \HurwitzZeta{s}{a} \Zeta{s,a} \RiemannSiegelTheta{x} \RiemannSiegelZ{x} \StieltjesGamma{n} \MathieuC{a}{q}{z} \MathieuS{a}{q}{z} (s) (s) (s, a) (s, a) (x) Z(x) n
47.9 delarray
Math packages
47.9
delarray
Package delarray28 supports dierent delimiters which are dened together with the beginning of an array:
1 2
denes an array with two centered columns and the delimiters <delLeft><delRight>, e.g., ().
1 2 3 4 5 6
A=
a b c d
The delarray package expects a pair of delimiters. If you need only one (like the cases structure) then use the dot for an empty delimiter, e.g.,
1 2 3 4 5 6
A=
a b c d
which is a useful command for a cases structure without the AMSmath package, which is described in the AMSmath part.
47.10
dotseqn
This package29 lls the space between the math expression and the equation number with dots. Expect problems when using this package together with AMSmath. F (x) = F (x) = f (x) dx + C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (47.2) f (x) dx + C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (47.1)
28 29
CTAN://macros/latex/required/tools/delarray.dtx CTAN://macros/latex/contrib/dotseqn
Mathmode.tex
104
47.11 empheq
Math packages
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
\ begin { eqnarray } F ( x ) &=& \ int f ( x ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x + C \ end { eqnarray } % \ begin { equation } F ( x ) =\ int f ( x ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x + C \ end { equation }
47.11
empheq
This package supports dierent frames for math environments of the AMSmath A package. It doesnt support all the environments from standard L TEX which are not modied by AMSmath, e.g., eqnarray environment. With the optional argument of the empheq environment the preferred box type can be specied. A simple one is \fbox f (x) =
1
1 2 3
1 dt = 1 x2
(47.3)
\ begin { empheq }[ box =\ fbox ]{ align } f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ , dt =1 \ end { empheq }
1 dt = 1 x2
(47.4)
1 2 3
\ begin { empheq }[ box ={\ fboxsep =10 pt \ colorbox { yellow }}]{ align } f ( x ) =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ , dt =1 \ end { empheq }
A The key box can hold any possible L TEX command sequence. Boxing subequations is also no problem, the empheq environment works in the same way:
f (x) = f (x) =
2 1
1 dt = 1 x1 1 dt = 0.25 x2
(47.5a) (47.5b)
1 2 3
\ begin { subequations } \ begin { empheq }[ box ={\ fboxsep =10 pt \ colorbox { cyan }}]{ align } f ( x ) & =\ int _1^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ , dt =1\\
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105
47.12 esint
Math packages
4 5 6
f ( x ) & =\ int _2^{\ infty }\ frac {1}{ x ^2}\ , dt =0.25 \ end { empheq } \ end { subequations }
For more information on empheq package have a look at the documentation of the package which is available at any CTAN server.
47.12
esint
This is a very useful package when you want nice double or triple integral or curve integral symbols. The ones from the wasysym package30 are not the best. esint31 supports the following symbols: \int : \iint : \iiintop : \iiiintop : \dotsintop : \ointop : \oiint : \sqint : \sqiint : \ointctrclockwise : \ointclockwise : \varointclockwise : \varointctrclockwise : \fint :
30 31
(47.6) (47.7) (47.8) (47.9) (47.10) (47.11) (47.12) (47.13) (47.14) (47.15) (47.16) (47.17) (47.18) (47.19)
Mathmode.tex
106
Math packages
47.13
These packages should be part of your local TEX installation, because they come with the AMSmath packages. Otherwise get them from CTAN32 . They support a scriptwriting of only uppercase letters:
\mathscr{...} ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
Read the documentation for the interdependence to the \mathcal command. For the above example the package eucal was loaded with the option mathscr.
47.14
exscale
The following formula is written with the default fontsize where everything looks more or less well:
+1
f (x) dx 2 n 1x
f
i=1
cos
2i 1 2n
Writing the same with the fontsize \huge gives a surprising result, which A belongs to the historical development of L TEX, the \int and \sum symbols are not stretched. This extreme fontsize is often needed for slides and not only written just for fun.
Using the exscale package33 package, which should be part of any local TEX installation, all symbols get the right size.
32 33
CTAN://fonts/amsfonts/latex/euscript.sty CTAN://macros/latex/base/
Mathmode.tex
107
47.15 mathtools
Math packages
+1
1
47.15
f (x) dx 2 n 1x
f
i=1
2i 1 cos 2n
mathtools
This package comes with a lot of additional features for typesetting math code. Sometimes it is useful when only such equations are numbered which are referenced in the text. This is possible with the switch \showonlyrefs. Matrices are set by default with a centered horizontal alignment, which is often not the best way. The mathtools package provides a starred version of the matrix environments which allow an optional argument for the horizontal alignment: 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 11 11 11
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
\[ \ begin { pmatrix *}[ r ] 1 & -1 & 0 \\ -1 & 1 & -1 \\ 1 & -1 & 0 \\ -11 & 11 & -11 \\ \ end { pmatrix *} \]
mathtools also provides some more environments for setting equations. Very interesting is the lgathered environment, which allows to typeset a formula in the following way:
\begin{align} x &= 3 \begin{lgathered}[t] 4 a + b + c \\ 5 d + e + 6 \!\begin{gathered}[t ] 7 f + g + h \\ 8 i + j + k 9 \end{gathered} 10 \end{lgathered} 11 \end{align}
1 2
(47.23)
The \! revokes the internal horizontal space in front of the gathered environment.
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108
47.16 nicefrac
Math packages
47.16
nicefrac
Typesetting fractions in the inline mode is often a bad choice, the vertical spacing increases in fact of the fraction. The nicefrac package denes the macro \nicefrac, which is used in the same way as the \frac command, but it typesets the fraction with a less height: 2/3 \nicefrac{2}{3}. The package is part of the units package bundle and can be found in the directory of units.
47.17
relsize
Often consecutives math operators are used, like two sum symbols, e.g.,
n
i2
i=1
As seen the sums are of the same size. To increase the rst operator size, someone can use the \scalebox macro from package graphicx environment and write an own macro \Sum, e.g.,
1
\ def \ Sum {\ ensuremath \ mathop {\ scalebox {1.2}{$\ displaystyle \ sum $}}} \[ \ Sum _{ j =1}\ sum _{ i =1}^\ infty i \]
j=1 i=1
Another solution is to use the relsize package34 together with the exscale one. relsize denes a useful macro \mathlarger:
n
1
i
i=1
\[ \mathlarger{\sum}\sum_{i=1}^n i^2 \]
47.18
xypic
The \xymatrix macro is part of the xypic package35 which can be loaded with several options which are not so important here.36 .
CTAN://macros/latex/ltxmisc/ CTAN://macros/generic/diagrams/xypic/xy-3.7/ 36 For more information look at the package documentation or the package xy itself, which is often saved in /usr/share/texmf/tex/generic
35
34
Mathmode.tex
109
47.18 xypic
Math packages
AA
O O O
AA AA AA
(47.24)
E /o /o /o F
~> ~> ~> ~>
4 5
\[ \ xymatrix { A \ POS [];[ d ]**\ dir {~} ,[];[ dr ]**\ dir { -} & B & C \\ D & E \ POS [];[ l ]**\ dir {.} ,[];[ r ]**\ dir {~} & F \ POS [];[ dl ]**\ dir {~}\\ G & H & I} \]
Mathmode.tex
110
49 LATIN MODERN
Part V
Math fonts
Typesetting text and math is far dierent. There exist a lot of free text fonts without additional math characters. This is the reason why we have to buy a commercial math font, e. g. Palatino (pamath) or Helvetica (hvmath), or to combine the free text font with another free math font.
48
Computer modern
This is the default font, designed by Knuth. For the PDF output the Type 1 fonts cm-super and BlueSky were used.
Theorem 1 (Residuum). Fr eine in einer punktierten Kreisscheibe D\{a} analytische Funktion f deniert man das Residuum im Punkt a als Resf (z) = Resf =
z=a a
1 2i
C
f (z) dz ,
wobei C D\{a} ein geschlossener Weg mit n(C, a) = 1 ist (z.B. ein entgegen dem Uhrzeigersinn durchlaufener Kreis). A BCDEFGHIJKLMNO PQRSTUVWXYZ abcde f gh ijkl mnop qrst uvw xyz d
49
Latin modern
This is the new designed font which comes with an own Type 1 version.lm
Theorem 1 (Residuum). Fr eine in einer punktierten Kreisscheibe D\{a} analytische Funktion f deniert man das Residuum im Punkt a als Resf (z) = Resf =
z=a a
1 2i
C
f (z) dz ,
wobei C D\{a} ein geschlossener Weg mit n(C, a) = 1 ist (z.B. ein entgegen dem Uhrzeigersinn durchlaufener Kreis). A BCDEFGHIJKLMNO PQRSTUVWXYZ abcde f gh ijkl mnop qrst uvw xyz d
Mathmode.tex
111
51 PALATINO MICROIMP
50
Palatino
1 2i
f (z) dz ,
C
wobei C D \{ a} ein geschlossener Weg mit n(C, a) = 1 ist (z.B. ein entgegen dem Uhrzeigersinn durchlaufener Kreis). A BCDEFGHIJKLMNO PQRSTUVWXYZ abcde f gh ijk l mno p qrstuvw h xyz d
51
Palatino microimp
Resf
a
1 2i
C
f z dz ,
wobei C D\{a} ein geschlossener Weg mit n C, a dem Uhrzeigersinn durchlaufener Kreis).
Mathmode.tex
112
53 MINION
52
cmbright
Theorem 1 (Residuum). Fr eine in einer punktierten Kreisscheibe D\{a} analytische Funktion f deniert man das Residuum im Punkt a als Resf (z) = Resf =
z=a a
1 2i
C
f (z) dz ,
wobei C D\{a} ein geschlossener Weg mit n(C, a) = 1 ist (z.B. ein entgegen dem Uhrzeigersinn durchlaufener Kreis). A BCDEF GHIJKLMNO PQRSTUVWXYZ abcde f gh i jkl mnop qr st uv w xy z d
53
minion
eorem (Residuum). Fr eine in einer punktierten Kreisscheibe D a analytische Funktion f de niert man das Residuum im Punkt a als Res f(z) = Res f =
z=a a
Mathmode.tex
113
54 INTEGRAL SYMBOLS
Part VI
Special symbols
In this section only those symbols are dened, which are not part of the list of all available symbols: CTAN://info/symbols/comprehensive/symbols-a4.pdf. A With fontmath.ltx L TEX itself denes the following special symbols for using inside math: Name \mathparagraph \mathsection \mathdollar \mathsterling \mathunderscore \mathellipsis Meaning $ ...
54
Integral symbols
Name \dashint \ddashint \clockint \counterint Symbol =
For all new integral symbols limits can be used in the usual way:
=1=0< = 0 1
(54.1)
\ ddashint _01=\ dashint _10 <\ oint \ limits _{ -\ infty }^\ infty = \ clockint \ counterint _ A
Put the following denitions into the preamble to use one or all of these new integral symbols.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
\ def \ Xint #1{\ mathchoice {\ XXint \ displaystyle \ textstyle {#1}} % {\ XXint \ textstyle \ scriptstyle {#1}} % {\ XXint \ scriptstyle \ scriptscriptstyle {#1}} % {\ XXint \ scriptscriptstyle \ scriptscriptstyle {#1}} % \!\ int } \ def \ XXint #1#2#3{{\ setbox 0=\ hbox {$#1{#2#3}{\ int }$} \ vcenter {\ hbox {$#2#3$}}\ kern -.5\ wd 0}}
Mathmode.tex
114
55 HARPOONS
9 10 11 12
13
14
\ def \ ddashint {\ Xint =} \ def \ dashint {\ Xint -} \ def \ clockint {\ Xint \ circlearrowright } % GOOD ! \ def \ counterint {\ Xint \ rotcirclearrowleft } % Good for Computer Modern ! \ def \ rotcirclearrowleft {\ mathpalette {\ RotLSymbol { -30}}\ circlearrowleft } \ def \ RotLSymbol #1#2#3{\ rotatebox [ origin = c ]{#1}{$#2#3$}}
55
Harpoons
A L TEX knows no stretchable harpoon symbols, like \xrightarrow. The following code denes several harpoon symbols. \xrightharpoondown
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21
22 23 24 25 26
27 28
29 30
\ def \ r ighth arpoon downf ill@ { % \ arrowfill@ \ relbar \ relbar \ rightharpoondown } \ def \ rightharpoonupfill@ { % \ arrowfill@ \ relbar \ relbar \ rightharpoonup } \ def \ leftharpoondownfill@ { % \ arrowfill@ \ leftharpoondown \ relbar \ relbar } \ def \ leftharpoonupfill@ { % \ arrowfill@ \ leftharpoonup \ relbar \ relbar } \ newcommand {\ xrightharpoondown }[2][]{ % \ ext@arrow 0359\ righ tharpo ondow nfill@ {#1}{#2}} \ newcommand {\ xrightharpoonup }[2][]{ % \ ext@arrow 0359\ rightharpoonupfill@ {#1}{#2}} \ newcommand {\ xleftharpoondown }[2][]{ % \ ext@arrow 3095\ leftharpoondownfill@ {#1}{#2}} \ newcommand {\ xleftharpoonup }[2][]{ % \ ext@arrow 3095\ leftharpoonupfill@ {#1}{#2}} \ newcommand {\ xleftrightharpoons }[2][]{\ mathrel { % \ raise .22 ex \ hbox { % $\ ext@arrow 3095\ leftharpoonupfill@ {\ phantom {#1}}{#2}$} % \ setbox 0=\ hbox { % $\ ext@arrow 0359\ ri ghtha rpoond ownfi ll@ {#1}{\ phantom {#2}}$} % \ kern -\ wd 0 \ lower .22 ex \ box 0} % } \ newcommand {\ xrightleftharpoons }[2][]{\ mathrel { % \ raise .22 ex \ hbox { % $\ ext@arrow 3095\ rightharpoonupfill@ {\ phantom {#1}}{#2}$} % \ setbox 0=\ hbox { % $\ ext@arrow 0359\ leftharpoondownfill@ {#1}{\ phantom {#2}}$} % \ kern -\ wd 0 \ lower .22 ex \ box 0} % }
Mathmode.tex
115
under under over
56
This uses the \mathrlap denition from section 35.2 on page 73. With this denition a huge symbol is also possible: {\Huge\bijmap}
57
There are several symbols stacked with an equal sign, e.g., \doteq, \equiv . or \cong (=, , ). But there are still some missing, which are shown in = table 22 and the following denitions. \eqdef \eqexcl \eqhat
def
=
!
= =
\ newcommand {\ eqdef }{\ ensuremath {\ stackrel {\ mathrm { def }}{=}}} \ newcommand {\ eqexcl }{\ ensuremath {\ stackrel {\ mathrm {!}}{=}}} \ newcommand {\ eqhat }{\ ensuremath {\ widehat {=}}}
Mathmode.tex
116
58 OTHER SYMBOLS
58
1 2 3
Other symbols
\ newcommand *{\ threesim }{ % \ mathrel {\ vcenter {\ offinterlineskip \ hbox {$\ sim $}\ vskip -.35 ex \ hbox {$\ sim $}\ vskip -.35 ex \ hbox {$\ sim $}}}} $\ threesim ABC $
ABC
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117
Part VII
Examples
59 Tuning math typesetting
Chapter 18 of the TEXbook is named Fine Points of Mathematics Typing [12] and it shows on 20 pages some more or less important facts when typesetting mathematical expressions. Often inline formulas contain a punctuation character like a dot, comma, colon, etc.. It is a general rule to write those characters outside the math mode. Compare a, b, c, d, e, and f a, b, c, d, e, and f
1 2
$a, b, c, d, e, \textrm{and }f$ \\[5pt] $a$, $b$, $c$, $d$, $e$, and $f$
Having such math as single expressions enables TEX to insert a linebreak at several places (see Section 2.6 on page 13). Writing an ellipses as three single dots, doesnt look very nice, one should always use the \ldots command: 1, ..., 10 1, . . . , 10
1 2
$1,...,10$\\[5pt] $1,\ldots,10$
This is correct as long as on the left and right are a comma as a separator. For sums the \cdot command should be used instead: 1 + 2 + + 10
1 2
xn = xn1 = = n0 = 1
$1+2+\cdots+10$\\[5pt] $x_n=x_{n-1}=\cdots=n_0=1$
For a multiplication it is important which character is used, in european countries often a centered dot. In such a case it is appropriate not to use the \cdots command for a ellipsis. For typesetting integrals or dierential equations it makes sense to dene the following short macros:
1 2 3 4 5 6
\ newcommand *\ dy {\ ,\ mathrm { d } y } \ newcommand *\ dx {\ ,\ mathrm { d } x } \ newcommand *\ dyx {\ ,\ frac {\ mathrm { d } y }{\ mathrm { d } x }} \ newcommand *\ ds {\ ,\ mathrm { d } s } \ newcommand *\ dt {\ ,\ mathrm { d } t } \ newcommand *\ dst {\ ,\ frac {\ mathrm { d } s }{\ mathrm { d } t }}
\begin{align*} F(x) &= \int\!f(x)\dx\\ 3 v(t) &= \dst\\ 4 a(t) &= \frac{\mathrm{d}^2s}{\mathrm{d}t ^2} 5 \end{align*}
1 2
118
dx dy . . .
iC (t) dt
60
60.1
Matrix
Identity matrix
There are several possibilities to write this matrix. Here is a solution with the default array environment.
\[ \left( 3 \begin{array}{ccccc} 4 1\\ 5 & 1 & & \text{{\huge{0}}}\\ 6 & & 1\\ 7 & \text{{\huge{0}}} & & 1\\ 8 & & & & 1 9 \end{array} 10 \right) 11 \]
1 2
1 1 1
0
1 1
60.2
yn1 = x(n1)1 + x(n1)2 + x(n1)3 + . . . + x(n1)3 + x(n1)n yn = xn1 + xn2 + xn3 + . . . + x(n1)(n1) + xnn
\[ \begin{array}{l@{\:=\:}*{5}{l@{\:+\:}}l} 3 y_1 & x_{11} & x_{12} & x_{13} & \dots & x_{1(n-1)} & x_{1n} \\ 4 y_2 & x_{21} & x_{22} & x_{23} & \dots & x_{2(n-1)} & x_{2n} \\ 5 \ \vdots &\ \vdots &\ \vdots &\ \vdots &\ \vdots &\ \vdots &\ \vdots\\ 6 y_{n-1} & x_{(n-1)1} & x_{(n-1)2} & x_{(n-1)3} & \dots & x_{(n-1)3} & x _{(n-1)n}\\ 7 y_n & x_{n1} & x_{n2} & x_{n3} & \dots & x_{(n-1)(n-1)} & x_{nn} 8 \end{array} 9 \]
1 2
Mathmode.tex
119
61 CASES STRUCTURE
60.3
Xx Yx Zx Tx Xy Yy Zy Ty Xz Yz Zz Tz 0 0 0 1
61
Cases structure
Sometimes it is better to use the array environment instead of amsmaths cases environment. To get optimal horizontal spacing for the conditions, there are two matrixes in series, one 3 1 followed by 3 3 matrix. To minimize the horizontal space around the variable z a
1
\ addtolength {\ arraycolsep }{ -3 pt }
text1
text1
text1
text1
D z p p z p z
p D
(61.1)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
\ addtolength {\ arraycolsep }{ -3 pt } I ( z ) =\ delta _{0}\ left \{ % \ begin { array }{ lcrcl } D + z & \ quad & -D & \ le z \ le & -p \\ D -\ frac {1}{2}\ left (p -\ frac { z ^{2}}{ p }\ right ) % & \ quad & -p & \ le z \ le & \ phantom { -} p \\ D - z & \ quad & p & \ le z \ le & \ phantom { -} D \ end { array }\ right . \ end { equation }
The \phantom command replaces exactly that place with whitespace which the argument needs.
61.1
This is not possible in an easy way, because cases uses the array environment for typesetting which has by default no numbering. However, there are some tricky ways to get numbered lines. The following three examples use the tabular, the tabularx and the array environment.
Mathmode.tex
120
62 ARRAYS
(61.2) (61.3)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
\ begin { tabular }{ rc } \ ldelim \{{2}{2.75 cm }[ some text here ] & \ parbox {{\ linewidth -3 cm -4\ tabcolsep }}{ \ vspace *{1 ex } \ begin { flalign } x & = 2\ quad \ text { if } y >2 &\\ x & = 3\ quad \ text { if } y \ le 2& \ end { flalign }} \ end { tabular }
x = 2 if y > 2 x = 3 if y 2
(61.4) (61.5)
1 2 3 4 5
\ begin { tabularx }{\ linewidth }{ rXc } \ ldelim \{{2}{2.75 cm }[ some text here ] & $ x =2\ quad \ text { if }y >2$ &\ refstepcounter { equation }(\ theequation ) \\ & $ x =3\ quad \ text { if } y \ le 2$&\ refstepcounter { equation }(\ theequation ) \ end { tabularx }
x = 2 if y > 2 x = 3 if y 2
(61.6) (61.7)
1 2 3 4
6 7
\[ \ begin { array }{ rc@ {\ qquad } c } \ ldelim \{{2}{2.75 cm }[ some text here ] & x = 2\ quad \ text { if } y > 2 & \ refstepcounter { equation }(\ theequation ) \\ & x = 3\ quad \ text { if } y \ le 2& \ refstepcounter { equation }(\ theequation ) \ end { array } \]
62
Arrays
There is a general rule that a lot of mathematical stu should be divided in smaller pieces. But sometimes it is dicult to get a nice horizontal alignment when splitting a formula. The following ones uses the array environment to get a proper alignment.
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121
62 ARRAYS
62.1
Quadratic equation
y = = = x2 + bx + c b x2 + 2 x + c 2 b b 2 x +2 x+ 2 2 x+ = x+ x+ b 2
2
b 2
+c
b 2
b 2
+c
b 2
y+
b 2
c y yS
S(xS ; yS )
b 2 2 = (x xS )2 b b bzw. S ; 2 2 =
|(Scheitelpunktform)
2
c (62.1)
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8
9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17
\ begin { equation } \ begin { array }{ rcll } y & = & x ^{2}+ bx + c \\ & = & x ^{2}+2\ cdot {\ displaystyle \ frac { b }{2} x + c }\\ & = & \ underbrace { x ^{2}+2\ cdot \ frac { b }{2} x +\ left (\ frac { b }{2}\ right ) ^{2}} -{\ displaystyle % \ left (\ frac { b }{2}\ right ) ^{2}+ c }\\ & & \ qquad \ left ( x +{\ displaystyle \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2}\\ & = & \ left ( x +{\ displaystyle \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2} -\ left ({\ displaystyle % \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2}+ c & \ left |+\ left ({\ displaystyle % \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2} - c \ right .\\ y +\ left ({\ displaystyle \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2} - c & = & \ left ( x +{\ displaystyle % \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2} & \ left |(\ textrm { Scheitelpunktform }) \ right .\\ y - y _{ S } & = & (x - x _{ S }) ^{2}\\ S ( x _{ S }; y _{ S }) & \ ,\ textrm { bzw .}\ , & S \ left ( -{\ displaystyle % \ frac { b }{2};\ ,\ left ({\ displaystyle \ frac { b }{2}}\ right ) ^{2} - c }\ right ) \ end { array } \ end { equation }
Mathmode.tex
122
62 ARRAYS
62.2
9e e5 19 03 (62.2)
3 j=0 si,j
i = 0, 1, ..., k 1
\ begin { equation } \ begin { array }{ rcl } \ underline { RS } & = & \ left (\ begin { array }{ cccccccc } 01 & a 4 & 55 & 87 & 5 a & 58 & db & 9 e \\ a 4 & 56 & 82 & f 3 & 1 e & c 6 & 68 & e 5\\ 02 & a 1 & fc & c 1 & 47 & ae & 3 d & 19\\ a 4 & 55 & 87 & 5 a & 58 & db & 9 e & 03\ end { array }\ right ) \\ \\ \ left (\ begin { array }{ c } s _{ i ,0}\\ s _{ i ,1}\\ s _{ i ,2}\\ s _{ i ,3} \ end { array }\ right ) & = & \ underline { RS }\ cdot % \ left (\ begin { array }{ c } m _{8 i +0}\\ m _{8 i +1}\\ \ cdots \\ m _{8 i +6}\\ m _{8 i +7} \ end { array }\ right ) \\ \\ S _{ i } & = & \ sum _{ j =0}^{3} s _{ i , j }\ cdot 2^{8 j }\ qquad i =0 ,1 ,... , k -1\\ \\ S & = & \ left ( S _{ k -1} , S _{ k -2} ,... , S _{1} , S _{0}\ right ) \ end { array } \ end { equation }
62.3
Mathmode.tex
123
62.4 Arrays inside arrays divergent q 1 0 |q| < 1 n = lim q n> q = 1 1 q > 1
62 ARRAYS
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
$\ lim \ limits _{ n - >\ infty } q ^{ n }=\ left \{ % \ begin { array }{ lc@ {\ kern 2 pt } c@ {\ kern 2 pt } r } \ textrm { divergent }\ & q & \ le & -1\\ 0 & | q | & < & 1\\ 1 & q & = & 1\\ \ infty & q & > & 1 \ end { array }\ right .$
62.4
The array environment is a powerful one ways: a11 a12 0 a 21 a22 b11 b12 b21 b22 0 b31 b32 0 0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
\[ \ left ( \ begin { array }{ c@ {} c@ {} c } \ begin { array }{| cc |}\ hline a _{11} & a _{12} \\ a _{21} & a _{22} \\\ hline \ end { array } & \ mathbf {0} & \ mathbf {0} \\ \ mathbf {0} & \ begin { array }{| ccc |}\ hline b _{11} & b _{12} & b _{13}\\ b _{21} & b _{22} & b _{23}\\ b _{31} & b _{32} & b _{33}\\\ hline \ end { array } & \ mathbf {0} \\ \ mathbf {0} & \ mathbf {0} & \ begin { array }{| cc |}\ hline c _{11} & c _{12} \\ c _{21} & c _{22} \\\ hline \ end { array } \\ \ end { array } \ right ) \]
Mathmode.tex
124
62 ARRAYS
0 Y1 = 1 1 2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
0 0 1 1
1 1 1 3
0 0 1 1
\[ Y ^1= \ begin { array }{ c } \ null \\[1 ex ] % only vor vertical alignment \ left [\ begin { array }{ rrrr } 0 & 0 & 1 & 0\\ 1 & 0 & 1 & 0\\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \ end { array }\ right ]\\[3 ex ]\ hline \ begin { array }{ rrrr } % \ hdotsfor {4}\\%( needs \ AmSmath ) instead of \\[3 ex ]\ hline 2 & 1 &3 & 1 \ end { array } \ end { array } \]
62.5
Colored cells
In general there is no dierence in coloring tabular or array cells. The following example shows how one can put colors in rows, columns and cells.
1 2 3 4 5 6
hk,1,1 (n) hk,2,1 (n) hk,3,1 (n) hk,4,1 (n) hk,1,0 (n 1) hk,2,0 (n 1) hk,3,0 (n 1) hk,4,0 (n 1) 0 0 0 0
hk,1,2 (n) hk,2,2 (n) hk,3,2 (n) hk,4,2 (n) hk,1,1 (n 1) hk,2,1 (n 1) hk,3,1 (n 1) hk,4,1 (n 1) hk,1,0 (n 2) hk,2,0 (n 2) hk,3,0 (n 2) hk,4,0 (n 2)
125
... \ usepackage { array } \ usepackage { colortbl } \ definecolor { umbra }{ rgb }{0.8 ,0.8 ,0.5} \ def \ zero {\ multicolumn {1}{ >{\ columncolor { white }} c }{0}} \ def \ colCell #1#2{\ multicolumn {1}{ >{\ columncolor {#1}} c }{#2}}
Mathmode.tex
125
62 ARRAYS
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23
\ begin { document } \[\ left [\ , \ begin { array }{*{5}{ >{\ columncolor [ gray ]{0.95}} c }} h _{ k ,1 ,0}( n ) & h _{ k ,1 ,1}( n ) & h _{ k ,1 ,2}( n ) & \ zero & \ zero \\ h _{ k ,2 ,0}( n ) & h _{ k ,2 ,1}( n ) & h _{ k ,2 ,2}( n ) & \ zero & \ zero \\ h _{ k ,3 ,0}( n ) & h _{ k ,3 ,1}( n ) & h _{ k ,3 ,2}( n ) & \ zero & \ zero \\ h _{ k ,4 ,0}( n ) } & \ colCell { umbra }{ h _{ k ,4 ,1}( n ) } & h _{ k ,4 ,2}( n ) & \ zero & \ zero \\ \ zero & h _{ k ,1 ,0}( n -1) & h _{ k ,1 ,1}( n -1) & h _{ k ,1 ,2}( n -1) & \ zero \\ \ zero & h _{ k ,2 ,0}( n -1) & h _{ k ,2 ,1}( n -1) & h _{ k ,2 ,2}( n -1) & \ zero \\ \ zero & h _{ k ,3 ,0}( n -1) & h _{ k ,3 ,1}( n -1) & h _{ k ,3 ,2}( n -1) & \ zero \\ \ zero & \ colCell { umbra }{ h _{ k ,4 ,0}( n -1) } & h _{ k ,4 ,1}( n -1) & h _{ k ,4 ,2}( n -1) & \ zero \\ \ zero & \ zero & h _{ k ,1 ,0}( n -2) & h _{ k ,1 ,1}( n -2) & h _{ k ,1 ,2}( n -2) \\ \ zero & \ zero & h _{ k ,2 ,0}( n -2) & h _{ k ,2 ,1}( n -2) & h _{ k ,2 ,2}( n -2) \\ \ zero & \ zero & h _{ k ,3 ,0}( n -2) & h _{ k ,3 ,1}( n -2) & h _{ k ,3 ,2}( n -2) \\ \ zero & \ zero & h _{ k ,4 ,0}( n -2) & h _{ k ,4 ,1}( n -2) & h _{ k ,4 ,2}( n -2) \ end { array } \ ,\ right ]_{12\ times 5}\] ...
62.6
1 1 A = 1 1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4
1 1 A = 1 1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4
\[ \overrightarrow{A}=\left[ 3 \begin{array}{cc|c|c}\cline{3-3} 4 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\ 5 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\ 6 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\ 7 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\\cline{3-3} 8 \end{array}\right] 9 \]
1 2
1 1 A = 1 1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4
\[ \overrightarrow{A}=\left[ 3 \begin{array}{cc|c|c}\cline{3-3} 4 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\ 5 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\\hline 6 \multicolumn{1}{|c}{1} & 2 & 3 & 7 \multicolumn{1}{c|}{4}\\\hline 8 1 & 2 & 3 & 4\\\cline{3-3} 9 \end{array}\right] 10 \]
1 2
Mathmode.tex
126
63
63.1
To put an underbrace in a root without enlarging the root symbol is possible with the \makebox macro: z= x2 + y 2
=z 2
1 2 3 4 5
\[ z =\;\;\ underbrace { % \ makebox [\ widthof {~$ x ^2+ y ^2$}][ r ]{ % $\ sqrt { x ^2+ y ^2}$}}_{= z ^2} \]
63.2
Overlapping braces
o
needs some
tricky code, because we cannot have parts of the argument inside overbrace and also underbrace. The following equation 63.1 is an example for such a construction: y = 2x2 3x + 5 = 2 x2 =2 y 31 3 = 2 x 8 4 3 x+ 2 3 x 4
2
=0
3 4
2
3 4
31 16
5 + 2
(63.1)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
\ begin { align }\ label { eq : pqFormel } y &= 2 x ^2 -3 x +5\ nonumber \\ & \ hphantom {= \ 2\ left ( x ^2 -\ frac {3}{2}\ , x \ right . } % \ textcolor { blue }{ % \ overbrace {\ hphantom {+\ left (\ frac {3}{4}\ right ) ^2 - % \ left (\ frac {3}{4}\ right ) ^2}}^{=0}}\ nonumber \\[ -11 pt ] &= 2\ left (\ textcolor { red }{ % \ underbrace { % x ^2 -\ frac {3}{2}\ , x + \ left (\ frac {3}{4}\ right ) ^2} %
Mathmode.tex
127
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
}% \ underbrace { % - \ left (\ frac {3}{4}\ right ) ^2 + \ frac {5}{2}} % \ right ) \\ &= 2\ left (\ qquad \ textcolor { red }{\ left (x -\ frac {3}{4}\ right ) ^2} \ qquad + \ \ frac {31}{16}\ qquad \ right ) \ nonumber \\ y \ textcolor { blue }{ -\ frac {31}{8}} &= 2\ left ( x \ textcolor { cyan }{ -\ frac {3}{4}}\ right ) ^2\ nonumber \ end { align }
63.3
When having several braces in one formula line, then it looks better when all braces are also on the same line, e.g., xR yR = r
Scaling
1 2
xK yK
tx ty
Translation
(63.2)
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
\ begin { equation } \ binom { x _ R }{ y _ R } = \ underbrace { r \ vphantom {\ binom { A }{ B }}}_{\ text { Skaling }}\ cdot % \ underbrace { % \ begin { pmatrix } \ sin \ gamma & -\ cos \ gamma \\ \ cos \ gamma & \ sin \ gamma \\ \ end { pmatrix } % }_{\ text { Rotation }} \ binom { x _ K }{ y _ K } + \ underbrace {\ binom { t _ x }{ t _ y }}_{\ text { Translation }} \ end { equation }
It is again the \vphantom macro which reserves the needed vertical space. Nevertheless the horizontal space around the r of the rst underbrace and the last + should be decreased to get a better typesetting. This is possible with \hspace or simply \kern: xR yR = r
Skaling
1 2
xK yK
tx ty
Translation
3 4 5 6 7 8
\[ \ binom { x _ R }{ y _ R } = % \ kern -10 pt \ underbrace { r \ vphantom {\ binom { A }{ B }}}_{\ text { Skaling }}\ kern -10 pt % \ cdot \ underbrace { % \ begin { pmatrix } \ sin \ gamma & -\ cos \ gamma \\ \ cos \ gamma & \ sin \ gamma \\ \ end { pmatrix } % }_{\ text { Rotation }}
Mathmode.tex
128
63.4 Alignment
9 10
63.4
The forgoing example simply uses \hspace to decrease the horizontal width between two underbraces. This may be okay for a single solution, but in general it is better to have some code which works in any case. The following example looks simple but it needs some tricky code to get vertical and horizontal alignment. 300 29 19 9 8 1 1 . . . . . . 5069 490 321 152 135 16 1
a=271 a=10 = 271 29 b=4579 b=169= 4579 490 1 iteration 2 iterations a=1 = 10 9 b=17= 169 152 8 iterations a=0= 1 1 b=1= 17 16 8 iterations
It uses the macro \mathclap dened in section 35.2 on page 73 , which gives a better result. It is also possible to use \makebox[0pt]{...} but it works only in text mode and this needs some more $...$.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
\ def \ num #1{\ hphantom {#1}} \ def \ vsp {\ vphantom {\ rangle _1}} \ begin { equation *} \ frac {300}{5069} % \ underbrace {\ longmapsto \ vphantom {\ frac {1}{1}}}_{ % \ mathclap {\ substack { % \ Delta a =271\ num 9\ vsp \\[2 pt ] \ Delta b =4579\ vsp \\[2 pt ] \ text {$1$ iteration } % }}} \ frac {29}{490} % \ underbrace {\ longmapsto \ frac {19}{321}\ longmapsto }_{ % \ mathclap {\ substack { % \ Delta a =10\ num {9}=\ langle 271\ rangle _{29}\ num {20}\\[2 pt ] \ Delta b =169=\ langle 4579\ rangle _{490}\\[2 pt ] \ text {$2$ iterations } }}} \ frac {9}{152} \ underbrace {\ longmapsto \ frac {8}{135}\ longmapsto \ dots \ longmapsto }_{ % \ substack { % \ Delta a =1\ num {7}=\ langle 10\ rangle _{9}\ num {119}\\[2 pt ] \ Delta b =17=\ langle 169\ rangle _{152}\\[2 pt ] \ text {$8$ iterations } }} \ frac {1}{16} \ underbrace {\ longmapsto \ dots \ longmapsto \ vphantom {\ frac {8}{135}}}_{ % \ substack { % \ Delta a =0=\ langle 1\ rangle _{1}\ num {76} \\[2 pt ] \ Delta b =1=\ langle 17\ rangle _{16} \\[2 pt ]
19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27
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65 HORIZONTAL ALIGNMENT
28 29 30
64
Integrals
u v v n n
d2 A
They are both written with the esint package37 , which gives nice integral A symbols. The L TEX code for the rst equation is:
1 2 3
4 5
\[ \ underset {\ mathcal { G }\ quad }\ iiint \! % \ left [ u \ nabla ^{2} v +\ left (\ nabla u ,\ nabla v \ right ) \ right ]\ mathrm { d }^{3} V % =\ underset {\ mathcal { S }\ quad }\ oiint u \ ,\ Q { v }{ n }\ ,\ ,\ mathrm { d }^{2} A \]
with the following denition in the preamble for the partial derivation:
1
65
65.1
Horizontal alignment
Over more than one page
Sometimes it may be useful to have a vertical alignment over the whole page with a mix of formulas and text. Section 37 shows the use of \intertext. There is another trick to get all formulas vertical aligned. Lets have the following formulas distributed over the whole page: f (x) = a f (x) g(x) = x2 + x3 + x
37
g(x) = x2 4x
g = x2 + x3 + x4 + x5 + b
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65 HORIZONTAL ALIGNMENT
They all have a dierent length of the left and right side. Now we want to write some text and other objects between them, but let the alignment untouched. We choose the longest left and the longest right side and take them for scaling with the \hphantom command: \hphantom{\mbox{$f(x)-g(x)$}} & \hphantom{\mbox{$= x^2+x^3+x^4+x^5+b$}} This is the rst (empty) line in every equation where now all other lines are aligned to this one. For example: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah f (x) = a g(x) = x 4x
2
(65.1) (65.2)
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah f (x) g(x) = x2 + x3 + x (65.3)
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah g(x) = x2 + x3 + x4 + x5 + b (65.4)
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah
The phantom line is empty but leaves the vertical space for a line. This could be corrected with decreasing the \abovedisplayshortskip length and done all inside a group.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12
\ newcommand {\ x }{ blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah } \ bgroup \ addtolength \ abo vedis playsh ortsk ip { -0.5 cm } % decrease the skip \ addtolength \ abovedisplayskip { -0.5 cm } \x\x\x \ begin { align } \ hphantom {\ mbox {$ f ( x ) -g ( x ) $}} & \ hphantom {\ mbox {$= x ^2+ x ^3+ x ^4+ x ^5+ b $}}\ nonumber \\ f ( x ) &= a \\ g ( x ) &= x ^2 -4 x \ end { align } % \x\x\x
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65 HORIZONTAL ALIGNMENT
13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24
\ begin { align } \ hphantom {\ mbox {$ f ( x ) -g ( x ) $}} & \ hphantom {\ mbox {$= x ^2+ x ^3+ x ^4+ x ^5+ b $}}\ nonumber \\ f ( x ) -g ( x ) &= x ^2+ x ^3+ x \ end { align } \x\x\x % \ begin { align } \ hphantom {\ mbox {$ f ( x ) -g ( x ) $}} & \ hphantom {\ mbox {$= x ^2+ x ^3+ x ^4+ x ^5+ b $}}\ nonumber \\ g ( x ) &= x ^2+ x ^3+ x ^4+ x ^5+ b \ end { align } \x\x\x \ egroup
Another case of aligning equations inside an itemize environment is the following one. With the \makebox macro one can have the same size on the left side of the equal sign to get a vertical alignment. rst function P1 =
a
\ newsavebox \ lW \ sbox \ lW {$ P _{3}+ P _{2} - P _{1}$} \ begin { itemize } \ item first function \\ $\ displaystyle \ makebox [\ wd \ lW ][ r ]{$ P _1$}=\ sum _ a \ in A $ \ item but another one \\ $\ makebox [\ wd \ lW ][ r ]{$\ sin \ left ( P _1\ right ) $}= blabla $ \ item or perhaps \\ $ P _{3}+ P _{2} - P _{1}= blablub $ \ end { itemize }
65.2
This one comes from Hartmut Henkel and oers a special form of placing additional text between the equation and the equation number. This makes only sense when you load the documentclass with the option fleqn. The example places the additional text at 0.5\textwidth, changing this value is no problem.
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65 HORIZONTAL ALIGNMENT
text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text
a0 e Nsi m Z Bohrscher Radius (= 0,53 ) Elementarladung Anzahl der Siliziumatome (65.5) pro Einheitsvolumen Atomgewicht Kernladungszahl
E 4 0 a0 Zi + ZSi Zi ZSi e2 1 +
mi mSi
2 3
2 3
1 2
a2 + b2 = c2
abc
(65.6)
z=9
(65.7)
text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text
This solution works only with AMSmath, without you have to redene A the L TEX macro, which creates the equation number.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
\ newsavebox {\ myendhook } % for the tabulars \ def \ tagform@ #1{{(\ maketag@@@ {\ ignorespaces #1\ unskip \ @@italiccorr ) } \ makebox [0 pt ][ r ]{ % after the equation number \ makebox [0.4\ textwidth ][ l ]{\ usebox {\ myendhook }} % }% \ global \ sbox {\ myendhook }{} % clear box content }} [ ... ] \ sbox {\ myendhook }{ % \ begin { footnotesize } % \ begin { tabular }{ @ {} ll } $ a _0$ & Bohrscher Radius ($\ mathrm {= 0{ ,}53\ ,\ mbox {\ AA }}$) \\ $ e $ & Elementarladung \\ $ N _{ si }$ & Anzahl der Siliziumatome \\ & pro Einheitsvolumen \\ $ m $ & Atomgewicht \\ $ Z $ & Kernladungszahl \ end { tabular } \ end { footnotesize }} % \ begin { equation } \ varepsilon = \ frac { E \ cdot 4 \ cdot \ pi \ cdot \ varepsilon _{0} \ cdot a _0 \ cdot \ left ( Z _ i ^{\ frac {2}{3}} + Z _{ Si }^{\ frac {2}{3}} \ right ) ^{ -\ frac {1}{2}}} { Z _ i \ cdot Z _{ Si } \ cdot e 2 \ cdot \ left ( 1
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66 NODE CONNECTIONS
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32
+ \ frac { m _ i }{ m _{ Si }} \ right ) }\ ,; \ end { equation } % \ sbox {\ myendhook }{ abc } % \ begin { equation } a 2+ b 2= c 2 \ end { equation } % \ begin { equation } z = 9 \ end { equation }
65.3
By default the vertical dots of \vdots are aligned to the left of the = symbol and not centered. a1 = b1 a2 = b2 . a . b . an = bn
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
c1 = d1 c2 = d2 . . . cn = dn
(65.8) (65.9)
(65.10)
\ usepackage { amsmath } ... \ newsavebox {\ eqbox } \ sbox {\ eqbox }{$\ null =\ null $} \ newcommand {\ Vdots }{\ makebox [\ wd \ eqbox ]{\ vdots }} \ begin { align } a _1 & = b _1 & c _1 & = d _1 \\ a _2 & = b _2 & c _2 & = d _2 \\ a & \ Vdots b & & \ Vdots \ nonumber \\ a_n & = b_n & c_n & = d_n \ end { align }
66
Node connections
This is a typical application for PSTricks and it needs the package pst-node and doesnt work with pdflatex. Use vlatex, ps4pdf or ps2pdf.
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66 NODE CONNECTIONS
Die Bindungsenergie im Trpfchenmodell setzt sich aus folgenden Teilen zuo sammen: dem Oberchenanteil a dem Volumenanteil,
2
(1)
\ psset { nodesep =3 pt } \ definecolor { lila }{ rgb }{0.6 ,0.2 ,0.5} \ definecolor { darkyellow }{ rgb }{1 ,0.9 ,0} Die Bindungsenergie im Tr \" opfchenmodell setzt sich aus folgenden Teilen zusammen : \ begin { itemize } \ item dem \ rnode { b }{ Oberfl \" achenanteil } \ item dem \ rnode { a }{ Volumenanteil } ,\\[1 cm ] \ def \ xstrut {\ vphantom {\ frac {( A ) ^1}{( B ) ^1}}} \ begin { equation } E = \ rnode [ t ]{ ae }{\ psframebox *[ fillcolor = darkyellow , linestyle = none ]{\ xstrut a _ vA }} + \ rnode [ t ]{ be }{\ psframebox *[ fillcolor = lightgray , linestyle = none ]{\ xstrut -a _ fA ^{2/3}}} + \ rnode [ t ]{ ce }{\ psframebox *[ fillcolor = green , linestyle = none ]{\ xstrut -a _ c \ frac { Z (Z -1) }{ A ^{1/3}}}} + \ rnode [ t ]{ de }{\ psframebox *[ fillcolor = cyan , linestyle = none ]{\ xstrut -a _ s \ frac {( A -2 Z ) ^2}{ A }}} + \ rnode [ t ]{ ee }{\ psframebox *[ fillcolor = yellow , linestyle = none ]{\ xstrut E _ p }} \ end { equation }\\[0.25 cm ] \ item dem \ rnode { c }{ Coulomb - Anteil } \ item der \ rnode { d }{ Symmetrieenergie } \ item sowie einem \ rnode { e }{ Paarbildungsbeitrag }. \ end { itemize } \ nccurve [ angleA = -90 , angleB =90]{ - >}{ a }{ ae } \ nccurve [ angleB =45]{ - >}{ b }{ be } \ nccurve [ angleB = -90]{ - >}{ c }{ ce } \ nccurve [ angleB = -90]{ - >}{ d }{ de } \ nccurve [ angleB = -90]{ - >}{ e }{ ee }
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67 SPECIAL PLACEMENT
67
67.1
Sometimes it may be useful to have numbered formulas side by side like the following ones: Eds = 0 a= c d (67.1.a) (67.2.a) (67.3.a) 2x dx = x2 + C (67.3.b) B =0 b=1 (67.1.b) (67.2.b)
c=1
(67.4)
4 5 6 7
\ begin { mtabular }{*{2}{ m {0.35\ linewidth } m {0.15\ linewidth }}} \ begin { align *} \ oint E ds =0 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt % & \ begin { align *} \ nabla \ cdot B =0 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt [\ label { blah }]\\ \ begin { align *} a =\ frac { c }{ d } \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt % & \ begin { align *} b = 1 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt \\ \ begin { align *} c =1 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt [\ label { blub }] & \ begin { align *} \ int 2 x \ ,\ mathrm { d } x = x ^2+ C \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt \ end { mtabular }
The new environment mtabular has two arguments, one optional and one which is the same as the one from the tabular environment. With the option long it is possible to have all the formulas in a longtable environment, which allows a pagebreak. The new macro \eqnCnt controls the counting of these equations as subequations for one tabular line. This macro can have an optional argument for a label. At least it counts the equations. If the equation number is not centered to the foregoing equation, then it needs some more horizontal space in the tabular column. \eqnCnt[<optional label>] The vertical space is controlled by the length mtabskip, which is by default -1.25cm and can be modied in the usual way. To dene all these macros write into the preamble:
1 2
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67 SPECIAL PLACEMENT
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
\ newlength \ mtabskip \ mtabskip = -1.25 cm \ newcommand \ eqnCnt [1][]{ % \ refstepcounter { subequation } % \ begin { align }#1\ end { align } % \ addtocounter { equation }{ -1}} \ def \ mtabLong { long } \ makeatletter \ newenvironment { mtabular }[2][\ empty ]{ % \ def \ @xarraycr { % \ stepcounter { equation } % \ setcounter { subequation }{0} % \ @ifnextchar [\ @argarraycr {\ @argarraycr [\ mtabskip ]}} \ let \ theoldequation \ theequation % \ renewcommand \ theequation {\ theoldequation .\ alph { subequation }} \ edef \ mtabOption {#1} \ setcounter { subequation }{0} % \ tabcolsep =0 pt \ ifx \ mtabOption \ mtabLong \ longtable {#2}\ else \ tabular {#2}\ fi % }{ % \ ifx \ mtabOption \ mtabLong \ endlongtable \ else \ endtabular \ fi % \ let \ theequation \ theoldequation % \ stepcounter { equation }} \ makeatother
As seen in equation 67.3.a and equation 67.1.b, everything of the table contents is nonsense . . . And the following tabular is dened as a longtable to enable pagebreaks. Eds = 0 a= c d (67.5.a) (67.6.a) (67.7.a) (67.8.a) (67.9.a) (67.10.a) (67.11.a) (67.12.a) 2x dx = x2 + C B =0 b=1 (67.10.b) (67.11.b) (67.12.b) 2x dx = x2 + C B =0 b=1 (67.7.b) (67.8.b) (67.9.b) B =0 b=1 (67.5.b) (67.6.b)
c=1 Eds = 0 a= c d
c=1 Eds = 0 a= c d
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67 SPECIAL PLACEMENT
c=1 Eds = 0 a= c d (67.14.a) (67.15.a) (67.16.a) 2x dx = x2 + C (67.16.b) B =0 b=1 (67.14.b) (67.15.b) (67.13.a) 2x dx = x2 + C (67.13.b)
c=1
As seen in equation 67.13.a and equation 67.11.b, everything is nonsense ... And again a default display equation: 1 F (x) = dx x 0
1
(67.17)
2 3 4 5 6 7
\ begin { mtabular }[ long ]{*{2}{ m {0.375\ linewidth } m {0.125\ linewidth }}} \ begin { align *} \ oint E ds =0 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt % & \ begin { align *} \ nabla \ cdot B =0 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt \\ \ begin { align *} a =\ frac { c }{ d } \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt % & \ begin { align *} b = 1 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt \\ \ begin { align *} c =1 \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt & \ begin { align *} \ int 2 x \ ,\ mathrm { d } x = x ^2+ C \ end { align *} & \ eqnCnt \\ [ ... ]
8 9
67.2
Without any modication it is not possible to get a numbered equation at the same height as the symbol of the itemize environment. This depends on the \abovedisplayskip. The formula has to be raised up for exactly this length.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
\ def \ itemMath #1{ % \ raisebox { -\ ab ovedis playsh ortsk ip }{ % \ parbox {0.75\ linewidth }{ % \ begin { equation }#1\ end { equation }}}} % \ begin { itemize } \ item \ itemMath { f = l } \ item \ itemMath { g ( x ) = \ int f ( x ) \ ,\ mathrm { d } x } \ end { itemize }
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68 ROOTS
f =l g(x) = f (x) dx
(67.18) (67.19)
68
Roots
There exists no special symbol for roots which are longer than one line. In such cases the root should be split into two or more one, like a b c = a a b c if possible. If nothing helps one can use \overline for following lines of the root. The following example uses the multline environment to get only one equation number:
d(P, Q)|Stat.,Dependent = [a11 (x1 y1 )2 + a22 (x2 y2 )2 + . . . + app (xp yp )2 ] + [2a12 (x1 y1 )(x2 y2 ) + 2a13 (x1 y1 )(x3 y3 )+ . . . + 2ap1,p (xp1 yp1 )(xp yp )] (68.1)
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9
10
\ begin { multline } d (P , Q ) |_{ Stat . , Dependent }=\\ \ sqrt {\ left [ a _{11}( x _{1} - y _{1}) ^{2}+ a _{22}( x _{2} - y _{2}) ^{2}+ \ ldots + a _{ pp }( x _{ p } - y _{ p }) ^{2}\ right ]+} \\ \ overline {\ rule {0 pt }{2.5 ex } \ left [2 a _{12}( x _{1} - y _{1}) ( x _{2} - y _{2}) +2 a _{13} ( x _{1} - y _{1}) ( x _{3} - y _{3}) + \ right .}\\ \ overline {\ rule {0 pt }{2.5 ex } \ left .\ ldots +2 a _{ p -1 , p }( x _{ p -1} - y _{ p -1}) ( x _{ p } - y _{ p }) \ right ]} \ end { multline }
Alternative:
d(P, Q)|Stat.,Dependent = a11 (x1 y1 )2 + a22 (x2 y2 )2 + . . . + app (xp yp )2 + [2a12 (x1 y1 )(x2 y2 ) + 2a13 (x1 y1 )(x3 y3 )+ . . . + 2ap1,p (xp1 yp1 )(xp yp )]
1/2
(68.2)
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68 ROOTS
1 2 3
4 5 6 7
\ begin { multline } d (P , Q ) |_{ Stat . , Dependent }=\\ \ left \{\ left [ a _{11}( x _{1} - y _{1}) ^{2}+ a _{22}( x _{2} - y _{2}) ^{2}+ \ ldots + a _{ pp }( x _{ p } - y _{ p }) ^{2}\ right ]+\ right . \\ \ left [2 a _{12}( x _{1} - y _{1}) ( x _{2} - y _{2}) +2 a _{13} ( x _{1} - y _{1}) ( x _{3} - y _{3}) + \ right .\\ \ left .\ left .\ ldots +2 a _{ p -1 , p }( x _{ p -1} - y _{ p -1}) ( x _{ p } - y _{ p }) \ right ]\ right \}^{1/2} \ end { multline }
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Part VIII
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141
List of Figures
Figure Page 1 multline Alignment demo (the fourth row is shifted to the right with \shoveright) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 2 Demonstration of \multlinegap (default is 0pt) . . . . . . . 60
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List of Tables
Table 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Page Meaning of \mathsurround . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Dierence between the default \bigg and the \biggm command 27 Use of the dierent parentheses for the big commands . . . 28 Old font style commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Fonts in math mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 The meaning of the math spaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Spaces in math mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Math styles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Dots in math mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Accents in math mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Vectors with package esvec . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 The predened operators of fontmath.ltx . . . . . . . . . . . 43 The predened operators of latex.ltx . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 The greek letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Comparison between the dierent align environments . . . . . 51 Matrix environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 binom commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 The modulo commands and their meaning . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Dierent mathcommands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 The predened operators of amsopn.sty . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 Predened math symbols from fontmath.ltx . . . . . . . . . 114 New symbols in combination with the equal sign . . . . . . . 116
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References
[1] Paul W. Abrahams, Karl Berry, and Kathryn Hargreaves. TEX for the Impatient. http://tug.org/ftp/tex/impatient/book.pdf, 2003. [2] Claudio Beccari. Typesetting mathematics for science and technology according to iso 31/xi. TUGboat Journal, 18(1):3947, 1997. [3] Thierry Bouche. Diversity in math fonts. TUGboat Journal, 19(2):121135, 1998. [4] David Cobac. Atelier documents mathmatiques. http://dcobac.free.fr/latex/Presentation4.pdf, 2004.
A [5] David Cobac. Ecrire des mathmatiques avec L TEX. http://dcobac.free.fr/latex/prepDocMaths.pdf, 2004.
[6] Michael Downes. Technical Notes on the amsmath package. American Mathematical Society, ftp://ftp.ams.org/pub/tex/doc/amsmath/technote.pdf, 1999.
A [7] Michael Downes. Short Math Guide for L TEX. American Mathematical Society, http://www.ams.org/tex/short-math-guide.html, 2002.
[8] Victor Eijkhout. TEX by Topic. http://www.eijkhout.net/tbt/, 1992. [9] J. Anthony Fitzgerald. Web Math Formulas Using TEX. http://www.unb.ca/web/Sample/math/, 1997.
A [10] Michel Goosens, Frank Mittelbach, and Alexander Samarin. The L TEX Companion. Addison Wesley, 13 edition, 1994. A [11] George Grtzer. Math into L TEX. Birkhuser Boston, third edition, 2000.
[12] Donald E. Knuth. The TEXbook. Addison Wesley Professional, 21 edition, 1986. [13] Donald E. Knuth, Tracy Larrabee, and Paul M. Roberts. Mathematical Writing. Stanford University, Computer Science Department, http: //sunburn.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/mathwriting.tex.gz, 1987.
A [14] R. Kuhn, R. Scott, and L. Andreev. An Introduction to using L TEX in the Harvard Mathematics Department. Harvard University, Department of Mathematics, http: //abel.math.harvard.edu/computing/latex/manual/texman.html.
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[15] Johannes Kster. Designing Math Fonts. http://www.typoma.com/publ/20040430-bachotex.pdf, apr 2004. Vortrag auf der polnischen TeX-Konferenz BachoTeX. [16] Johannes Kster. Fonts for Mathematics. http://www.typoma.com/publ/20041002-atypi.pdf, oct 2004. Vortrag auf der ATypI-Konferenz in Prag. [17] Richard Lawrence. Math=Typography? TUGboat Journal, 24(2):165168, 2003. [18] NIST. Typefaces for Symbols in Scientic Manuscripts. http://physics.nist.gov/Document/typefaces.pdf, 2004. [19] Luca Padovani. Mathml formatting with tex rules and tex fonts. TUGboat Journal, 24(1):5361, 2003. [20] Sebastian Rahtz and Leonor Barroca. A style option for rotated objects A in L TEX. TUGboat Journal, 13(2):156180, July 1992. [21] Steve Seiden. Math cheat sheet. TUG, http://www.tug.org/texshowcase/#math, 2000. [22] Carole Siegfried and Herbert Vo. Mathematik im Inline-modus. Die TEXnische Komdie, 3/04:2532, November 2004. [23] Paul Taylor. Commutative Diagrams in TEX. Department of Computer Science, Queen Mary and Westeld College, http://www.dcs.qmw.ac.uk/~pt/diagrams/, 2000. [24] Herbert Vo. Farbige Mathematik. Die TEXnische Komdie, 2/04:8187, March 2004.
A [25] Herbert Vo. L TEX in Naturwissenschaften & Mathematik. Franzis Verlag, Mnchen, rst edition, 2006.
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Index
Symbols $, 10, 12, 13 \!, 108 \(, 10 \), 10 \ 33 \:, 33 \;, 33 \[, 14, 36 \], 14, 36 A \above, 91 \abovedisplayshortskip, 36 \abovedisplayshortskip, 83 \abovedisplayskip, 36 \abovedisplayskip, 36, 83, 138 \abovewithdelims, 92 \acute, 40 \acute, 40 aligned, 57 alignedat, 57 Alignment left, 54 \allowdisplaybreaks, 46 \ArcCos, 102 \ArcCot, 102 \ArcCsc, 102 \ArcSec, 102 \ArcSin, 102 \ArcTan, 102 array, 56 array, 22, 37, 98100 \arraycolsep, 20, 22 \arraystretch, 37 Arrows, 78 \atop, 73 \atop, 24, 46, 92 \atopwithdelims, 92 B \bar, 40 \bar, 40 \belowdisplayshortskip, 36 \belowdisplayshortskip, 83 \belowdisplayskip, 36 \belowdisplayskip, 36, 83 \bf, 31 \Big, 26 \big, 26 Bigg, 28 \Bigg, 26 \bigg, 26 \Biggm, 27 \biggm, 27 \Bigl, 27 \bigl, 27 \Bigm, 27 \bigm, 27 \bigr, 27 Binom, 46 \Binomial, 103 \binoppenalty, 95 \Bmatrix, 65 \bmatrix, 65 Bold greek letters, 80 \boldmath, 47 \boldmath, 48 \boldsymbol, 80 \bordermatrix, 22 \bordermatrix, 22 \boxed, 79 boxed inline math, 12 Braces, 101 Problems, 74 \Braket, 101 \breve, 40 \breve, 40 C \cal, 31 \cancel, 102 Cases
146
numbered lines, 120 \cases, 21, 64 \catcode, 87 \cdot, 118 \cdots, 39 \cdots, 118 centertags, 50 \cfrac, 67 \chapter, 11, 12 \check, 40 \check, 40 \choose, 46 \clap, 74 cmex10, 30 cmr, 111 colon, 118 Color, 47 color, 125 \colorbox, 12 \columncolor, 125 comma, 35, 118 Computer modern, 111 \cong, 116 \Cos, 102 \Cot, 102 \Csc, 102 ctagsplit, 72 D \DblFactorial, 103 \ddddot, 66 \dddot, 40, 66 \dddot, 40 \ddot, 40 \ddot, 40 \ddots, 39 decimal point, 35 \DeclareMathDelimiter, 87 \delcode, 87 Delimiter, 14, 29 \delimiter, 87 \delimiterfactor, 30, 83 \delimitershortfall, 30, 84 description, 48
Mathmode.tex
\dfrac, 68 \dfrac, 11 dierential equation, 118 Display math mode, 10 \displaybreak, 46 displayindent, 85 \displayindent, 84 \displaylimits, 92 displaymath, 20 \displaystyle, 68 \displaystyle, 11, 38, 87, 89 \displaywidowpenalty, 95 \displaywidth, 85 dot, 35, 118 \dot, 40 \dot, 40 \doteq, 116 \dotsb, 39 \dotsc, 39 \dotsi, 39 \dotsm, 39 \dotso, 39 double stroke, 31 dsfont, 31 E ellipses, 118 empheq, 105 \ensuremath, 46 Environment array, 22, 37, 98100 description, 48 displaymath, 20 empheq, 105 eqnarray, 15, 16, 20, 36, 51, 105 equation, 20, 36 gathered, 108 graphicx, 109 lgathered, 108 matrix, 24 tabular, 20 \eqdef, 46 eqnarray, 15, 16, 20, 36, 51, 105 \eqno, 93 147
Equation number, 72 numbering, 70 equation, 20, 36 Equation number, 72 equation number, 132 \equiv, 116 \everydisplay, 49 \everydisplay, 93 \everymath, 49 \everymath, 93 Exponent, 43 Extensible arrows, 78 F \Factorial, 103 \fam, 88 \fbox, 12, 19, 105 \fboxrule, 12 \fboxsep, 12 eqn, 50 fleqn, 36 Font cmex10, 30 lm, 111 fontmath.ltx, 29 Fontsize, 39 \frac, 46, 109 Fraction, 11, 67, 109 \frac, 67 Framed inline math, 12 G \GammaFunc, 103 gather, 57 gathered, 57 gathered, 108 \genfrac, 67 \GenIncGamma, 103 \GenRegIncGamma, 103 \GenRegIncGammaInv, 103 graphicx, 109 \grave, 40 \grave, 40
Greek, 44 greek, 45 bold, 45 upright, 45 H Harpoon, 115 \hat, 40 \hat, 40 \hcancel, 101 \hdotsfor, 66 Helvetica, 111 \hphantom, 33, 129 \hphantom, 34 \hspace, 33 \Huge, 39 \huge, 107 \HurwitzZeta, 103 \Hypergeometric, 103 I \imath, 40 \IncGamma, 103 Indentation, 54, 84 Indice, 43 \int, 11, 43, 107 Integral, 118 Integral symbols, 114 \intertext, 77 intlimits, 50 \intop, 43 \it, 31 Italic, 30, 75 \item, 48 itemize, 138 J \jmath, 40 \jot, 36, 37 K \kern, 33 L Label, 18 148
Mathmode.tex
\label, 72 \labelwidth, 84 \Large, 38 large, 38 Latin modern, 111 \ldelim, 100 \ldots, 39 \ldots, 118 \left, 26, 93, 100 Left aligned, 55 Length \abovedisplayskip, 36, 138 \arraycolsep, 20, 22 \belowdisplayskip, 36 \delimitershortfall, 30 \fboxrule, 12 \fboxsep, 12 \jot, 36, 37 \mathsurround, 13 \topsep, 36 leqno, 50 \leqno, 93 lgathered, 108 \lim, 11 Limits, 24, 44, 73, 75 limits, 11 \limits, 11, 43, 94 lm, 111 \LogGamma, 103 longtable, 137 M Macro \ArcCos, 102 \ArcCot, 102 \ArcCsc, 102 \ArcSec, 102 \ArcSin, 102 \ArcTan, 102 \Biggm, 27 \Bigl, 27 \Bigm, 27 \Binomial, 103 \Braket, 101
Mathmode.tex
\Cos, 102 \Cot, 102 \Csc, 102 \DblFactorial, 103 \DeclareMathDelimiter, 87 \Factorial, 103 \GammaFunc, 103 \GenIncGamma, 103 \GenRegIncGammaInv, 103 \GenRegIncGamma, 103 \Huge, 39 \HurwitzZeta, 103 \Hypergeometric, 103 \IncGamma, 103 \Large, 38 \LogGamma, 103 \MathieuCharacteristicA, 103 \MathieuCharacteristicB, 103 \MathieuCharacteristicExponent, 103 \MathieuCharisticA, 103 \MathieuCharisticB, 103 \MathieuCharisticExp, 103 \MathieuC, 103 \MathieuS, 103 \MeijerG, 103 \Multinomial, 103 \Pochhammer, 103 \RegHypergeometric, 103 \RegIncGammaInv, 103 \RegIncGamma, 103 \RiemannSiegelTheta, 103 \RiemannSiegelZ, 103 \RiemannZeta, 103 \Sec, 102 \Set, 101 \Sin, 102 \StieltjesGamma, 103 \Tan, 102 \Zeta, 103 \[, 14, 36 \], 14, 36 \acute, 40 \allowdisplaybreaks, 46 149
\arraystretch, 37 \atop, 24, 46 \bar, 40 \biggm, 27 \bigl, 27 \bigm, 27 \bigr, 27 \boldmath, 48 \bordermatrix, 22 \breve, 40 \cancel, 102 \catcode, 87 \cdots, 118 \cdot, 118 \chapter, 11, 12 \check, 40 \choose, 46 \colorbox, 12 \cong, 116 \dddot, 40 \ddot, 40 \delimiterfactor, 30 \dfrac, 11 \displaybreak, 46 \displaystyle, 11, 38, 89 \doteq, 116 \dot, 40 \ensuremath, 46 \eqdef, 46 \equiv, 116 \everydisplay, 93 \fbox, 12, 19, 105 \frac, 46, 109 \grave, 40 \hat, 40 \hcancel, 101 \hphantom, 34 \huge, 107 \imath, 40 \intop, 43 \int, 11, 43, 107 \item, 48 \jmath, 40 \labelwidth, 84
\ldelim, 100 \ldots, 118 \left, 26, 100 \limits, 11, 43, 94 \lim, 11 \makebox, 25, 132 \mathbf, 48, 100 \mathchar, 89 \mathcode, 87 \mathlarger, 109 \mathord, 35 \mathpunct, 35 \mathring, 40 \mathrlap, 116 \mathversion, 48 \mbox, 31 \medmuskip, 33, 34 \nicefrac, 109 \nolimits, 43 \nonumber, 1416 \ointop, 43 \oint, 43 \overbrace, 40, 42 \overbracket, 40 \overleftarrow, 40 \overleftrightarrow, 40 \overline, 40 \overrightarrow, 40 \overset, 25 \parbox, 31 \part, 11 \pmb, 44 \prod, 11, 24 \rdelim, 100 \right, 26, 100 \scalebox, 109 \scriptscriptstyle, 38, 89 \scriptstyle, 38, 89 \section, 11, 12, 48 \show, 34 \smash, 26 \sqrt, 25 \stackrel, 46 \sum, 11, 24, 107 150
Mathmode.tex
\texorpdfstring, 12 \textstyle, 31, 38, 89 \thickmuskip, 33 \thinmuskip, 32, 34 \tilde, 40 \underbar, 40 \underbrace, 40, 41 \underbracket, 40 \underleftarrow, 40 \underleftrightarrow, 40 \underline, 40 \underrightarrow, 40 \underset, 25 \vec, 40 \vert, 29 \vphantom, 26, 100 \vskip, 37 \widehat, 40 \widetilde, 40 \xymatrix, 109 \makebox, 25, 132 \mapstofill, 78 Math operator, 11 Math unit, 70 math unit, 32 \mathaccent, 88 \mathbb, 31 \mathbf, 31 \mathbf, 48, 100 \mathbin, 88 \mathcal, 31 \mathchar, 88, 89 \mathchardef, 89 \mathchoice, 89 \mathclap, 74, 129 \mathclose, 89 \mathcode, 87, 89 \mathds, 31 \mathfrak, 31 Mathieu Characteristics, 103 Functions, 103 \MathieuC, 103 \MathieuCharacteristicA, 103
Mathmode.tex
\MathieuCharacteristicB, 103 \MathieuCharacteristicExponent, 103 \MathieuCharisticA, 103 \MathieuCharisticB, 103 \MathieuCharisticExp, 103 \MathieuS, 103 \mathindent, 50 \mathinner, 94 \mathit, 31 \mathlarger, 109 \mathop, 90 \mathopen, 90 mathopen symbol, 27 \mathord, 35, 90 \mathpunct, 35, 90 \mathrel, 90 \mathring, 40 \mathring, 40 \mathrlap, 116 \mathrm, 31, 76 \mathsf, 31 \mathsurround, 13, 85 \mathtt, 31 \mathversion, 47 \mathversion, 48 \matrix, 65 matrix, 24 \mbox, 76 \mbox, 31 \medmuskip, 33, 34, 85 \medspace, 33 \MeijerG, 103 \mkern, 85 \mskip, 85 \Multinomial, 103 Multiple exponents, 42 multline, 62 \multlinegap, 60 \muskip, 86 \muskipdef, 86 N namelimits, 50 \negmedspace, 33 151
\negthickspace, 33 \negthinspace, 33 \nicefrac, 109 nointlimits, 50 \nolimits, 43, 94 nonamelimits, 50 \nonscript, 86 \nonumber, 1416 nosumlimits, 50 \nulldelimiterspace, 86 O \oint, 43 \ointop, 43 Operator, 43 names, 75 size, 109 \operatornamewithlimits, 75 \over, 94 \overbrace, 40, 127 \overbrace, 40, 42 \overbracket, 40 \overleftarrow, 40 \overleftarrow, 40 \overleftrightarrow, 40 \overleftrightarrow, 40 \overline, 40 \overline, 40, 94, 139 \overrightarrow, 40, 42 \overrightarrow, 40 \overset, 80 \overset, 25 \overwithdelims, 94 P Package accent, 98 amscd, 98 amsmath, 91 amsopn, 98 amssymb, 34, 39 bigdelim, 99 bm, 45, 48, 100 braket, 29, 100
calc, 19 color, 101 cool, 102 delarray, 104 empheq, 106 esint, 130 esvect, 42 eucal, 107 exscale, 39, 107, 109 fixltx2e, 11 hvmath, 111 hyperref, 12 icomma, 35 leqno, 17 mathpazo, 112 mathtools, 108 multirow, 98 nicefrac, 109 numprint, 35 pamath, 111, 112 pstricks, 98 relsize, 109 remreset, 17 setspace, 37 units, 109 upgreek, 45 wasysym, 106 xypic, 98, 109 xy, 109 Pagebreak, 46 Palatino, 111, 112 \parbox, 65 \parbox, 31 \part, 11 \phantom, 120 \pmatrix, 65 \pmb, 80 \pmb, 44 \Pochhammer, 103 Polylogarithm, 103 \postdisplaypenalty, 96 \predisplaypenalty, 96 \predisplaystyle, 86 \prod, 11, 24 152
Mathmode.tex
punctuation, 118 Q \qquad, 33 \quad, 33 R \radical, 94 \rdelim, 100 Reference, 18 \reectbox, 39 \RegHypergeometric, 103 \RegIncGamma, 103 \RegIncGammaInv, 103 \relpenalty, 96 reqno, 50 \RiemannSiegelTheta, 103 \RiemannSiegelZ, 103 \RiemannZeta, 103 \right, 26, 95, 100 righttag, 72 \rm, 31 Root, 25, 69, 139 \rowcolor, 125 S \scalebox, 109 \scriptfont, 90 \scriptscriptfont, 90 \scriptscriptstyle, 38, 89, 91 \scriptspace, 86 scriptstyle, 11 \scriptstyle, 11, 68 \scriptstyle, 38, 89, 91 \Sec, 102 \section, 11, 12, 48 \Set, 101 Set symbol, 31 \shoveright, 60 \show, 34 \sideset, 75 \Sin, 102 Size Operator, 109 \skew, 91
Mathmode.tex
\skewchar, 91 \smallmatrix, 65, 66 \smash, 26 Spacing vertical, 37 Split equation, 56 \sqrt, 25 Stacked limits, 74 \stackrel, 46 \StieltjesGamma, 103 Style, 38 Subequations, 71 Subscript, 11 subscript, 24 \substack, 73, 74, 129 \sum, 75 \sum, 11, 24, 107 sumlimits, 50 Superscript, 11 T tabular, 20 \tag, 18 \Tan, 102 tbtags, 50 \texorpdfstring, 12 Text, 30 \parbox, 31 \textfont, 91 \textstyle, 31, 38, 89, 91 \tfrac, 68 \thickmuskip, 33, 86 \thickspace, 33 \thinmuskip, 32, 34, 86 \thinspace, 33 \tilde, 40 \tilde, 40 \topsep, 36 \tt, 31 U \unboldmath, 47 \underbar, 40 \underbar, 40 153
\underbrace, 40, 127, 129 \underbrace, 40, 41 \underbracket, 40 \underleftarrow, 40 \underleftarrow, 40 \underleftrightarrow, 40 \underleftrightarrow, 40 \underline, 40, 49 \underline, 40, 95 \underrightarrow, 40 \underrightarrow, 40 \underset, 80, 130 \underset, 25 Upright letters, 43 upright mode, 24 \uproot, 69 V \vcenter, 95 \vdots, 39, 134 \vec, 40 \vec, 40 Vector, 42, 123 \vert, 29 Vertical spacing, 37 \Vmatrix, 65 \vmatrix, 65 \vphantom, 129 \vphantom, 26, 100 \vskip, 37 W \widehat, 40 \widehat, 40 \widetilde, 40 \widetilde, 40 X \xleftharpoondown, 115 \xleftharpoonup, 115 \xleftrightharpoons, 115 \xrightharpoondown, 115 \xrightharpoonup, 115 \xrightleftharpoons, 115 \xymatrix, 109
Mathmode.tex
Z Zeta, 103 Functions, 103 Hurwitz, 103 Riemann, 103 \Zeta, 103
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Appendix A
1
Filelist
11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37
38 39 40
* File List * article . cls size 11. clo fixltx 2 e . sty fontenc . sty t 1 enc . def inputenc . sty latin 1. def ifpdf . sty ifvtex . sty modes ( HO ) comment . sty graphicx . sty keyval . sty graphics . sty trig . sty graphics . cfg TeXLive pdftex . def varwidth . sty array . sty delarray . sty tabularx . sty amsmath . sty amstext . sty amsgen . sty amsbsy . sty amsopn . sty amssymb . sty amsfonts . sty bm . sty upgreek . sty cancel . sty amscd . sty accents . sty dsfont . sty multirow . sty bigdelim . sty framed . sty breaks longtable . sty varioref . sty xcolor . sty
2005/09/16 v 1.4 f Standard LaTeX document class 2005/09/16 v 1.4 f Standard LaTeX file ( size option ) 2006/03/24 v 1.1 n fixes to LaTeX 2005/09/27 2006/05/05 2006/05/05 2006/02/20 2007/01/10 v 1.99 g Standard LaTeX file v 1.1 b Input encoding file v 1.1 b Input encoding file v 1.4 Provides the ifpdf switch ( HO ) v 1.2 Switches for detecting VTeX and its
1999/02/16 1999/03/16 2006/02/20 1999/03/16 2007/01/18 2007/01/08 2003/03/10 2005/08/23 1994/03/14 1999/01/07 2000/07/18 2000/06/29 1999/11/30 1999/11/29 1999/12/14 2002/01/22 2001/10/25 2004/02/26 2003/02/12 2000/03/12 1999/11/29 2006/05/12 1995/08/01
v 1.0 f Enhanced LaTeX Graphics ( DPC , SPQR ) v 1.13 key = value parser ( DPC ) v 1.0 o Standard LaTeX Graphics ( DPC , SPQR ) v 1.09 sin cos tan ( DPC ) v 1.5 graphics configuration of teTeX / v 0.04 d Graphics / color for pdfTeX ver 0.9 a ; Variable - width minipages v 2.4 b Tabular extension package ( FMi ) v 1.01 array delimiter package ( DPC ) v 2.07 tabularx package ( DPC ) v 2.13 AMS math features v 2.01 v 2.0 v 1.2 d v 2.01 operator names v 2.2 d v 2.2 f v 1.1 c Bold Symbol Support ( DPC / FMi ) v 2.0 ( WaS ) v 2.1 Cancel math terms v 1.2 d v 1.3 Math Accent Tools v 0.1 Double stroke roman fonts
2003/07/21 v 0.8 a : framed or shaded text with page 2004/02/01 v 4.11 Multi - page Table package ( DPC ) 2006/05/13 v 1.4 p package for extended references ( FMi ) 2007/01/21 v 2.11 LaTeX color extensions ( UK )
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45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73
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color . cfg makeidx . sty url . sty setspace . sty package empheq . sty mhsetup . sty mathtools . sty calc . sty nicefrac . sty ifthen . sty exscale . sty relsize . sty xspace . sty eucal . sty footmisc . sty esint . sty esvect . sty remreset . sty cool . sty coollist . sty coolstr . sty forloop . sty bbm . sty xypic . sty xy . sty fancyhdr . sty showexpl . sty listings . sty lstpatch . sty lstmisc . sty listings . cfg lstmisc . sty showexpl . cfg ( hv ) lstlang 1. sty lstlang 2. sty lstlang 3. sty lstmisc . sty microtype . sty microtype . cfg hyperref . sty pd 1 enc . def ( HO ) hyperref . cfg kvoptions . sty options ( HO ) hpdftex . def hypcap . sty babel . sty english . ldf braket . sty supp - pdf . tex
2007/01/18 v 1.5 color configuration of teTeX / TeXLive 2000/03/29 v 1.0 m Standard LaTeX package 2005/06/27 ver 3.2 Verb mode for urls , etc . 2000/12/01 6.7 Contributed and Supported LaTeX 2 e 2004/10/10 2004/10/10 2004/10/10 2005/08/06 1998/08/04 2001/05/26 1997/06/16 2003/07/04 2006/05/08 2001/10/01 2005/03/17 v 2.11 a Emphasizing equations ( MH ) v 1.0 b programming setup ( MH ) v 1.01 a mathematical typesetting tools ( MH ) v 4.2 Infix arithmetic ( KKT , FJ ) v 0.9 b Nice fractions v 1.1 c Standard LaTeX ifthen package ( DPC ) v 2.1 g Standard LaTeX package exscale ver 3.1 v 1.12 Space after command names ( DPC , MH ) v 2.2 d Euler Script fonts v 5.3 d a miscellany of footnote facilities
v 1.35 COntent Oriented LaTeX v 1 COntent Oriented LaTeX Lists v 2.1 COntent Oriented LaTeX Strings v 3.0 For Loops for LaTeX V 1.2 provides fonts for set symbols - TH Xy - pic version 3.7
2007/02/03 2004/10/17 2004/10/17 2004/09/07 2004/09/05 2004/09/07 2005/06/30 2004/09/05 2004/09/05 2004/09/05 2004/09/07 2007/01/21 2007/01/14 2007/02/07 2007/02/07
v 0.3 h Typesetting example code ( RN ) 1.3 b ( Carsten Heinz ) 1.3 b ( Carsten Heinz ) 1.3 ( Carsten Heinz ) 1.3 listings configuration 1.3 ( Carsten Heinz ) v 0.02 Definitions for the showexpl package 1.3 listings language file 1.3 listings language file 1.3 listings language file 1.3 ( Carsten Heinz ) v 2.0 Micro - typography with pdfTeX ( RS ) v 2.0 microtype main configuration file ( RS ) v 6.75 r Hypertext links for LaTeX v 6.75 r Hyperref : PDFDocEncoding definition
2002/06/06 v 1.2 hyperref configuration of TeXLive 2006/08/22 v 2.4 Connects package keyval with LaTeX 2007/02/07 2006/02/20 2005/11/23 2005/03/30 v 6.75 r Hyperref driver for pdfTeX v 1.5 Adjusting anchors of captions ( HO ) v 3.8 h The Babel package v 3.3 o English support from the babel system
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mt - cmr . cfg Modern Roman nameref . sty refcount . sty Mathmode . out Mathmode . tex umsa . fd mt - msa . cfg ) ( RS ) umsb . fd mt - msb . cfg ) ( RS ) mt - eur . cfg Roman ( RS ) uesint . fd uesvect . fd t 1 cmtt . fd omscmr . fd t 1 cmss . fd Mathmode . bbl Mathmode . ind ***********
2005/11/07 v 1.9 microtype config . file : Computer ( RS ) 2006/12/27 v 2.28 Cross - referencing by name of section 2006/02/20 v 3.0 Data extraction from references ( HO )
2002/01/19 v 2.2 g AMS font definitions 2006/02/04 v 1.1 microtype config . file : AMS symbols ( a 2002/01/19 v 2.2 g AMS font definitions 2005/06/01 v 1.0 microtype config . file : AMS symbols ( b 2006/07/31 v 1.1 microtype config . file : AMS Euler
1999/05/25 v 2.5 h Standard LaTeX font definitions 1999/05/25 v 2.5 h Standard LaTeX font definitions 1999/05/25 v 2.5 h Standard LaTeX font definitions
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