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super and subscripts on stackrel variable


Better looking nested subscripts and superscriptsAutomatically Raising SubscriptsSuper and subscripts with DeclarePairedDelimiterEtiquette for math subscripts and superscriptsKerning super- and subscripts “semantically”Redefine hbar to work in super- or subscriptsUsing printeranswers environment, how to print solutions in the box without the title “Solutions”






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








3















How I am trying to put a label above a variable omega. That works well but I cant find a better way to have the sub- and superscripts belonging to omega itself without a gap. using the superscripts on stackrel itself places them way to high



documentclass[]scrreprt

usepackageeurosym,bm,amsmath % Mathematische Notationen
usepackagescalerel

begindocument

$stackrelscaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$

enddocument


enter image description here










share|improve this question
































    3















    How I am trying to put a label above a variable omega. That works well but I cant find a better way to have the sub- and superscripts belonging to omega itself without a gap. using the superscripts on stackrel itself places them way to high



    documentclass[]scrreprt

    usepackageeurosym,bm,amsmath % Mathematische Notationen
    usepackagescalerel

    begindocument

    $stackrelscaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$

    enddocument


    enter image description here










    share|improve this question




























      3












      3








      3








      How I am trying to put a label above a variable omega. That works well but I cant find a better way to have the sub- and superscripts belonging to omega itself without a gap. using the superscripts on stackrel itself places them way to high



      documentclass[]scrreprt

      usepackageeurosym,bm,amsmath % Mathematische Notationen
      usepackagescalerel

      begindocument

      $stackrelscaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$

      enddocument


      enter image description here










      share|improve this question
















      How I am trying to put a label above a variable omega. That works well but I cant find a better way to have the sub- and superscripts belonging to omega itself without a gap. using the superscripts on stackrel itself places them way to high



      documentclass[]scrreprt

      usepackageeurosym,bm,amsmath % Mathematische Notationen
      usepackagescalerel

      begindocument

      $stackrelscaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$

      enddocument


      enter image description here







      math-mode subscripts superscripts stacking-symbols






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 8 hours ago









      Bernard

      191k8 gold badges86 silver badges226 bronze badges




      191k8 gold badges86 silver badges226 bronze badges










      asked 9 hours ago









      QuastiatQuastiat

      666 bronze badges




      666 bronze badges























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3
















          Something like this?



          enter image description here



          Note the use of , (thinspace) to nudge the "f" superscript to the right, to improve its centering above the omega character.



          documentclassscrreprt
          usepackageamsmath % for smash[t]... macro
          usepackagescalerel % for stackrel macro
          begindocument
          $smash[t]stackrel,scaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$
          enddocument



          Addendum to address the OP's follow-up question: Since the macro lstmw will only be encountered in math mode, I'd define it as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaleto#25pt#1^(i)_#3


          and write $lstmwomega,fkl$ in the body of the document.



          In fact, to make the superscript term (here: f) look a little bit less skinny and brittle, I'd define the macro as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaletoscriptscriptstyle #25pt#1^(i)_#3


          This "works" because TeX's math glyphs are optically sized, rather than just linearly scaled versions of the "standard size" glyphs.






          share|improve this answer






















          • 1





            thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago











          • @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

            – Mico
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago


















          2
















          The accentset command is another possibility. By default, the accent letter is in scriptscriptstyle, but you might be interested in having it in scriptstyle:



          documentclassscrreprt

          usepackageaccents

          begindocument

          $ accentsetmkern2muscriptstyle fomega^(i)_klqquad accentsetmkern1mu fomega^(i)_kl$

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer

























          • thanks for the input the works as well!

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago













          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3
















          Something like this?



          enter image description here



          Note the use of , (thinspace) to nudge the "f" superscript to the right, to improve its centering above the omega character.



          documentclassscrreprt
          usepackageamsmath % for smash[t]... macro
          usepackagescalerel % for stackrel macro
          begindocument
          $smash[t]stackrel,scaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$
          enddocument



          Addendum to address the OP's follow-up question: Since the macro lstmw will only be encountered in math mode, I'd define it as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaleto#25pt#1^(i)_#3


          and write $lstmwomega,fkl$ in the body of the document.



          In fact, to make the superscript term (here: f) look a little bit less skinny and brittle, I'd define the macro as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaletoscriptscriptstyle #25pt#1^(i)_#3


          This "works" because TeX's math glyphs are optically sized, rather than just linearly scaled versions of the "standard size" glyphs.






          share|improve this answer






















          • 1





            thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago











          • @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

            – Mico
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago















          3
















          Something like this?



          enter image description here



          Note the use of , (thinspace) to nudge the "f" superscript to the right, to improve its centering above the omega character.



          documentclassscrreprt
          usepackageamsmath % for smash[t]... macro
          usepackagescalerel % for stackrel macro
          begindocument
          $smash[t]stackrel,scaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$
          enddocument



          Addendum to address the OP's follow-up question: Since the macro lstmw will only be encountered in math mode, I'd define it as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaleto#25pt#1^(i)_#3


          and write $lstmwomega,fkl$ in the body of the document.



          In fact, to make the superscript term (here: f) look a little bit less skinny and brittle, I'd define the macro as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaletoscriptscriptstyle #25pt#1^(i)_#3


          This "works" because TeX's math glyphs are optically sized, rather than just linearly scaled versions of the "standard size" glyphs.






          share|improve this answer






















          • 1





            thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago











          • @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

            – Mico
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago













          3














          3










          3









          Something like this?



          enter image description here



          Note the use of , (thinspace) to nudge the "f" superscript to the right, to improve its centering above the omega character.



          documentclassscrreprt
          usepackageamsmath % for smash[t]... macro
          usepackagescalerel % for stackrel macro
          begindocument
          $smash[t]stackrel,scaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$
          enddocument



          Addendum to address the OP's follow-up question: Since the macro lstmw will only be encountered in math mode, I'd define it as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaleto#25pt#1^(i)_#3


          and write $lstmwomega,fkl$ in the body of the document.



          In fact, to make the superscript term (here: f) look a little bit less skinny and brittle, I'd define the macro as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaletoscriptscriptstyle #25pt#1^(i)_#3


          This "works" because TeX's math glyphs are optically sized, rather than just linearly scaled versions of the "standard size" glyphs.






          share|improve this answer















          Something like this?



          enter image description here



          Note the use of , (thinspace) to nudge the "f" superscript to the right, to improve its centering above the omega character.



          documentclassscrreprt
          usepackageamsmath % for smash[t]... macro
          usepackagescalerel % for stackrel macro
          begindocument
          $smash[t]stackrel,scaletof5ptomega^(i)_kl$
          enddocument



          Addendum to address the OP's follow-up question: Since the macro lstmw will only be encountered in math mode, I'd define it as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaleto#25pt#1^(i)_#3


          and write $lstmwomega,fkl$ in the body of the document.



          In fact, to make the superscript term (here: f) look a little bit less skinny and brittle, I'd define the macro as follows:



          newcommandlstmw[3]%
          smash[t]stackrelscaletoscriptscriptstyle #25pt#1^(i)_#3


          This "works" because TeX's math glyphs are optically sized, rather than just linearly scaled versions of the "standard size" glyphs.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 8 hours ago

























          answered 8 hours ago









          MicoMico

          305k33 gold badges420 silver badges829 bronze badges




          305k33 gold badges420 silver badges829 bronze badges










          • 1





            thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago











          • @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

            – Mico
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago












          • 1





            thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

            – Quastiat
            8 hours ago











          • @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

            – Mico
            8 hours ago






          • 1





            thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago







          1




          1





          thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

          – Quastiat
          8 hours ago





          thanks yeah thats exactly what i was hoping for :)

          – Quastiat
          8 hours ago




          1




          1





          I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

          – Quastiat
          8 hours ago





          I am quite new to designing my own commands, but wouldn't i create one out of this like the following: newcommandlstmw[3]$smash[t],stackrelscaleto #2 5pt #1 ^(i)_ #3 $ ? Using that in math mode gets me running into missing } errors...

          – Quastiat
          8 hours ago













          @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

          – Mico
          8 hours ago





          @Quastiat - Please see the addendum I just posted.

          – Mico
          8 hours ago




          1




          1





          thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

          – Quastiat
          7 hours ago





          thanks again that works just as expected, scaleto causes some issues with some letters but thats fine for me :)

          – Quastiat
          7 hours ago













          2
















          The accentset command is another possibility. By default, the accent letter is in scriptscriptstyle, but you might be interested in having it in scriptstyle:



          documentclassscrreprt

          usepackageaccents

          begindocument

          $ accentsetmkern2muscriptstyle fomega^(i)_klqquad accentsetmkern1mu fomega^(i)_kl$

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer

























          • thanks for the input the works as well!

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago















          2
















          The accentset command is another possibility. By default, the accent letter is in scriptscriptstyle, but you might be interested in having it in scriptstyle:



          documentclassscrreprt

          usepackageaccents

          begindocument

          $ accentsetmkern2muscriptstyle fomega^(i)_klqquad accentsetmkern1mu fomega^(i)_kl$

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer

























          • thanks for the input the works as well!

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago













          2














          2










          2









          The accentset command is another possibility. By default, the accent letter is in scriptscriptstyle, but you might be interested in having it in scriptstyle:



          documentclassscrreprt

          usepackageaccents

          begindocument

          $ accentsetmkern2muscriptstyle fomega^(i)_klqquad accentsetmkern1mu fomega^(i)_kl$

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer













          The accentset command is another possibility. By default, the accent letter is in scriptscriptstyle, but you might be interested in having it in scriptstyle:



          documentclassscrreprt

          usepackageaccents

          begindocument

          $ accentsetmkern2muscriptstyle fomega^(i)_klqquad accentsetmkern1mu fomega^(i)_kl$

          enddocument


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 7 hours ago









          BernardBernard

          191k8 gold badges86 silver badges226 bronze badges




          191k8 gold badges86 silver badges226 bronze badges















          • thanks for the input the works as well!

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago

















          • thanks for the input the works as well!

            – Quastiat
            7 hours ago
















          thanks for the input the works as well!

          – Quastiat
          7 hours ago





          thanks for the input the works as well!

          – Quastiat
          7 hours ago


















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