# Tag Info

21

There is a new font, called New PX, which seems to resolve most issues. This package is meant to be a replacement for Young Ryu’s pxfonts—a complete text and math package with roman text font provided by a Palatino clone, sans serif based on a Helvetica clone, typewriter faces, plus math symbol fonts whose math italic letters are from a Palatino Italic ...

15

tabular switches to textmode, use array in math: \documentclass[12pt]{article} \usepackage{geometry} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage[sc,osf]{mathpazo} \linespread{1.025} \usepackage[euler-digits,small]{eulervm} \usepackage[usenames, dvipsnames]{color} \begin{document} \begin{center} Normally, math digits appear as lined figures: \[ ...

12

The mathpazo package implicitly requires the Palladio set of fonts, which are not part of the standard psnfss package. Therefore, it is also necessary to install the fpl package, as well as palatino, before mathpazo will work. (Thanks to @jfbu for the tip!)

12

In the Modern Toolchain I personally recommend you use unicode-math when you can, and legacy fonts when you have to. Not everyone agrees, so I present the alternatives. With the package unicode-math, you can use any OpenType fonts of your choice, including Fira Sans and its successor FiraGO. Asana Math is a Unicode math font based on mathpazo, but with ...

12

I suggest that you not load the mathpple, mathpazo, and upgreek packages and, instead, load the newpxtext and newpxmath packages. \documentclass[10pt,letterpaper]{memoir} \usepackage{amsmath,amssymb} %\usepackage{mathpple} %\usepackage{upgreek} %\usepackage{mathpazo} \usepackage{lipsum} \usepackage{newpxtext,newpxmath} \begin{document} Some regular text. \...

10

The \textperthousand command is available both with the T1 encoding (used by classicthesis) and the TS1 encoding. However, the Palatino font loaded via the mathpazo package by classicthesis hasn't the required glyph: in the T1 encoding \textperthousand is built by adding a small zero next to % and the small zero is missing (a black square is used to show ...

9

The mathpazo package, which provides Palatino-clone text and math fonts, hasn't been updated in a long time. As you've discovered, it also lacks macros to generate double- and triple-integral symbols. An up-to-date alternative to mathpazo is the newpxtext and newpxmath pair of packages. A side-benefit of loading newpxmath is that it provides a \iiint macro ...

8

You could use a \vphantom{} which inserts a vertical height equal to the parameter provided but of zero width. So using \vphantom{f} will make the \hat behave as if the hat needs to be on top of an f: To have more fine tuned control you can use a scaled parameter via \hat{\vphantom{\scalebox{1.1}{x}} x}: The \vphantom{} trick is useful in other cases such ...

7

If you want really curly curly braces and wish to use a Times-like math font -- as would seem to be the case because of your consideration of the newtxmath package -- you should look into using the mtpro2 font package. ("mtpro2" is short for "MathTime Professional II".) The full mtpro2 package isn't free of charge. However, its "lite" subset, which is all ...

7

You can also do this with OpenType fonts using unicode-math. \documentclass[10pt,letterpaper]{memoir} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{unicode-math} \usepackage{microtype} \usepackage{lipsum} \defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchLowercase} \setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella} \setmathfont{Asana Math} \begin{document} \chapter{Demo} Some regular text. \lipsum[1] ...

6

The text font defined by mathpazo is not available in T5 encoding (for Vietnamese). The Palatino clone in the TeX Gyre fonts is, so you can use it: \documentclass{article} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[vietnamese,german,english]{babel} \usepackage{mathpazo} % for math fonts \usepackage{tgpagella} % overrides the text ...

6

Assuming that you call \vec with the argument consisting of a single symbol, either a Latin or a Greek letter, the following should do. Note that this has nothing to do with mathpazo: \mathbf just works for Latin letters (and possibly for uppercase Greek, but not for all math fonts). \documentclass{article} \usepackage{mathpazo} \usepackage{bm} \...

6

Page 176 of the Koma-Script manual tells you that the default font for the back address is \sffamily. Just add \setkomafont{backaddress}{\normalfont} Full code \documentclass{scrlttr2} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage[english]{babel} \usepackage{blindtext} \usepackage[osf,sc]{mathpazo} \LoadLetterOption{DIN} \setkomavar{...

6

As long as the metropolis theme is compiled with a suitable engine (e.g. xelatex) it uses fira fonts per default. So simply do not load any other packages or themes and you'll get fira font for text. % !TeX TS-program = xelatex \documentclass{beamer} \usetheme{metropolis} % Use metropolis theme \usefonttheme[onlymath]{serif} \usepackage{mathpazo} \...

6

mathpazo.sty has \DeclareSymbolFont{operators} {OT1}{pplx}{m}{n} \DeclareSymbolFont{upright} {OT1}{zplm}{m}{n} \DeclareSymbolFont{letters} {OML}{zplm}{m}{it} \DeclareSymbolFont{symbols} {OMS}{zplm}{m}{n} \DeclareSymbolFont{largesymbols} {OMX}{zplm}{m}{n} one more than the standard. Next amssymb.sty (actually amsfonts.sty) has \...

5

Surprisingly the Koma styles do not provide a simple way to hook in to this for all entries in the table of the contents. There are styles for the sectionentrypagenumber for the page numbers of sections (and corresponding ones for chapters and parts), but not for lower level entries. Digging through the code one finds that at the bottom is the standard ...

5

I would avoid using TeX Gyre Pagella or newpxtext if small caps are to be used. The proportions of some of these small caps are off. This is particularly obvious for o.sc. Here O\textsc{o}o is compared for newpxtext with option largesc, TeX Gyre Pagella and mathpazo with option sc (or osf): Without the largesc option, newpxtext is the same as Pagella. But ...

4

Warning: I am probably biased since I authored the FPL fonts used by mathpazo. One design decision for the FPL fonts was to be metric compatible with the Palatino SC and OsF fonts provided by Adobe. This fixed both the glyph width as well as the bonding box for each glyph. In particular this meant that the SC glyphs are a bit larger than lower case letters ...

4

There is in fact a package option for this: if you pass noBBpl to mathpazo, then its blackboard bold fonts are not loaded. That also means you have to load the AMS ones separately, but that just means using amssymb, which is simpler than defining another symbol font alphabet: \documentclass{article} % these two \usepackage commands make it work \usepackage{...

4

Please explain why you are using both fourier and mathpazo at the same time? They are the culprit. Besides it has nothing to do with memoir \documentclass{article} \usepackage{fourier} \usepackage{mathpazo} \begin{document} $$a<0$$ \end{document}

4

It seems that the last update to newpx has introduced a bug: please, report it. For the time being, you can use the corresponding glyphs in newtx: \documentclass{standalone} \usepackage{newpxmath} \DeclareFontFamily{U}{ntxmia}{\skewchar \font=127 } \makeatletter \DeclareFontShape{U}{ntxmia}{m}{it}{ <-> \npxmath@scaled ntxmia }{} \DeclareFontShape{U}...

4

The BOONDOX font has the suitable interface: \documentclass[a4paper, 12pt]{scrartcl} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{mathpazo} \usepackage{BOONDOX-cal} \newcommand{\derivataparziale}[3]{\dfrac{\partial^{#1}{#2}}{\partial {#3}^{#1}} } \begin{document} $\mathcal{E}(y) = - \derivataparziale{}{V(y)}{y}$ \end{document}

4

If you add \usepackage{tracefnt} you get more information from the font system, in particular it tells you which font got substituted: LaTeX Font Warning: Font shape `U/matha/m/n' in size <7.6> not available (Font) size <8> substituted on input line 8. So you could decide that you don't care that superscripts are using an 8pt ...

4

\mathrm{\Omega} is wrong as it points to a non existent character. You should use siunitx, instead of doing manual markup. \documentclass{article} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage[catalan]{babel} \usepackage[sc]{mathpazo} \usepackage{siunitx} \begin{document} \begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|} \hline Filtre & Resistència & ...

4

The error is in loading fouriernc, which is for using New Century Schoolbook, rather than Palatino. Load either it or mathpazo, not both. The centertags option is active by default for amsmath. \documentclass[a4paper,10pt,reqno,oldfontcommands]{memoir} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage{mathpazo} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{...

4

\documentclass{article} \usepackage{bbold} \let\altmathbb\mathbb \usepackage[sc]{mathpazo} \begin{document} Hello world $\altmathbb{012345}$ \end{document} To restore the original so that no syntax variant is required: \documentclass{article} \usepackage{bbold} \let\altmathbb\mathbb \usepackage[sc]{mathpazo} \AtBeginDocument{\let\mathbb\altmathbb} ...

3

Instead of using the mathpazo package, which is (a) quite old and (b) well known for having various font metric problems, you could use the newpxtext and newpxmath packages. These are derived from the mathpazo package but have much better font metrics. In particular, these packages produce well-spaced hat symbols. If you use these packages instead of ...

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