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I'm trying to write the formula in the picture and I have a problem in highlighting the term q and the term m. unfortunately I can not manage the piece of code that helps me to look for the formulas. Can you help me?

enter image description here

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{mathtools}
\usepackage{tikz}
\usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,calc}

\begin{document}
    \begin{tikzpicture}[overlay,remember picture]
           \draw[thick,blue,fill=blue!20,rounded corners] 
               ($(pic cs:mark1)+(-1,-4pt)$) -- ($(pic cs:mark1)+(0,10pt)$) -- 
               ($(pic cs:mark2)+(2pt,10pt)$) -- ($(pic cs:mark2)+(1pt,+3pt)$) -- 
               ($(pic cs:mark4)+(2pt,6pt)$) -- ($(pic cs:mark4)+(2pt,-7pt)$) -- 
               ($(pic cs:mark3)+(-1,-4pt)$) -- ($(pic cs:mark3)+(0,8pt)$) -- cycle; 
           \draw[blue,thick,-latex] ($(pic cs:mark2)+(2pt,4pt)$) to [in=180,out=15] +(30:1cm) 
               node[anchor=west,text=black] {angular coefficient};
       \end{tikzpicture}
       \begin{equation*}
          y={m\tikzmark{mark1}\tikzmark{mark2}\tikzmark{mark3}\tikzmark{mark4}} \cdot x +q
       \end{equation*}
\end{document}
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  • Why have you placed four \tikzmarks in the same place? Dec 13, 2017 at 8:00

3 Answers 3

2

This is another approach

enter image description here

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{amsmath}
\usepackage{tikz}
    \usetikzlibrary{positioning}

\begin{document}
    \begin{equation*}
         y = \tikz[baseline=(n1.base)]{\node[fill=yellow!50, draw, circle,  inner sep=1.5pt] (n1){$m$};
         \node[overlay, above right=of n1] (t1) {angular coefficient};
         \draw [->] (n1.north) to [bend left=45] (t1.west);
         } 
         \hspace{-1cm}\cdot x +\tikz[baseline=(n2.base)]{\node[fill=green!50, draw, circle, anchor=south, inner sep=1.5pt] (n2){$q$};
         \node[overlay, below right=of n2] (t2) {$y$-intercept};
         \draw [->] (n2.south) to [bend right=45] (t2.west);
         }
    \end{equation*}
\end{document}

The background grid can be drawn according with @GonzaloMedinas's answer Making a checkered background for a page

3
  • 1
    @ryuk I tried to be the more accurate possible according to your orginal question. Thank you for accepting my answer.
    – Cragfelt
    Dec 13, 2017 at 23:36
  • 1
    To get rid of the manual \hspace{}, you should add the overlay option to the two \draw[->] commands.
    – hbaderts
    Dec 14, 2017 at 7:40
  • @hbaderts Excellent! I noticed that you used it in your answer. There are many many features of TikZ that I do not know. Thank you for the tip, I appreciate that.
    – Cragfelt
    Dec 16, 2017 at 23:53
13

You can use the \tikz{} command directly inside \begin{equation*} ... \end{equation*} to create the letters "a" and "q". That way you don't even need \tikzmark.

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{mathtools}
\usepackage{tikz}

\begin{document}
    \begin{equation*}
        y =
        \tikz[baseline=(a.base)]{
            \node[circle, draw=blue, fill=blue!60, inner sep=1pt] (a) {$a$};
            \draw[overlay, blue, thick, -latex] (a.north) to[out=90, in=180] +(30:1cm)
                node[anchor=west,text=black] {angular coefficient};
        }
        \cdot x +
        \tikz[baseline=(q.base)]{
            \node[circle, draw=green, fill=green!60, inner sep=1pt] (q) {$q$};
            \draw[overlay, green, thick, -latex] (a.south) to[out=-90, in=180] +(-30:1cm)
                node[anchor=west,text=black] {y-intercept};
        }
    \end{equation*}

\end{document}

Resulting equation

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9

Think of a \tikzmark as an invisible character that doesn't take up any space. In your code you placed four of those in the same place.

It makes more sense I think, to place a mark on either side of the character you want to highlight, i.e. \tikzmark{mark1} m \tikzmark{mark2}. To draw rectangle around the m you can then do something like

\draw[thick,blue,fill=blue!20,rounded corners] 
           ($(pic cs:mark1)+(-1pt,-4pt)$) rectangle ($(pic cs:mark2)+(1pt,10pt)$);

The first coordinate is below left of mark1 (which is on the left side of m), the second coordinate is the opposite corner, above right of mark2 (which is on the right side of m).

That said though, it might be just as easy to use a \node to draw the rectangle, then the annotation arrow can be drawn directly from the node. Use the fit library, and \node [fit=(pic cs:mark1)(pic cs:mark2),minimum height=3ex,...] to make a node that encompasses the two \tikzmarks.

output of code

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{mathtools}
\usepackage{tikz}
\usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,calc,fit}

\begin{document}
\begin{tikzpicture}[overlay,remember picture]
%           \draw[thick,blue,fill=blue!20,rounded corners] 
%               ($(pic cs:mark1)+(-1pt,-4pt)$) rectangle ($(pic cs:mark2)+(1pt,10pt)$);
%           \draw[thick,blue,fill=red!20,rounded corners] 
%               ($(pic cs:mark3)+(-1pt,-4pt)$) rectangle ($(pic cs:mark4)+(1pt,10pt)$);
%           \draw[blue,thick,-latex] ($(pic cs:mark2)+(2pt,4pt)$) to [in=180,out=15] +(30:1cm) 
%               node[anchor=west,text=black] {angular coefficient};

 \node [fit=(pic cs:mark1)(pic cs:mark2),inner sep=2pt,minimum height=3ex,yshift=0.5ex,blue!20,draw,thick,rounded corners] (a) {};
 \node [fit=(pic cs:mark3)(pic cs:mark4),inner sep=2pt,minimum height=3ex,yshift=0.5ex,red!20,draw,thick,rounded corners] (b) {};

 \draw [-latex] (a) to[bend left] ++(2,1) node[right] {angular coefficient};
 \draw [-latex] (b) to[bend right] ++(1,-1) node[right] {$y$-intercept};
\end{tikzpicture}
\begin{equation*}
          y=\tikzmark{mark1}m\tikzmark{mark2} \cdot x + \tikzmark{mark3}q\tikzmark{mark4}
\end{equation*}
\end{document}
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