I'm investigating about possible strategies to get nice vectors, discarding bold fonts. To make it simple, I'm not very happy with traditional ways of writing vectors with arrows. Please compare $\overrightarrow{OM}$, $\overrightarrow{M}$, $\vec{OM}$ and $\vec{M}$. My preference goes to the $\vec{M}$ command which is not suited for longer names like $\vec{OM}$ and I do not like \overrightarrow. I would be interested in possibles ways to overcome these problems. Thank you
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Width (according to the argument) and size (according to the context, normal, subscripts, subsubscripts) are automatically calculated. |
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Just be sure to use your own |
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This has long been a bugbear for me as well. While boldface is standard in my field, and good enough for almost all of my work, there have always been occasions when I wished for extensible and well-placed harpoons as well. Prompted by your question, I've looked once more, and found a potential solution: I submit for your approval the harpoon package. |
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$\vec{M}$and$\vec{OM}$are pretty different things: the first is the vector called 'M', the second the (nameless) vector from point O to point M (as you of course know). You'd want those to be formatted in very different ways, so the fact that$\vec{OM}$doesn't work is neither surprising nor undesirable. – Norman Gray Aug 18 '10 at 17:39