# Black and white emphasis for \boxed?

I am using \boxed to place emphasis on important equations in an assignment I am typing up, and would like to give the final answer a bit of extra emphasis. I'm using $$...$$ to number each line, so that I can put in references in the text.

There are some very nice looking boxes in the answers to Attractive Boxed Equations and framed equations, but both rely on colour, when I have a black and white printer. I was thinking of a double line around the final equation, but I'll take other answers if they are easier to code or look better.

I would love it if either the balanced boxes or the full width boxes were incorporated into the answer, but this is optional. It is a class assignment that the TA will look at for all of 10 minutes, not a publication.

Minimal Working Example:

\documentclass[letterpaper]{article}
\usepackage{kpfonts}
\usepackage{amssymb,mathtools}

\begin{document}
$$\frac{M}{R} \propto R^2 \rho$$
$$\label{eqn:density} \boxed{ \rho \propto \frac{M}{R^3} }$$
\end{document}

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Could you include an equation showing your current "emphasis" so the community has a frame of reference (or a \boxed reference :-))? –  Werner Jan 26 '12 at 0:27
I added a MWE. \boxed is from amsmath or mathtools. I used kpfonts as that is what I was using there, so if you compile it your equations will look exactly the same. –  Canageek Jan 26 '12 at 0:51

You can use the predefined boxes from the fancybox package, which you can wrap around equations via the empheq package:

\documentclass[letterpaper]{article}
\usepackage{kpfonts,amssymb,empheq,fancybox}

\newsavebox{\mybox}

}

\begin{document}

A double box

\begin{empheq}[box=\doublebox]{align}
a&=b\\
E&=mc^2 + \int_a^a x\, dx
\end{empheq}

An oval box (cheesy)

\begin{empheq}[box=\ovalbox]{align}
a&=b\\
E&=mc^2 + \int_a^a x\, dx
\end{empheq}

A shadowbox, which has some vertical alignment problems \ldots

a&=b\\
E&=mc^2 + \int_a^a x\, dx
\end{empheq}

\ldots which apparently can be fixed by sticking it into a raisebox.

a&=b\\
E&=mc^2 + \int_a^a x\, dx
\end{empheq}

\end{document}


This gives

Note that the definition of \raisedshadowbox contains a fudge factor of 0.6ex for the vertical offset correction. I don't know what this compensates for, but it does seem to work across different font sizes, line heights as well as \shadowbox, \fboxsep and \fboxrule settings.

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I like doublebox a lot, thank you. The easier it is for the TA to notice the things that should be me marks, the more likely I am to get them. –  Canageek Jan 26 '12 at 2:31

Some alternative examples made with tcboxmath, ams equation|gather|align|... tcolorbox environments:

\documentclass[letterpaper]{article}
\usepackage{lmodern}
\usepackage{amssymb,mathtools}
\usepackage[most]{tcolorbox}

\tcbset{colback=white,colframe=black}

\begin{document}

With \texttt{tcboxmath} only the equation is boxed
$$\tcboxmath{\frac{M}{R} \propto R^2 \rho}$$

An \texttt{ams equation} also boxes equation number
\begin{tcolorbox}[ams equation]
\label{eqn:density} \rho \propto \frac{M}{R^3}
\end{tcolorbox}

With \texttt{tcbhighmath} some part can be detached
\begin{tcolorbox}[ams gather]
\frac{M}{R} \propto R^2 \rho \\
\tcbhighmath[colback=black,coltext=white,colframe=white]{\rho \propto \frac{M}{R^3}}
\end{tcolorbox}

\tcboxmath[enhanced, drop shadow]{\frac{M}{R} \propto R^2 \rho}  \hfill
\tcboxmath[enhanced, drop fuzzy shadow]{\frac{M}{R} \propto R^2 \rho}\hfill
\tcboxmath[enhanced, drop lifted shadow]{\frac{M}{R} \propto R^2 \rho}

sharp corners
\begin{tcolorbox}[ams equation, sharp corners]
\label{eqn:density} \rho \propto \frac{M}{R^3}
\end{tcolorbox}

border lines
\begin{tcolorbox}[enhanced, ams equation, sharp corners, borderline={1pt}{-3pt}{black}]
\label{eqn:density} \rho \propto \frac{M}{R^3}
\end{tcolorbox}
\dots
\end{document}


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