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I remember there being a way to display some Greek letters in a slightly different style (like how people often write Greek letters a bit differently than they're printed). Can anybody remind me of the command for this?

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  • You can use \usepackage[Polutoniko, greek]{babel} and \textgreek{giannis} or are you looking for math fonts?
    – yannisl
    Jan 4, 2011 at 8:36

3 Answers 3

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\varphi, \varepsilon and so on.

If you want to use one variant throughout and save yourself a few keystrokes, put \let\phi\varphi in your preamble.

The kpfonts package contains slanted and upright greek letters for mathmode.

psgreek provides some alternate Greek fonts.

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  • 1
    I've been looking for a variant of $$\lambda$$, any thoughts?
    – Bryson S.
    Nov 5, 2016 at 19:50
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    You say "and so on" but a lot of these don't exist right? For example \vardelta does not.
    – Kvothe
    Feb 21, 2022 at 14:13
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There are several packages that render slightly different Greek letters, such as the upgreek package.

enter image description here

You can check this and many more in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol Guide, starting from page 90.

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5

I came across this document: http://www.tug.org/pracjourn/2006-1/hartke/hartke.pdf, which is a review of different fonts for math mode. In the document it also shows the rendered version of each of the fonts, to give you an impression of what the final result will be like.

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