As the title suggests, is there a way to adjust the width of the integral symbol by compressing it in the horizontal direction? Adjustbox only seems to allow me to adjust the height, and the width does not change.
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Member of over one year, 22 posts and no minimal working example (MWE)? -1– Henri MenkeJun 8, 2017 at 2:52
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Are you trying to save space or make it look different? A little negative space before and after to givene things up might work better if it's just a space issue– Chris HJun 8, 2017 at 7:22
2 Answers
Use \resizebox
.
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\begin{document}
$\displaystyle\int$
\resizebox{.5\width}{\height}{$\displaystyle\int$}
$\displaystyle\int$
\end{document}
or use an upright integral symbol which is naturally narrower, e.g. from eulervm
.
\documentclass{article}
\DeclareSymbolFont{eulargesymbols}{U}{zeuex}{m}{n}
\DeclareMathSymbol{\intop}{\mathop}{eulargesymbols}{"52}
\begin{document}
$\displaystyle\int$
\end{document}
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1+1 for your alternative solution. The change in the weight of the (near) vertical stroke in the first option doesn't look nice.– Chris HJun 8, 2017 at 7:21
Here I use scalerel
package's \hstretch
to compress the sign to 80, 60, and 40%, respectively. Unlike \resizebox
, it automatically works across math styles. I have embodied it here as \varint[<scale>]
.
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{scalerel}
\newcommand\varint[1][.8]{\mathrel{\hstretch{#1}{\int}}}
\begin{document}
\[
\int_0^x \varint_{\!\!\!0}^x \varint[.6]_{\!\!0}^x \varint[.4]_{\!0}^x
\]
\[
\scriptstyle \int \varint \varint[.6] \varint[.4]
\]
\end{document}
See this related question, Integral Sign $\int...$, for integral signs that are naturally more vertical and less slanted; in the Russian style, as it were.