# latex command for the symbol like UI

Hi I'm trying to code this symbol but I'm not getting the exact output, can anyone help me to code this symbol

i tried code \cup|

• so it's kind of like \subseteq but rotated? – cmhughes Aug 9 '13 at 7:55
• yes somewhat like tat, but im not getting exact output for this – ravi Aug 9 '13 at 7:58
• Hi, you have asked several questions about finding symbols. Maybe you can state what these symbols do / where are they from? This way you can help others helping you finding the desired symbols. Thanks! – Francis Aug 9 '13 at 7:59
• following up on what @Francis has said, there's more than one reason why it's helpful to know what a symbol is used for, and where you may have seen it in use. as a representative to unicode from the stipub consortium, with suitable documentation i can submit "new" symbols to be considered for addition to unicode. however, good documentation is needed, including published examples. – barbara beeton Aug 22 '13 at 21:06
• @ravi The symbol in the answer is not what you were looking for? – karlkoeller Aug 23 '13 at 21:14

Depending on the fact you want it as a binary operator or as a binary relation, you can try

\newcommand{\binsubseteq}{\mathbin{\text{\rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$\subseteq$}}‌​}}


or

\newcommand{\relsubseteq}{\mathrel{\text{\rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$\subseteq$}}‌​}}


They both require amsmath and graphicx.

MWE

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{amsmath}
\usepackage{graphicx}

\newcommand{\binsubseteq}{\mathbin{\text{\rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$\subseteq$}}}}
\newcommand{\relsubseteq}{\mathrel{\text{\rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$\subseteq$}}}}

\begin{document}

$A \binsubseteq B_{A \binsubseteq B_{A \binsubseteq B}}$

$A \relsubseteq B_{A \relsubseteq B_{A \relsubseteq B}}$

\end{document}


Output