I know what my symbol looks like, but I don't know what the command is. How do I go about finding this out?
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You can look things up in the Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list. It can usually be easily accessed with Another good option is to try Detexify, which allows you to draw the symbol and tries to recognize what you've drawn. If you are using |
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Theres lots of ways of doing this, but the two I've found to be most useful are these:
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The old school way is to look it up in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (warning: 4 MB PDF file). The new hotness is to use DeTeXify which uses handwriting recognition to look the symbol up for you. DeTeXify even comes in an iPhone/Andriod app- you can get a free version or pay for one. The only difference is that with the paid app you are making a donation to the developer- the feature set is exactly the same. The author is planning to work on a mobile version of the website that will supplant these apps. |
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I often look up the relevant topic on Wikipedia, (e.g. Set theory) and look at the source there. Wikipedia uses LaTeX for math markup as well. |
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For uncommon symbols, instead of search documentation on-line or in a big PDF to find packages and commands to include in my code, I have found useful sometimes to compile the whole table of characters of a font (even in the working document) to quickly find, for example, the skull of the
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There's also an iPhone app for Detexify, which I've used occasionally, for some reason ... Links (on the US iTunes App Store): free version and supporter version ($0.99, same functionality). |
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This reference has yet to fail me; it has all the symbols typeset along with the |
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The LaTeX wikibook Mathematics section has been very helpful for me. |
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Some utilities for lookup symbols in Unicode: |
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You can also search for a skull the in Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list, or paint a skull in Detexify, or remember the easy command "