# How can I break an align environment for a paragraph?

I would like to have two displayed equations, broken by a short paragraph, but with aligned equal signs (as if using the align environment). Is there some way to "break" the align environment temporarily?

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See this question. –  Lev Bishop Jan 24 '11 at 1:39
Thanks, just what I was looking for. :o) –  Kristen Jan 24 '11 at 1:45

\begin{align}
a &= 1 \\
\intertext{and}
b &= 2
\end{align}

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An alternative which requires less vertical spacing than \intertext is \shortintertext, provided by the mathtools package:

\documentclass{article}
\begin{document}
\begin{align}
ax + b &= 0 \\
\shortintertext{and}
ab &= x
\end{align}
in comparison with
\begin{align}
ax + b &= 0 \\
\intertext{and}
ab &= x
\end{align}
\end{document}


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\intertext and \shortintertext are the correct solution if you are able to place all the content within one align environment. If for some reason you need to have alignment across two different align type environments, you can use

\makebox[<length>][<l|r|c>]{<text>}


to place the <text> in a box of width <length> and placed within that box with l, r, or c alignment. The appropriate <length> can be determined via \widthof from the the calc package.

Below I have defined \WidestLeftHandSide and \WidestRightHandSide, and applied r alignment to the left hand side of the first equation in the second align, and an l alignment to the right hand side. This adjustment only needs to be applied once to both side. This yields:

## Code:

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{amsmath}
\usepackage{calc}

\newcommand*{\WidestLeftHandSide}{\tan^2 \theta + \sin^2 \theta + \cos^2 \theta}%
\newcommand*{\WidestRightHandSide}{1 + \tan^2 \theta}%

\begin{document}
\begin{align*}
\tan^2 \theta + \sin^2 \theta + \cos^2 \theta &= 1 + \tan^2 \theta\\
\implies \cos^2 \theta &= 1 - \sin^2 \theta
\end{align*}
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Mauris diam quam, cursus vel porttitor eget, posuere non mauris. Suspendisse potenti. Sed in vestibulum augue. Nullam eu est ante.
\begin{align*}
\makebox[\widthof{$\WidestLeftHandSide$}][r]{$E$} &= \makebox[\widthof{$\WidestRightHandSide$}][l]{$mc^2$}\\
F &= ma
\end{align*}
\end{document}

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In Plain: \eqalignno{ ax+b&=1\cr\noalign{\hbox{and}} ab&=x }\bye.

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