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How do I get the ς (final sigma) symbol?
How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?How do I get the single turnstile symbol?How to create subset with sim symbolParallelogram symbolWhat's the symbol for the curly D used to denote a dissection for a Riemann integral?What is this symbol?Drawing dashed `subseteq` symbolDetexify-like service where I can paste a symbolHow to draw the following symbol in LaTeX?LaTeX symbol for the Kulkarni-Nomizu productHow to make this symbol (topology)?
I am trying to get this Symbol
I already tried using Detexify, but to no avail.
Any pointers would be really appreciated.
symbols
New contributor
add a comment |
I am trying to get this Symbol
I already tried using Detexify, but to no avail.
Any pointers would be really appreciated.
symbols
New contributor
2
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
5 hours ago
add a comment |
I am trying to get this Symbol
I already tried using Detexify, but to no avail.
Any pointers would be really appreciated.
symbols
New contributor
I am trying to get this Symbol
I already tried using Detexify, but to no avail.
Any pointers would be really appreciated.
symbols
symbols
New contributor
New contributor
edited 6 hours ago
Davislor
8,0091534
8,0091534
New contributor
asked 9 hours ago
A-welsA-wels
332
332
New contributor
New contributor
2
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
5 hours ago
add a comment |
2
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
5 hours ago
2
2
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
5 hours ago
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
5 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
It looks like a “final sigma”:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetextgreek
begindocument
textvarsigma
enddocument
What does "final sigma" have to do withtextvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!
– manooooh
9 hours ago
5
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
add a comment |
If you can use LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX, the best way to get the upright ς is to load unicode-math
. Here are a few of the different commands the package supports for it in math mode:
documentclass[varwidth]standalone
usepackageunicode-math
begindocument
( mupvarsigma symupvarsigma symup^^^^03c2 )
enddocument
Either fontspec
or any package that loads it (including unicode-math
) will let you enter the Unicode character in text mode as well, but only if your text font contains the character.
If you’re required to use PDFLaTeX, there are a few legacy 8-bit fonts that include an upright Greek font. You might check the documentation of isomath
for some options.
If you load a font encoding that includes the character (such as usepackage[LGR, T1]fontenc
in legacy NFSS), PDFTeX will also be able to understand the Unicode character in text mode.
add a comment |
To me the symbol also reminds to this indicated or called final sigma.
documentclassminimal
usepackage[greek]babel
begindocument
char115
enddocument
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It looks like a “final sigma”:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetextgreek
begindocument
textvarsigma
enddocument
What does "final sigma" have to do withtextvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!
– manooooh
9 hours ago
5
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
add a comment |
It looks like a “final sigma”:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetextgreek
begindocument
textvarsigma
enddocument
What does "final sigma" have to do withtextvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!
– manooooh
9 hours ago
5
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
add a comment |
It looks like a “final sigma”:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetextgreek
begindocument
textvarsigma
enddocument
It looks like a “final sigma”:
documentclassarticle
usepackagetextgreek
begindocument
textvarsigma
enddocument
answered 9 hours ago
egregegreg
743k8919473281
743k8919473281
What does "final sigma" have to do withtextvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!
– manooooh
9 hours ago
5
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
add a comment |
What does "final sigma" have to do withtextvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!
– manooooh
9 hours ago
5
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
What does "final sigma" have to do with
textvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!– manooooh
9 hours ago
What does "final sigma" have to do with
textvarsigma
? P.S. Nice symbol!– manooooh
9 hours ago
5
5
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
@manooooh That's how the package calls it. The letter is used in Greek for a sigma falling at the end of a word, hence “final sigma”.
– egreg
9 hours ago
add a comment |
If you can use LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX, the best way to get the upright ς is to load unicode-math
. Here are a few of the different commands the package supports for it in math mode:
documentclass[varwidth]standalone
usepackageunicode-math
begindocument
( mupvarsigma symupvarsigma symup^^^^03c2 )
enddocument
Either fontspec
or any package that loads it (including unicode-math
) will let you enter the Unicode character in text mode as well, but only if your text font contains the character.
If you’re required to use PDFLaTeX, there are a few legacy 8-bit fonts that include an upright Greek font. You might check the documentation of isomath
for some options.
If you load a font encoding that includes the character (such as usepackage[LGR, T1]fontenc
in legacy NFSS), PDFTeX will also be able to understand the Unicode character in text mode.
add a comment |
If you can use LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX, the best way to get the upright ς is to load unicode-math
. Here are a few of the different commands the package supports for it in math mode:
documentclass[varwidth]standalone
usepackageunicode-math
begindocument
( mupvarsigma symupvarsigma symup^^^^03c2 )
enddocument
Either fontspec
or any package that loads it (including unicode-math
) will let you enter the Unicode character in text mode as well, but only if your text font contains the character.
If you’re required to use PDFLaTeX, there are a few legacy 8-bit fonts that include an upright Greek font. You might check the documentation of isomath
for some options.
If you load a font encoding that includes the character (such as usepackage[LGR, T1]fontenc
in legacy NFSS), PDFTeX will also be able to understand the Unicode character in text mode.
add a comment |
If you can use LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX, the best way to get the upright ς is to load unicode-math
. Here are a few of the different commands the package supports for it in math mode:
documentclass[varwidth]standalone
usepackageunicode-math
begindocument
( mupvarsigma symupvarsigma symup^^^^03c2 )
enddocument
Either fontspec
or any package that loads it (including unicode-math
) will let you enter the Unicode character in text mode as well, but only if your text font contains the character.
If you’re required to use PDFLaTeX, there are a few legacy 8-bit fonts that include an upright Greek font. You might check the documentation of isomath
for some options.
If you load a font encoding that includes the character (such as usepackage[LGR, T1]fontenc
in legacy NFSS), PDFTeX will also be able to understand the Unicode character in text mode.
If you can use LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX, the best way to get the upright ς is to load unicode-math
. Here are a few of the different commands the package supports for it in math mode:
documentclass[varwidth]standalone
usepackageunicode-math
begindocument
( mupvarsigma symupvarsigma symup^^^^03c2 )
enddocument
Either fontspec
or any package that loads it (including unicode-math
) will let you enter the Unicode character in text mode as well, but only if your text font contains the character.
If you’re required to use PDFLaTeX, there are a few legacy 8-bit fonts that include an upright Greek font. You might check the documentation of isomath
for some options.
If you load a font encoding that includes the character (such as usepackage[LGR, T1]fontenc
in legacy NFSS), PDFTeX will also be able to understand the Unicode character in text mode.
edited 5 hours ago
answered 6 hours ago
DavislorDavislor
8,0091534
8,0091534
add a comment |
add a comment |
To me the symbol also reminds to this indicated or called final sigma.
documentclassminimal
usepackage[greek]babel
begindocument
char115
enddocument
add a comment |
To me the symbol also reminds to this indicated or called final sigma.
documentclassminimal
usepackage[greek]babel
begindocument
char115
enddocument
add a comment |
To me the symbol also reminds to this indicated or called final sigma.
documentclassminimal
usepackage[greek]babel
begindocument
char115
enddocument
To me the symbol also reminds to this indicated or called final sigma.
documentclassminimal
usepackage[greek]babel
begindocument
char115
enddocument
answered 4 hours ago
SebastianoSebastiano
12.6k42569
12.6k42569
add a comment |
add a comment |
A-wels is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
A-wels is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
A-wels is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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2
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
5 hours ago