Hmm; \textbackslash
(mentioned by others) isn't in my reference book (Kopka and Daly).
At any rate, math mode provides \sim
, \backslash
, and \setminus
(the latter two appear to look the same and differ only by spacing in math mode).
My LaTeX book – which, as you would expect, features the \ extensively – seems to use the verbatim
environment. For example, this code:
\begin{verbatim}
\addtocounter{footnote}{-1}\footnotetext{Small insects}
\stepcounter{footnote}\footnoteext{Large mammals}
\end{verbatim}
Produces this text in the book:
\addtocounter{footnote}{-1}\footnotetext{Small insects}
\stepcounter{footnote}\footnoteext{Large mammals}
The \verb
command is similar, but the argument must be on one line only. The first character after the b is the delimiter; for example:
\verb=\emph{stuff}=
will produce
\emph{stuff}
So you could presumably get your backslash by typing:
\verb=\=
You can also add a *
– i.e. \verb*
or \begin{verbatim*}
– to make whitespace visible.
It is interesting to speculate how you would get an example of a verbatim
environment into a document..
(using \verb
to do the last line, I guess)
\sim
.