Chikis Posted August 20, 2014 Posted August 20, 2014 Men! I have a big problem here oh.... I find it difficult rendering number of elements in a set. For example:[math]n(A)[/math] But that's not what I want to write. I want to have this shown in latex: ©(P\cap{Q})' I wrote it like this:[math](c)(P\cap{Q})'[/math] and am having latex error. I have gone through the whole library of latex symbols;no help is sight. I need help please.
ajb Posted August 20, 2014 Posted August 20, 2014 [math]\vert A \vert[/math], [math]\textnormal{n}(A)[/math], [math]\textnormal{card}(A)[/math], [math]\# A[/math], [math]\bar{\bar{A}}[/math] Any of these help? I am not sure of any other notation in common use.
Chikis Posted August 20, 2014 Author Posted August 20, 2014 (edited) [math]\vert A \vert[/math], [math]\textnormal{n}(A)[/math], [math]\textnormal{card}(A)[/math], [math]\# A[/math], [math]\bar{\bar{A}}[/math].Mind you, this is what I actually want to write. Edited August 20, 2014 by Chikis
imatfaal Posted August 20, 2014 Posted August 20, 2014 per the actual thread the problem is the use of (c) - this is common word processor short form for the copyright symbol © - you see it has changed in your OP. The LaTex renderer obviously knows this and goes to look for the symbol - but for some reason (probably because it is legal symbol rather than mathematical) the LaTex we use does not include it in the font; therefore it returns an error. if you want a c in brackets in Latex you can just add an extra white space[latex](c )[/latex]ie[math](c )[/math] edit although I note the noparse tag has stopped working again ie [_math](c )[_/math] but removing underscores
ajb Posted August 21, 2014 Posted August 21, 2014 [math]( C )(P \cap Q)[/math] Something like the above?
Chikis Posted August 21, 2014 Author Posted August 21, 2014 (edited) [math]( C )(P \cap Q)[/math]Something like the above?Not untill when it becomes[math]( c )(P \cap Q)'[/math] that c is a small letter. Is just like a kind of numbering the problems. We have problems a, b and c. Edited August 21, 2014 by Chikis
ajb Posted August 21, 2014 Posted August 21, 2014 [math]( a ) \hspace{10pt} E = m c^{2}[/math] [math]( b ) \hspace{10pt} \textnormal{card}(P \cap Q)' = 78[/math] [math]( c ) \hspace{10pt} y = mx +c[/math] Something more like the above...
Chikis Posted August 21, 2014 Author Posted August 21, 2014 Never mind. This [math]( c )(P \cap Q)'[/math] has sufficed everything.
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