|
- Underscores in words (text) - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
The LaTeX command is \symbol You can see that LaTeX default underscore does not use char 95 when encoding is OT1, because it occasionally fails depends on the font (i e , the encoding does not guarantee that the character at position 5F (hex) is an underscore, that character in the specific font cmtt10 "happens" to be an underscore)
- How do I use literally in LaTeX? - LaTeX Stack Exchange
@LéoLéopoldHertz준영 -- you must have a package loaded that changes the meaning (to latex) of \ , but since we don't know that that might be, can't guess at an answer since you're not the person who asked this question, please post a new one, with a compilable example that demonstrates the problem
- TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
- 如何从零开始,入门 LaTeX? - 知乎
首先, \\LaTeX 中章节分三阶,\\section{}、\\subsection{}、\\subsubsection{} ,在它们后面的花括号中填写题目,如果还加入*则可以消去前面对应的序数。 其次, \\LaTeX 中正文可以直接输入,段落区分是通过空行来实现的,有时候可以应用\\par或者\\\\来强制分段。如果
- How to write partial differential equation (Ex . . . - LaTeX Stack Exchange
See also cool: "The package (COntent Oriented LaTeX) gives LaTeX the power to retain mathematical meaning of its expressions in addition to the typsetting instructions; essentially separating style from the content of the math " –
- Latest advice on the euro symbol - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
If you have trouble copying the euro sign from a latex-generated pdf, e g copying "100 €" results in "100 e" or "100 =C" or "100 ⁄", check out this answer, it worked for me (the font in the LaTeX template I need to use didn't support the € character, which results in the Some font shapes were not available, defaults substituted warning
- Whats the quickest way to write 2nd 3rd etc in LaTeX?
To say "Superscripts aren't really necessary " Sort of misses the point given that we're already writing in LaTeX and so presumably we care enough about the formatting that the author of the OQ (or anyone else who arrived at this page later) probably already thought through that it would be easier to just write "2nd", "3rd" c and decided that they wanted to go through the trouble of having
- How to type special accented letters in LaTeX?
This is really out-of-date advice The default file encoding assumed by the LaTeX kernel is UTF-8, as is the default file encoding of most editors So the simple answer is just type your letters as you would in any other application, and make sure you're loading a font that contains them –
|
|
|