Since we have $\mathscr{F}$
, the script version of an English alphabet, do we also have the script version of a Greek alphabet such as $\Omega$
?
I have tried $\mathscr{\Omega}$
but nothing had happened.
Since we have $\mathscr{F}$
, the script version of an English alphabet, do we also have the script version of a Greek alphabet such as $\Omega$
?
I have tried $\mathscr{\Omega}$
but nothing had happened.
The question is a bit vague. If you find some font which has such symbols, you might use them with use of the package fontspec
.
But to answer the question "do we have script Greek symbol?" in the meaning of predefined in LaTeX or some package I say: no.
The package unicode-math
handles 6 very common Math fonts you will find in many of the examples here and here is their list of normal weight alphabetical symbols from their documentation:
No Greek script can be found here. As there is no Unicode-block for such symbols either, I guess it will get difficult to find something.
My recommendation: Search for some font of hand-written Greek, download and install it, and do:
% arara: lualatex
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec}
\usepackage{mathtools}
\newcommand*{\mscrOmega}{\text{\fontspec{yourFont.otf}\symbol{"03A9}}}
\begin{document}
$\mscrOmega$ \mscrOmega
\end{document}
To complement LaRiFaRi's answer, Microsoft's Gabriola font do have some capital Greek letters that look handwritten, but they just miss a slight italic aspect. A clean way to resolve this would be to use XeLatex with Gabriel font and fake the slant with TikZ. If you just need a single letter, you could also fake the slant with some design/vector software (say inkscape) and import the resulting symbol. Result with a capital cursive theta: