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- Why does \\leq show up as \\le? - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
When I type \leq, it shows up as if I had typed \le How do I do the actual less-than-equals (>=) sign? Edit: I typed \leq and the output symbol was >, but I want >= I am also using the site sharelatex com as my editor I think something was wrong with sharelatex, as when I closed my project and reopened, everything was fine
- math mode - Is there a difference between \ge and \geq (or . . . - TeX
Is there a difference between \ge and \geq (or equivalentely between \le and leq)? Ask Question Asked 13 years, 8 months ago Modified 13 years, 8 months ago
- \\leq, \\le, \\leqslant and LuaLaTeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
I have a problem replacing \leq by \leqslant with LuaLaTeX (I didn't have this problem with PdfLaTeX) Here is an MWE: \documentclass [10pt,a4paper,french] {article} \usepackage {mathtools} \usepackage {
- Is \leqq or \leq preferred over ≦? - LaTeX Stack Exchange
Compared to ≤ ≦ the macro versions \leq \leqq are (probably) easier to type for most people and require only US-ASCII characters (which is most likely the reason why older documents predating the triumph of Unicode only use those forms: ≤ ≦ wasn't an option back then)
- symbols - \lessim slanted variation - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
I need a \leq symbol underlined like the symbol \leqslant (in order to obtain a sort of \lessim version of \leqslant) That is, with the \sim parallel to the bottom part of \leq (and as well integrated as possible)
- notation - $\leq$ V. S. $\leqslant$ - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Is there a substantial difference between $\\leq$ and $\\leqslant$? My textbook uses both, but I could not tell why the authors selected one or the other I asked my teacher, and she said that there
- \\ge and \\geq vs \\geqslant (and similarly with \\le, \\leq, and . . .
The symbols \leq (\le) and \leqslant have exactly the same meaning; similarly for \geq (\ge) and \geqslant The preference for one or the other is basically subjective, but this is also affected by the house styles of major publishers of mathematics, which presumably traces back to the founding editors of journals handled by those publishers
- Variant of $\leq$ (less or equal)-symbol - LaTeX Stack Exchange
I am looking for a way to include a \\leq that (to me) is less ugly In the font I am using \\leq simply produces a lt; with an underline, but in my handwriting the lower "arm" of the lt; would be
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