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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;
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
math-mode subscripts superscripts stacking-symbols
add a comment
|
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
math-mode subscripts superscripts stacking-symbols
add a comment
|
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
math-mode subscripts superscripts stacking-symbols
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
math-mode subscripts superscripts stacking-symbols
math-mode subscripts superscripts stacking-symbols
edited 8 hours ago
Bernard
191k8 gold badges86 silver badges226 bronze badges
191k8 gold badges86 silver badges226 bronze badges
asked 9 hours ago
QuastiatQuastiat
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666 bronze badges
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add a comment
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Something like this?
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.
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
add a comment
|
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
thanks for the input the works as well!
– Quastiat
7 hours ago
add a comment
|
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Something like this?
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.
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
add a comment
|
Something like this?
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.
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
add a comment
|
Something like this?
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.
Something like this?
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.
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
add a comment
|
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
add a comment
|
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
thanks for the input the works as well!
– Quastiat
7 hours ago
add a comment
|
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
thanks for the input the works as well!
– Quastiat
7 hours ago
add a comment
|
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
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
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
add a comment
|
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
add a comment
|
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