LaTeX2e 1 About this document 2 Overview of LaTeX 3 Starting & ending 4 Document classes 5 Fonts 6 Layout 7 Sectioning 8 Cross references 9 Environments 10 Line breaking 11 Page breaking 12 Footnotes 13 Definitions 14 Counters 15 Lengths 16 Making paragraphs 17 Math formulas 18 Modes 19 Page styles 20 Spaces 21 Boxes 22 Special insertions 23 Splitting the input 24 Front/back matter 25 Letters 26 Terminal input/output 27 Command line Appendix A Document templates Concept Index Command Index LaTeX2e 1 About this document 2 Overview of LaTeX 3 Starting & ending 4 Document classes 4.1 Document class options 5 Fonts 5.1 Font styles 5.2 Font sizes 5.3 Low-level font commands 6 Layout 6.1 '\onecolumn' 6.2 '\twocolumn' 6.3 '\flushbottom' 6.4 '\raggedbottom' 6.5 Page layout parameters 7 Sectioning 8 Cross references 8.1 '\label' 8.2 '\pageref{KEY}' 8.3 '\ref{KEY}' 9 Environments 9.1 'abstract' 9.2 'array' 9.3 'center' 9.3.1 '\centering' 9.4 'description' 9.5 'displaymath' 9.6 'document' 9.7 'enumerate' 9.8 'eqnarray' 9.9 'equation' 9.10 'figure' 9.11 'filecontents': Create external files 9.12 'flushleft' 9.12.1 '\raggedright' 9.13 'flushright' 9.13.1 '\raggedleft' 9.14 'itemize' 9.15 'letter' environment: writing letters 9.16 'list' 9.17 'math' 9.18 'minipage' 9.19 'picture' 9.19.1 '\circle' 9.19.2 '\makebox' 9.19.3 '\framebox' 9.19.4 '\dashbox' 9.19.5 '\frame' 9.19.6 '\line' 9.19.7 '\linethickness' 9.19.8 '\thicklines' 9.19.9 '\thinlines' 9.19.10 '\multiput' 9.19.11 '\oval' 9.19.12 '\put' 9.19.13 '\shortstack' 9.19.14 '\vector' 9.20 'quotation' 9.21 'quote' 9.22 'tabbing' 9.23 'table' 9.24 'tabular' 9.24.1 '\multicolumn' 9.24.2 '\cline' 9.24.3 '\hline' 9.24.4 '\vline' 9.25 'thebibliography' 9.25.1 '\bibitem' 9.25.2 '\cite' 9.25.3 '\nocite' 9.25.4 Using BibTeX 9.26 'theorem' 9.27 'titlepage' 9.28 'verbatim' 9.28.1 '\verb' 9.29 'verse' 10 Line breaking 10.1 '\\'[*][MORESPACE] 10.2 '\obeycr' & '\restorecr' 10.3 '\newline' 10.4 '\-' (discretionary hyphen) 10.5 '\fussy' 10.6 '\sloppy' 10.7 '\hyphenation' 10.8 '\linebreak' & '\nolinebreak' 11 Page breaking 11.1 '\cleardoublepage' 11.2 '\clearpage' 11.3 '\newpage' 11.4 '\enlargethispage' 11.5 '\pagebreak' & '\nopagebreak' 12 Footnotes 12.1 '\footnote' 12.2 '\footnotemark' 12.3 '\footnotetext' 12.4 Symbolic footnotes 12.5 Footnote parameters 13 Definitions 13.1 '\newcommand' & '\renewcommand' 13.2 '\newcounter' 13.3 '\newlength' 13.4 '\newsavebox' 13.5 '\newenvironment' & '\renewenvironment' 13.6 '\newtheorem' 13.7 '\newfont' 13.8 '\protect' 14 Counters 14.1 '\alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol': Printing counters 14.2 '\usecounter{COUNTER}' 14.3 '\value{COUNTER}' 14.4 '\setcounter{COUNTER}{VALUE}' 14.5 '\addtocounter{COUNTER}{VALUE}' 14.6 '\refstepcounter{COUNTER}' 14.7 '\stepcounter{COUNTER}' 14.8 '\day \month \year': Predefined counters 15 Lengths 15.1 '\setlength{\LEN}{VALUE}' 15.2 \addtolength{\LEN}{AMOUNT} 15.3 '\settodepth' 15.4 '\settoheight' 15.5 '\settowidth{\LEN}{TEXT}' 15.6 Predefined lengths 16 Making paragraphs 16.1 '\indent' 16.2 '\noindent' 16.3 '\parskip' 16.4 Marginal notes 17 Math formulas 17.1 Subscripts & superscripts 17.2 Math symbols 17.3 Math functions 17.4 Math accents 17.5 Spacing in math mode 17.6 Math miscellany 18 Modes 19 Page styles 19.1 '\maketitle' 19.2 '\pagenumbering' 19.3 '\pagestyle' 19.4 '\thispagestyle{STYLE}' 20 Spaces 20.1 '\hspace' 20.2 '\hfill' 20.3 '\SPACE' 20.4 '\@' 20.5 '\thinspace' 20.6 '\/' 20.7 '\hrulefill' 20.8 '\dotfill' 20.9 '\addvspace' 20.10 '\bigskip \medskip \smallskip' 20.11 '\vfill' 20.12 '\vspace[*]{LENGTH}' 21 Boxes 21.1 '\mbox{TEXT}' 21.2 '\fbox' and '\framebox' 21.3 'lrbox' 21.4 '\makebox' 21.5 '\parbox' 21.6 '\raisebox' 21.7 '\savebox' 21.8 '\sbox{\BOXCMD}{TEXT}' 21.9 '\usebox{\BOXCMD' 22 Special insertions 22.1 Reserved characters 22.2 Text symbols 22.3 Accents 22.4 Non-English characters 22.5 '\rule' 22.6 '\today' 23 Splitting the input 23.1 '\include' 23.2 \'includeonly' 23.3 \input 24 Front/back matter 24.1 Tables of contents 24.1.1 \addcontentsline 24.1.2 \addtocontents 24.2 Glossaries 24.3 Indexes 25 Letters 25.1 \address{RETURN-ADDRESS} 25.2 '\cc' 25.3 '\closing' 25.4 '\encl' 25.5 '\location' 25.6 '\makelabels' 25.7 '\name' 25.8 '\opening{TEXT}' 25.9 '\ps' 25.10 '\signature{TEXT}' 25.11 '\startbreaks' 25.12 '\stopbreaks' 25.13 '\telephone' 26 Terminal input/output 26.1 '\typein[CMD]{MSG}' 26.2 '\typeout{MSG}' 27 Command line Appendix A Document templates A.1 'book' template A.2 'beamer' template A.3 'tugboat' template Concept Index Command Index LaTeX2e ******* This document is an unofficial reference manual for LaTeX, a document preparation system, version as of May 2014. It is intended to cover LaTeX2e, which has been the standard version of LaTeX for many years. 1 About this document ********************* The LaTeX document preparation system is implemented as a macro package for Donald E. Knuth's TeX typesetting program. LaTeX was originally created by Leslie Lamport; it is now maintained by a group of volunteers (). The official documentation written by the LaTeX project is available from their web site. The present document is completely unofficial and has not been reviewed by the LaTeX maintainers. Do not send bug reports or anything else about this document to them. Instead, please send all comments to . The home page for this document is . That page has links to the current output in various formats, sources, mailing lists, and other infrastructure. Of course, there are many, many other sources of information about LaTeX. Here are a few: Two pages of recommended references to LaTeX documentation. Writing your first document, with a bit of both text and math. The guide for document authors maintained as part of LaTeX; there are several others. Introduction to the TeX system, including LaTeX. 2 Overview of LaTeX ******************* What is LaTeX? LaTeX typesets a file of text using the TeX program and the LaTeX "macro package" for TeX. That is, it processes an input file containing the text of a document with interspersed commands that describe how the text should be formatted. LaTeX files are plain text that can be written in any reasonable editor. It produces at least three files as output: 1. The main output file, which is one of: '.dvi' If invoked as 'latex', a "Device Independent" ('.dvi') file is produced. This contains commands that can be translated into commands for virtually any output device. You can view such '.dvi' output of LaTeX by using a program such as 'xdvi' (display directly), 'dvips' (convert to PostScript), or 'dvipdfmx' (convert to PDF). '.pdf' If invoked as 'pdflatex', a "Portable Document Format" ('.pdf') file. Typically, this is a self-contained file, with all fonts and images embedded. This can be very useful, but it does make the output much larger than the '.dvi' produced from the same document. If invoked as 'lualatex', a '.pdf' file is created using the LuaTeX engine (). If invoked as 'xelatex', a '.pdf' file is created using the XeTeX engine (). Many other less-common variants of LaTeX (and TeX) exist, which can produce HTML, XML, and other things. 2. The "transcript" or '.log' file that contains summary information and diagnostic messages for any errors discovered in the input file. 3. An "auxiliary" or '.aux' file. This is used by LaTeX itself, for things such as cross-references. An open-ended list of other files might be created. We won't try to list them all. Xxx components? In the LaTeX input file, a command name starts with a '\', followed by either (a) a string of letters or (b) a single non-letter. Arguments contained in square brackets, '[]', are optional while arguments contained in braces, '{}', are required. LaTeX is case sensitive. Enter all commands in lower case unless explicitly directed to do otherwise. 3 Starting & ending ******************* A minimal input file looks like the following: \documentclass{CLASS} \begin{document} YOUR TEXT \end{document} where the CLASS is a valid document class for LaTeX. *Note Document classes::, for details of the various document classes available locally. You may include other LaTeX commands between the '\documentclass' and the '\begin{document}' commands (this area is called the "preamble"). 4 Document classes ****************** The class of a given document is defined with the command: \documentclass[OPTIONS]{CLASS} The '\documentclass' command must be the first command in a LaTeX source file. Built-in LaTeX document CLASS names are (many other document classes are available as add-ons; *note Overview::): article report book letter slides Standard OPTIONS are described below. 4.1 Document class options ========================== You can specify so-called "global options" or "class options" to the '\documentclass' command by enclosing them in square brackets as usual. To specify more than one OPTION, separate them with a comma: \documentclass[OPTION1,OPTION2,...]{CLASS} Here is the list of the standard class options. All of the standard classes except 'slides' accept the following options for selecting the typeface size (default is '10pt'): 10pt 11pt 12pt All of the standard classes accept these options for selecting the paper size (default is 'letterpaper'): a4paper a5paper b5paper executivepaper legalpaper letterpaper Miscellaneous other options: 'draft, final' mark/do not mark overfull boxes with a big black box; default is 'final'. 'fleqn' Put displayed formulas flush left; default is centered. 'landscape' Selects landscape format; default is portrait. 'leqno' Put equation numbers on the left side of equations; default is the right side. 'openbib' Use "open" bibliography format. 'titlepage, notitlepage' Specifies whether the title page is separate; default depends on the class. These options are not available with the slides class: 'onecolumn' 'twocolumn' Typeset in one or two columns; default is 'onecolumn'. 'oneside' 'twoside' Selects one- or two-sided layout; default is 'oneside', except for the 'book' class. The '\evensidemargin' ('\oddsidemargin' parameter determines the distance on even (odd) numbered pages between the left side of the page and the text's left margin. The defaults vary with the paper size and whether one- or two-side layout is selected. For one-sided printing the text is centered, for two-sided, '\oddsidemargin' is 40% of the difference between '\paperwidth' and '\textwidth', with '\evensidemargin' the remainder. 'openright' 'openany' Determines if a chapter should start on a right-hand page; default is 'openright' for book. The 'slides' class offers the option 'clock' for printing the time at the bottom of each note. Additional packages are loaded like this: \usepackage[OPTIONS]{PKG} To specify more than one PKG, you can separate them with a comma, or use multiple '\usepackage' commands. Any options given in the '\documentclass' command that are unknown by the selected document class are passed on to the packages loaded with '\usepackage'. 5 Fonts ******* Two important aspects of selecting a "font" are specifying a size and a style. The LaTeX commands for doing this are described here. 5.1 Font styles =============== The following type style commands are supported by LaTeX. This first group of commands is typically used with an argument, as in '\textit{italic text}'. In the table below, the corresponding command in parenthesis is the "declaration form", which takes no arguments. The scope of the declaration form lasts until the next type style command or the end of the current group. These commands, in both the argument form and the declaration form, are cumulative; e.g.,, you can say either '\sffamily\bfseries' or '\bfseries\sffamily' to get bold sans serif. You can alternatively use an environment form of the declarations; for instance, '\begin{ttfamily}...\end{ttfamily}'. These commands automatically supply an italic correction if needed. '\textrm (\rmfamily)' Roman. '\textit (\itshape)' Italics. '\emph' Emphasis (switches between '\textit' and '\textrm'). '\textmd (\mdseries)' Medium weight (default). '\textbf (\bfseries)' Boldface. '\textup (\upshape)' Upright (default). The opposite of slanted. '\textsl (\slshape)' Slanted. '\textsf (\sffamily)' Sans serif. '\textsc (\scshape)' Small caps. '\texttt (\ttfamily)' Typewriter. '\textnormal (\normalfont)' Main document font. '\mathrm' Roman, for use in math mode. '\mathbf' Boldface, for use in math mode. '\mathsf' Sans serif, for use in math mode. '\mathtt' Typewriter, for use in math mode. '\mathit' '(\mit)' Italics, for use in math mode. '\mathnormal' For use in math mode, e.g. inside another type style declaration. '\mathcal' 'Calligraphic' letters, for use in math mode. In addition, the command '\mathversion{bold}' can be used for switching to bold letters and symbols in formulas. '\mathversion{normal}' restores the default. Finally, the command '\oldstylenums{NUMERALS}' will typeset so-called "old-style" numerals, which have differing heights and depths (and sometimes widths) from the standard "lining" numerals. LaTeX's default fonts support this, and will respect '\textbf' (but not other styles; there are no italic old-style numerals in Computer Modern). Many other fonts have old-style numerals also; sometimes the 'textcomp' package must be loaded, and sometimes package options are provided to make them the default. FAQ entry: . LaTeX also provides the following commands, which unconditionally switch to the given style, that is, are _not_ cumulative. Also, they are used differently than the above commands: '{\CMD ...}' instead of '\CMD{...}'. These are two very different things. '\bf' Switch to bold face. '\cal' Switch to calligraphic letters for math. '\em' Emphasis (italics within roman, roman within italics). '\it' Italics. '\rm' Roman. '\sc' Small caps. '\sf' Sans serif. '\sl' Slanted (oblique). '\tt' Typewriter (monospace, fixed-width). Some people consider the unconditional font-switching commands, such as '\tt', obsolete and _only_ the cumulative commands ('\texttt') should be used. I (Karl) do not agree. There are perfectly reasonable situations when an unconditional font switch is precisely what you need to get the desired output; for one example, *note 'description': description. Both sets of commands have their place. 5.2 Font sizes ============== The following standard type size commands are supported by LaTeX. The table shows the command name and the corresponding actual font size used (in points) with the '10pt', '11pt', and '12pt' document size options, respectively (*note Document class options::). Command '10pt' '11pt' '12pt' -------------------------------------------------- '\tiny' 5 6 6 '\scriptsize' 7 8 8 '\footnotesize' 8 9 10 '\small' 9 10 10.95 '\normalsize' (default) 10 10.95 12 '\large' 12 12 14.4 '\Large' 14.4 14.4 17.28 '\LARGE' 17.28 17.28 20.74 '\huge' 20.74 20.74 24.88 '\Huge' 24.88 24.88 24.88 The commands as listed here are "declaration forms". The scope of the declaration form lasts until the next type style command or the end of the current group. You can also use the environment form of these commands; for instance, '\begin{tiny}...\end{tiny}'. 5.3 Low-level font commands =========================== These commands are primarily intended for writers of macros and packages. The commands listed here are only a subset of the available ones. '\fontencoding{enc}' Select font encoding. Valid encodings include 'OT1' and 'T1'. '\fontfamily{family}' Select font family. Valid families include: * 'cmr' for Computer Modern Roman * 'cmss' for Computer Modern Sans Serif * 'cmtt' for Computer Modern Typewriter and numerous others. '\fontseries{series}' Select font series. Valid series include: * 'm' Medium (normal) * 'b' Bold * 'c' Condensed * 'bc' Bold condensed * 'bx' Bold extended and various other combinations. '\fontshape{shape}' Select font shape. Valid shapes are: * 'n' Upright (normal) * 'it' Italic * 'sl' Slanted (oblique) * 'sc' Small caps * 'ui' Upright italics * 'ol' Outline The two last shapes are not available for most font families. '\fontsize{size}{skip}' Set font size. The first parameter is the font size to switch to and the second is the line spacing to use; this is stored in a parameter named '\baselineskip'. The unit of both parameters defaults to pt. The default '\baselineskip' for the Computer Modern typeface is 1.2 times the '\fontsize'. The line spacing is also multiplied by the value of the '\baselinestretch' parameter when the type size changes; the default is 1. However, the best way to "double space" a document, if you should be unlucky enough to have to produce such, is to use the 'setspace' package; see . '\linespread{FACTOR}' Equivalent to '\renewcommand{\baselinestretch}{FACTOR}', and therefore must be followed by '\selectfont' to have any effect. Best specified in the preamble, or use the 'setspace' package, as described just above. The changes made by calling the font commands described above do not come into effect until '\selectfont' is called. '\usefont{enc}{family}{series}{shape}' The same as invoking '\fontencoding', '\fontfamily', '\fontseries' and '\fontshape' with the given parameters, followed by '\selectfont'. 6 Layout ******** Miscellaneous commands for controlling the general layout of the page. 6.1 '\onecolumn' ================ The '\onecolumn' declaration starts a new page and produces single-column output. This is the default. 6.2 '\twocolumn' ================ Synopsis: \twocolumn[TEXT1COL] The '\twocolumn' declaration starts a new page and produces two-column output. If the optional TEXT1COL argument is present, it is typeset in one-column mode before the two-column typesetting starts. These parameters control typesetting in two-column output: '\columnsep' The distance between columns (35pt by default). '\columnseprule' The width of the rule between columns; the default is 0pt, so there is no rule. '\columnwidth' The width of the current column; this is equal to '\textwidth' in single-column text. These parameters control float behavior in two-column output: '\dbltopfraction' Maximum fraction at the top of a two-column page that may be occupied by floats. Default '.7', can be usefully redefined to (say) '.9' to avoid going to float pages so soon. '\dblfloatpagefraction' The minimum fraction of a float page that must be occupied by floats, for a two-column float page. Default '.5'. '\dblfloatsep' Distance between floats at the top or bottom of a two-column float page. Default '12pt plus2pt minus2pt' for '10pt' and '11pt' documents, '14pt plus2pt minus4pt' for '12pt'. '\dbltextfloatsep' Distance between a multi-column float at the top or bottom of a page and the main text. Default '20pt plus2pt minus4pt'. 6.3 '\flushbottom' ================== The '\flushbottom' declaration makes all text pages the same height, adding extra vertical space where necessary to fill out the page. This is the default if 'twocolumn' mode is selected (*note Document class options::). 6.4 '\raggedbottom' =================== The '\raggedbottom' declaration makes all pages the natural height of the material on that page. No rubber lengths will be stretched. 6.5 Page layout parameters ========================== '\headheight' Height of the box that contains the running head. Default is '30pt', except in the 'book' class, where it varies with the type size. '\headsep' Vertical distance between the bottom of the header line and the top of the main text. Default is '25pt', except in the 'book' class, where it varies with the type size. '\footskip' Distance from the baseline of the last line of text to the baseline of the page footer. Default is '30pt', except in the 'book' class, where it varies with the type size. '\linewidth' Width of the current line, decreased for each nested 'list' (*note list::). Specifically, it is smaller than '\textwidth' by the sum of '\leftmargin' and '\rightmargin' (*note itemize::). The default varies with the font size, paper width, two-column mode, etc. For an 'article' document in '10pt', it's set to '345pt'; in two-column mode, that becomes '229.5pt'. '\textheight' The normal vertical height of the page body; the default varies with the font size, document class, etc. For an 'article' or 'report' document in '10pt', it's set to '43\baselineskip'; for 'book', it's '41\baselineskip'. For '11pt', it's '38\baselineskip' and for '12pt', '36\baselineskip'. '\textwidth' The full horizontal width of the entire page body; the default varies as usual. For an 'article' or 'report' document, it's '345pt' at '10pt', '360pt' at '11pt', and '390pt' at '12pt'. For a 'book' document, it's '4.5in' at '10pt', and '5in' at '11pt' or '12pt'. In multi-column output, '\textwidth' remains the width of the entire page body, while '\columnwidth' is the width of one column (*note \twocolumn::). In lists (*note list::), '\textwidth' remains the width of the entire page body (and '\columnwidth' the width of the entire column), while '\linewidth' may decrease for nested lists. Inside a minipage (*note minipage::) or '\parbox' (*note \parbox::), all the width-related parameters are set to the specified width, and revert to their normal values at the end of the 'minipage' or '\parbox'. For completeness: '\hsize' is the TeX primitive parameter used when text is broken into lines. It should not be used in normal LaTeX documents. '\topmargin' Space between the top of the TeX page (one inch from the top of the paper, by default) and the top of the header. The default is computed based on many other parameters: '\paperheight - 2in - \headheight - \headsep - \textheight - \footskip', and then divided by two. '\topskip' Minimum distance between the top of the page body and the baseline of the first line of text. For the standard clases, the default is the same as the font size, e.g., '10pt' at '10pt'. 7 Sectioning ************ Sectioning commands provide the means to structure your text into units: '\part' '\chapter' (report and book class only) '\section' '\subsection' '\subsubsection' '\paragraph' '\subparagraph' All sectioning commands take the same general form, e.g., \chapter[TOCTITLE]{TITLE} In addition to providing the heading TITLE in the main text, the section title can appear in two other places: 1. The table of contents. 2. The running head at the top of the page. You may not want the same text in these places as in the main text. To handle this, the sectioning commands have an optional argument TOCTITLE that, when given, specifies the text for these other places. Also, all sectioning commands have '*'-forms that print TITLE as usual, but do not include a number and do not make an entry in the table of contents. For instance: \section*{Preamble} The '\appendix' command changes the way following sectional units are numbered. The '\appendix' command itself generates no text and does not affect the numbering of parts. The normal use of this command is something like \chapter{A Chapter} ... \appendix \chapter{The First Appendix} The 'secnumdepth' counter controls printing of section numbers. The setting \setcounter{secnumdepth}{LEVEL} suppresses heading numbers at any depth > LEVEL, where 'chapter' is level zero. (*Note \setcounter::.) 8 Cross references ****************** One reason for numbering things like figures and equations is to refer the reader to them, as in "See Figure 3 for more details." 8.1 '\label' ============ Synopsis: \label{KEY} A '\label' command appearing in ordinary text assigns to KEY the number of the current sectional unit; one appearing inside a numbered environment assigns that number to KEY. A KEY name can consist of any sequence of letters, digits, or punctuation characters. Upper and lowercase letters are distinguished. To avoid accidentally creating two labels with the same name, it is common to use labels consisting of a prefix and a suffix separated by a colon or period. Some conventionally-used prefixes: 'ch' for chapters 'sec' for lower-level sectioning commands 'fig' for figures 'tab' for tables 'eq' for equations Thus, a label for a figure would look like 'fig:snark' or 'fig.snark'. 8.2 '\pageref{KEY}' =================== Synopsis: \pageref{KEY} The '\pageref'{KEY} command produces the page number of the place in the text where the corresponding '\label'{KEY} command appears. 8.3 '\ref{KEY}' =============== Synopsis: \ref{KEY} The '\ref' command produces the number of the sectional unit, equation, footnote, figure, ..., of the corresponding '\label' command (*note \label::). It does not produce any text, such as the word 'Section' or 'Figure', just the bare number itself. 9 Environments ************** LaTeX provides many environments for marking off certain text. Each environment begins and ends in the same manner: \begin{ENVNAME} ... \end{ENVNAME} 9.1 'abstract' ============== Synopsis: \begin{abstract} ... \end{abstract} Environment for producing an abstract, possibly of multiple paragraphs. 9.2 'array' =========== Synopsis: \begin{array}{TEMPLATE} COL1 TEXT&COL1 TEXT&COLN}\\ ... \end{array} Math arrays are produced with the 'array' environment, normally within an 'equation' environment (*note equation::). It has a single mandatory TEMPLATE argument describing the number of columns and the alignment within them. Each column COL is specified by a single letter that tells how items in that row should be formatted, as follows: 'c' centered 'l' flush left 'r' flush right Column entries are separated by '&'. Column entries may include other LaTeX commands. Each row of the array is terminated with '\\'. In the template, the construct '@{TEXT}' puts TEXT between columns in each row. Here's an example: \begin{equation} \begin{array}{lrc} left1 & right1 & centered1 \\ left2 & right2 & centered2 \\ \end{array} \end{equation} The '\arraycolsep' parameter defines half the width of the space separating columns; the default is '5pt'. *Note tabular::, for other parameters which affect formatting in 'array' environments, namely '\arrayrulewidth' and '\arraystretch'. The 'array' environment can only be used in math mode. 9.3 'center' ============ Synopsis: \begin{center} LINE1 \\ LINE2 \\ \end{center} The 'center' environment allows you to create a paragraph consisting of lines that are centered within the left and right margins on the current page. Each line is terminated with the string '\\'. 9.3.1 '\centering' ------------------ The '\centering' declaration corresponds to the 'center' environment. This declaration can be used inside an environment such as 'quote' or in a 'parbox'. Thus, the text of a figure or table can be centered on the page by putting a '\centering' command at the beginning of the figure or table environment. Unlike the 'center' environment, the '\centering' command does not start a new paragraph; it simply changes how LaTeX formats paragraph units. To affect a paragraph unit's format, the scope of the declaration must contain the blank line or '\end' command (of an environment such as quote) that ends the paragraph unit. Here's an example: \begin{quote} \centering first line \\ second line \\ \end{quote} 9.4 'description' ================= Synopsis: \begin{description} \item [LABEL1] ITEM1 \item [LABEL2] ITEM2 ... \end{description} The 'description' environment is used to make labelled lists. Each LABEL is typeset in bold, flush right. The ITEM text may contain multiple paragraphs. Another variation: since the bold style is applied to the labels, if you typeset a label in typewriter using '\texttt', you'll get bold typewriter: '\item[\texttt{bold and typewriter}]'. This may be too bold, among other issues. To get just typewriter, use '\tt', which resets all other style variations: '\item[{\tt plain typewriter}]'. For details about list spacing, see *note itemize::. 9.5 'displaymath' ================= Synopsis: \begin{displaymath} MATH \end{displaymath} or \[MATH\] The 'displaymath' environment ('\[...\]' is a synonym) typesets the MATH text on its own line, centered by default. The global 'fleqn' option makes equations flush left; see *note Document class options::. No equation number is added to 'displaymath' text; to get an equation number, use the 'equation' environment (*note equation::). 9.6 'document' ============== The 'document' environment encloses the body of a document. It is required in every LaTeX document. *Note Starting & ending::. 9.7 'enumerate' =============== Synopsis: \begin{enumerate} \item ITEM1 \item ITEM2 ... \end{enumerate} The 'enumerate' environment produces a numbered list. Enumerations can be nested within one another, up to four levels deep. They can also be nested within other paragraph-making environments, such as 'itemize' (*note itemize::) and 'description' (*note description::). Each item of an enumerated list begins with an '\item' command. There must be at least one '\item' command within the environment. By default, the numbering at each level is done like this: 1. 1., 2., ... 2. (a), (b), ... 3. i., ii., ... 4. A., B., ... The 'enumerate' environment uses the counters '\enumi' through '\enumiv' counters (*note Counters::). If the optional argument to '\item' is given, the counter is not incremented for that item. The 'enumerate' environment uses the commands '\labelenumi' through '\labelenumiv' to produce the default label. So, you can use '\renewcommand' to change the labels (*note \newcommand & \renewcommand::). For instance, to have the first level use uppercase letters: \renewcommand{\labelenumi}{\Alph{enumi}} 9.8 'eqnarray' ============== First, a caveat: the 'eqnarray' environment has some infelicities which cannot be overcome; the article "Avoid eqnarray!" by Lars Madsen describes them in detail (). The bottom line is that it is better to use the 'align' environment (and others) from the 'amsmath' package. Nevertheless, here is a description of 'eqnarray': \begin{eqnarray} (or 'eqnarray*') FORMULA1 \\ FORMULA2 \\ ... \end{eqnarray} The 'eqnarray' environment is used to display a sequence of equations or inequalities. It is very much like a three-column 'array' environment, with consecutive rows separated by '\\' and consecutive items within a row separated by an '&'. '\\*' can also be used to separate equations, with its normal meaning of not allowing a page break at that line. An equation number is placed on every line unless that line has a '\nonumber' command. Alternatively, The '*'-form of the environment ('\begin{eqnarray*} ... \end{eqnarray*}') will omit equation numbering entirely, while otherwise being the same as 'eqnarray'. The command '\lefteqn' is used for splitting long formulas across lines. It typesets its argument in display style flush left in a box of zero width. 9.9 'equation' ============== Synopsis: \begin{equation} MATH \end{equation} The 'equation' environment starts a 'displaymath' environment (*note displaymath::), e.g., centering the MATH text on the page, and also places an equation number in the right margin. 9.10 'figure' ============= \begin{figure[*]}[PLACEMENT] FIGBODY \label{LABEL} \caption[LOFTITLE]{TEXT} \end{figure} Figures are objects that are not part of the normal text, and are instead "floated" to a convenient place, such as the top of a page. Figures will not be split between two pages. When typesetting in double-columns, the starred form produces a full-width figure (across both columns). The optional argument '[placement]' determines where LaTeX will try to place your figure. There are four places where LaTeX can possibly put a float: 't' (Top)--at the top of a text page. 'b' (Bottom)--at the bottom of a text page. However, 'b' is not allowed for full-width floats ('figure*') with double-column output. To ameliorate this, use the 'stfloats' or 'dblfloatfix' package, but see the discussion at caveats in the FAQ: . 'h' (Here)--at the position in the text where the figure environment appears. However, this is not allowed by itself; 't' is automatically added. To absolutely force a figure to appear "here", you can '\usepackage{float}' and use the 'H' specifier which it defines. For further discussion, see the FAQ entry at . 'p' (Page of floats)--on a separate float page, which is a page containing no text, only floats. '!' Used in addition to one of the above; for this float only, LaTeX ignores the restrictions on both the number of floats that can appear and the relative amounts of float and non-float text on the page. The '!' specifier does _not_ mean "put the float here"; see above. The standard report and article classes use the default placement 'tbp'. The body of the figure is made up of whatever text, LaTeX commands, etc. you wish. The '\caption' command specifies caption TEXT for the figure. The caption is numbered by default. If LOFTITLE is present, it is used in the list of figures instead of TEXT (*note Tables of contents::). Parameters relating to fractions of pages occupied by float and non-float text: The maximum fraction of the page allowed to be occuped by floats at the bottom; default '.3'. '\floatpagefraction' The minimum fraction of a float page that must be occupied by floats; default '.5'. '\textfraction' Minimum fraction of a page that must be text; if floats take up too much space to preserve this much text, floats will be moved to a different page. The default is '.2'. '\topfraction' Maximum fraction at the top of a page that may be occupied before floats; default '.7'. Parameters relating to vertical space around floats: '\floatsep' Space between floats at the top or bottom of a page; default '12pt plus2pt minus2pt'. '\intextsep' Space above and below a float in the middle of the main text; default '12pt plus2pt minus2pt' for '10pt' and '11pt' styles, '14pt plus4pt minus4pt' for '12pt'. '\textfloatsep' Space between the last (first) float at the top (bottom) of a page; default '20pt plus2pt minus4pt'. Parameters relating to the number of floats on a page: '\bottomnumber' Maximum number of floats that can appear at the bottom of a text page; default 1. '\topnumber' Maximum number of floats that can appear at the top of a text page; default 2. '\totalnumber' Maximum number of floats that can appear on a text page; default 3. The principal TeX FAQ entry relating to floats: . 9.11 'filecontents': Create external files ========================================== Synopsis: \begin{filecontents}{FILENAME} CONTENTS-OF-FILE \end{filecontents} ... \documentclass{MY-DOCUMENT-CLASS} The 'filecontents' environment is an "initial command", meaning that it can be used only before the '\documentclass' command, as in the synopsis above. LaTeX will create a file named FILENAME with the content CONTENTS-OF-FILE preceded by a header comment indicating how and when the file was generated. If the file already exists then nothing will happen. You can also use the 'filecontents' package, which has the following advantages: * If the file already exists, then it will be overwritten. * You can use the 'filecontents' environment at any point after the declaration '\usepackage{filecontents}', not just before '\documentclass'. * The 'filecontents' package also provides a 'filecontents*' environment which is used in the same way as the 'filecontents' environment except that it won't insert any leading comment, so it is better suited to create files which aren't in LaTeX format. The 'filecontents' environment only creates the file, and is unrelated to using the created file. So you need to use, for instance, '\input' or '\usepackage' or '\bibliography' or whatever is applicable, to use the created file. This environment is also useful to make a self-contained document, for example, for a bug report, or to keep a '.bib' file with the main document. 9.12 'flushleft' ================ \begin{flushleft} LINE1 \\ LINE2 \\ ... \end{flushleft} The 'flushleft' environment allows you to create a paragraph consisting of lines that are flush to the left-hand margin and ragged right Each line must be terminated with the string '\\'. 9.12.1 '\raggedright' --------------------- The '\raggedright' declaration corresponds to the 'flushleft' environment. This declaration can be used inside an environment such as 'quote' or in a 'parbox'. Unlike the 'flushleft' environment, the '\raggedright' command does not start a new paragraph; it only changes how LaTeX formats paragraph units. To affect a paragraph unit's format, the scope of the declaration must contain the blank line or '\end' command that ends the paragraph unit. 9.13 'flushright' ================= \begin{flushright} LINE1 \\ LINE2 \\ ... \end{flushright} The 'flushright' environment allows you to create a paragraph consisting of lines that are flush to the right-hand margin and ragged left. Each line must be terminated with the string '\\'. 9.13.1 '\raggedleft' -------------------- The '\raggedleft' declaration corresponds to the 'flushright' environment. This declaration can be used inside an environment such as 'quote' or in a 'parbox'. Unlike the 'flushright' environment, the '\raggedleft' command does not start a new paragraph; it only changes how LaTeX formats paragraph units. To affect a paragraph unit's format, the scope of the declaration must contain the blank line or '\end' command that ends the paragraph unit. 9.14 'itemize' ============== Synopsis: \begin{itemize} \item ITEM1 \item ITEM2 ... \end{itemize} The 'itemize' environment produces an "unordered", "bulleted" list. Itemizations can be nested within one another, up to four levels deep. They can also be nested within other paragraph-making environments, such as 'enumerate' (*note enumerate::). Each item of an 'itemize' list begins with an '\item' command. There must be at least one '\item' command within the environment. By default, the marks at each level look like this: 1. * (bullet) 2. -- (bold en-dash) 3. * (asterisk) 4. . (centered dot, rendered here as a period) The 'itemize' environment uses the commands '\labelitemi' through '\labelitemiv' to produce the default label. So, you can use '\renewcommand' to change the labels. For instance, to have the first level use diamonds: \renewcommand{\labelitemi}{$\diamond$} The '\leftmargini' through '\leftmarginvi' parameters define the distance between the left margin of the enclosing environment and the left margin of the list. By convention, '\leftmargin' is set to the appropriate '\leftmarginN' when a new level of nesting is entered. The defaults vary from '.5em' (highest levels of nesting) to '2.5em' (first level), and are a bit reduced in two-column mode. This example greatly reduces the margin space for outermost lists: \setlength{\leftmargini}{1.25em} % default 2.5em Some parameters that affect list formatting: '\itemindent' Extra indentation before each item in a list; default zero. '\labelsep' Space between the label and text of an item; default '.5em'. '\labelwidth' Width of the label; default '2em', or '1.5em' in two-column mode. '\listparindent' Extra indentation added to second and subsequent paragraphs within a list item; default '0pt'. '\rightmargin' Horizontal distance between the right margin of the list and the enclosing environment; default '0pt', except in the 'quote', 'quotation', and 'verse' environments, where it is set equal to '\leftmargin'. Parameters affecting vertical spacing between list items (rather loose, by default). '\itemsep' Vertical space between items. The default is '2pt plus1pt minus1pt' for '10pt' documents, '3pt plus2pt minus1pt' for '11pt', and '4.5pt plus2pt minus1pt' for '12pt'. '\parsep' Extra vertical space between paragraphs within a list item. Defaults are the same as '\itemsep'. '\topsep' Vertical space between the first item and the preceding paragraph. For top-level lists, the default is '8pt plus2pt minus4pt' for '10pt' documents, '9pt plus3pt minus5pt' for '11pt', and '10pt plus4pt minus6pt' for '12pt'. These are reduced for nested lists. '\partopsep' Extra space added to '\topsep' when the list environment starts a paragraph. The default is '2pt plus1pt minus1pt' for '10pt' documents, '3pt plus1pt minus1pt' for '11pt', and '3pt plus2pt minus2pt' for '12pt'. Especially for lists with short items, it may be desirable to elide space between items. Here is an example defining an 'itemize*' environment with no extra spacing between items, or between paragraphs within a single item ('\parskip' is not list-specific, *note \parskip::): \newenvironment{itemize*}% {\begin{itemize}% \setlength{\itemsep}{0pt}% \setlength{\parsep}{0pt}}% \setlength{\parskip}{0pt}}% {\end{itemize}} 9.15 'letter' environment: writing letters ========================================== This environment is used for creating letters. *Note Letters::. 9.16 'list' =========== The 'list' environment is a generic environment which is used for defining many of the more specific environments. It is seldom used in documents, but often in macros. \begin{list}{LABELING}{SPACING} \item ITEM1 \item ITEM2 ... \end{list} The mandatory LABELING argument specifies how items should be labelled (unless the optional argument is supplied to '\item'). This argument is a piece of text that is inserted in a box to form the label. It can and usually does contain other LaTeX commands. The mandatory SPACING argument contains commands to change the spacing parameters for the list. This argument will most often be empty, i.e., '{}', which leaves the default spacing. The width used for typesetting the list items is specified by '\linewidth' (*note Page layout parameters::). 9.17 'math' =========== Synopsis: \begin{math} MATH \end{math} The 'math' environment inserts the given MATH within the running text. '\(...\))' and '$...$' are synonyms. *Note Math formulas::. 9.18 'minipage' =============== \begin{minipage}[POSITION][HEIGHT][INNER-POS]{WIDTH} TEXT \end{minipage} The 'minipage' environment typesets its body TEXT in a block that will not be broken across pages. This is similar to the '\parbox' command (*note \parbox::), but unlike '\parbox', other paragraph-making environments can be used inside a minipage. The arguments are the same as for '\parbox' (*note \parbox::). By default, paragraphs are not indented in the 'minipage' environment. You can restore indentation with a command such as '\setlength{\parindent}{1pc}' command. Footnotes in a 'minipage' environment are handled in a way that is particularly useful for putting footnotes in figures or tables. A '\footnote' or '\footnotetext' command puts the footnote at the bottom of the minipage instead of at the bottom of the page, and it uses the '\mpfootnote' counter instead of the ordinary 'footnote' counter (*note Counters::). However, don't put one minipage inside another if you are using footnotes; they may wind up at the bottom of the wrong minipage. 9.19 'picture' ============== \begin{picture}(width,height)(x offset,y offset) ... PICTURE COMMANDS ... \end{picture} The 'picture' environment allows you to create just about any kind of picture you want containing text, lines, arrows and circles. You tell LaTeX where to put things in the picture by specifying their coordinates. A coordinate is a number that may have a decimal point and a minus sign--a number like '5', '0.3' or '-3.1416'. A coordinate specifies a length in multiples of the unit length '\unitlength', so if '\unitlength' has been set to '1cm', then the coordinate 2.54 specifies a length of 2.54 centimeters. You should only change the value of '\unitlength', using the '\setlength' command, outside of a 'picture' environment. The default value is '1pt'. A position is a pair of coordinates, such as '(2.4,-5)', specifying the point with x-coordinate '2.4' and y-coordinate '-5'. Coordinates are specified in the usual way with respect to an origin, which is normally at the lower-left corner of the picture. Note that when a position appears as an argument, it is not enclosed in braces; the parentheses serve to delimit the argument. The 'picture' environment has one mandatory argument, which is a 'position'. It specifies the size of the picture. The environment produces a rectangular box with width and height determined by this argument's x- and y-coordinates. The 'picture' environment also has an optional 'position' argument, following the 'size' argument, that can change the origin. (Unlike ordinary optional arguments, this argument is not contained in square brackets.) The optional argument gives the coordinates of the point at the lower-left corner of the picture (thereby determining the origin). For example, if '\unitlength' has been set to '1mm', the command \begin{picture}(100,200)(10,20) produces a picture of width 100 millimeters and height 200 millimeters, whose lower-left corner is the point (10,20) and whose upper-right corner is therefore the point (110,220). When you first draw a picture, you typically omit the optional argument, leaving the origin at the lower-left corner. If you then want to modify your picture by shifting everything, you can just add the appropriate optional argument. The environment's mandatory argument determines the nominal size of the picture. This need bear no relation to how large the picture really is; LaTeX will happily allow you to put things outside the picture, or even off the page. The picture's nominal size is used by LaTeX in determining how much room to leave for it. Everything that appears in a picture is drawn by the '\put' command. The command \put (11.3,-.3){...} puts the object specified by '...' in the picture, with its reference point at coordinates (11.3,-.3). The reference points for various objects will be described below. The '\put' command creates an "LR box". You can put anything that can go in an '\mbox' (*note \mbox::) in the text argument of the '\put' command. When you do this, the reference point will be the lower left corner of the box. The 'picture' commands are described in the following sections. 9.19.1 '\circle' ---------------- \circle[*]{DIAMETER} The '\circle' command produces a circle with a diameter as close to the specified one as possible. The '*'-form of the command draws a solid circle. Circles up to 40 pt can be drawn. 9.19.2 '\makebox' ----------------- '\makebox(width,height)[position]{...}' The '\makebox' command for the picture environment is similar to the normal '\makebox' command except that you must specify a 'width' and 'height' in multiples of '\unitlength'. The optional argument, '[position]', specifies the quadrant that your text appears in. You may select up to two of the following: 't' Moves the item to the top of the rectangle. 'b' Moves the item to the bottom. 'l' Moves the item to the left. 'r' Moves the item to the right. *Note \makebox::. 9.19.3 '\framebox' ------------------ Synopsis: \framebox(WIDTH,HEIGHT)[POS]{...} The '\framebox' command is like '\makebox' (see previous section), except that it puts a frame around the outside of the box that it creates. The '\framebox' command produces a rule of thickness '\fboxrule', and leaves a space '\fboxsep' between the rule and the contents of the box. 9.19.4 '\dashbox' ----------------- Draws a box with a dashed line. Synopsis: \dashbox{DLEN}(RWIDTH,RHEIGHT)[POS]{TEXT} '\dashbox' creates a dashed rectangle around TEXT in a 'picture' environment. Dashes are DLEN units long, and the rectangle has overall width RWIDTH and height RHEIGHT. The TEXT is positioned at optional POS. A dashed box looks best when the 'rwidth' and 'rheight' are multiples of the 'dlen'. 9.19.5 '\frame' --------------- Synopsis: \frame{TEXT} The '\frame' command puts a rectangular frame around TEXT. The reference point is the bottom left corner of the frame. No extra space is put between the frame and the object. 9.19.6 '\line' -------------- Synopsis: \line(XSLOPE,YSLOPE){LENGTH} The '\line' command draws a line with the given LENGTH and slope XSLOPE/YSLOPE. Standard LaTeX can only draw lines with SLOPE = x/y, where x and y have integer values from -6 through 6. For lines of any slope, not to mention other shapes, see the 'curve2e' and many many other packages on CTAN. 9.19.7 '\linethickness' ----------------------- The '\linethickness{DIM}' command declares the thickness of horizontal and vertical lines in a picture environment to be DIM, which must be a positive length. '\linethickness' does not affect the thickness of slanted lines, circles, or the quarter circles drawn by '\oval'. 9.19.8 '\thicklines' -------------------- The '\thicklines' command is an alternate line thickness for horizontal and vertical lines in a picture environment; cf. *note \linethickness:: and *note \thinlines::. 9.19.9 '\thinlines' ------------------- The '\thinlines' command is the default line thickness for horizontal and vertical lines in a picture environment; cf. *note \linethickness:: and *note \thicklines::. 9.19.10 '\multiput' ------------------- Synopsis: \multiput(X,Y)(DELTA_X,DELTA_Y){N}{OBJ} The '\multiput' command copies the object OBJ in a regular pattern across a picture. OBJ is first placed at position (x,y), then at (x+\delta x,y+\delta y), and so on, N times. 9.19.11 '\oval' --------------- Synopsis: \oval(WIDTH,HEIGHT)[PORTION] The '\oval' command produces a rectangle with rounded corners. The optional argument PORTION allows you to select part of the oval via the following: 't' selects the top portion; 'b' selects the bottom portion; 'r' selects the right portion; 'l' selects the left portion. The "corners" of the oval are made with quarter circles with a maximum radius of 20pt, so large "ovals" will look more like boxes with rounded corners. 9.19.12 '\put' -------------- '\put(x coord,y coord){ ... }' The '\put' command places the item specified by the mandatory argument at the given coordinates. 9.19.13 '\shortstack' --------------------- Synopsis: \shortstack[POSITION]{...\\...\\...} The '\shortstack' command produces a stack of objects. The valid positions are: 'r' Move the objects to the right of the stack. 'l' Move the objects to the left of the stack 'c' Move the objects to the centre of the stack (default) Objects are separated with '\\'. 9.19.14 '\vector' ----------------- Synopsis: \vector(X-SLOPE,Y-SLOPE){LENGTH} The '\vector' command draws a line with an arrow of the specified length and slope. The x and y values must lie between -4 and +4, inclusive. 9.20 'quotation' ================ Synopsis: \begin{quotation} TEXT \end{quotation} The margins of the 'quotation' environment are indented on both the left and the right. The text is justified at both margins. Leaving a blank line between text produces a new paragraph. Unlike the 'quote' environment, each paragraph is indented normally. 9.21 'quote' ============ Snyopsis: \begin{quote} TEXT \end{quote} The margins of the 'quote' environment are indented on both the left and the right. The text is justified at both margins. Leaving a blank line between text produces a new paragraph. Unlike the 'quotation' environment, paragraphs are not indented. 9.22 'tabbing' ============== Synopsis: \begin{tabbing} ROW1COL1 \= ROW1COL2 \= ROW1COL3 \= ROW1COL4 \\ ROW2COL1 \> \> ROW2COL3 \\ ... \end{tabbing} The 'tabbing' environment provides a way to align text in columns. It works by setting tab stops and tabbing to them much as was done on an ordinary typewriter. It is best suited for cases where the width of each column is constant and known in advance. This environment can be broken across pages, unlike the 'tabular' environment. The following commands can be used inside a 'tabbing' enviroment: '\\ (tabbing)' End a line. '\= (tabbing)' Sets a tab stop at the current position. '\> (tabbing)' Advances to the next tab stop. '\<' Put following text to the left of the local margin (without changing the margin). Can only be used at the start of the line. '\+' Moves the left margin of the next and all the following commands one tab stop to the right, beginning tabbed line if necessary. '\-' Moves the left margin of the next and all the following commands one tab stop to the left, beginning tabbed line if necessary. '\' (tabbing)' Moves everything that you have typed so far in the current column, i.e. everything from the most recent '\>', '\<', '\'', '\\', or '\kill' command, to the right of the previous column, flush against the current column's tab stop. '\` (tabbing)' Allows you to put text flush right against any tab stop, including tab stop 0. However, it can't move text to the right of the last column because there's no tab stop there. The '\`' command moves all the text that follows it, up to the '\\' or '\end{tabbing}' command that ends the line, to the right margin of the tabbing environment. There must be no '\>' or '\'' command between the '\`' and the command that ends the line. '\a (tabbing)' In a 'tabbing' environment, the commands '\=', '\'' and '\`' do not produce accents as usual (*note Accents::). Instead, the commands '\a=', '\a'' and '\a`' are used. '\kill' Sets tab stops without producing text. Works just like '\\' except that it throws away the current line instead of producing output for it. The effect of any '\=', '\+' or '\-' commands in that line remain in effect. '\poptabs' Restores the tab stop positions saved by the last '\pushtabs'. '\pushtabs' Saves all current tab stop positions. Useful for temporarily changing tab stop positions in the middle of a 'tabbing' environment. '\tabbingsep' Distance to left of tab stop moved by '\''. This example typesets a Pascal function in a traditional format: \begin{tabbing} function \= fact(n : integer) : integer;\\ \> begin \= \+ \\ \> if \= n $>$ 1 then \+ \\ fact := n * fact(n-1) \- \\ else \+ \\ fact := 1; \-\- \\ end;\\ \end{tabbing} 9.23 'table' ============ Synopsis: \begin{table}[placement] body of the table \caption{table title} \end{table} Tables are objects that are not part of the normal text, and are usually "floated" to a convenient place, like the top of a page. Tables will not be split between two pages. The optional argument '[placement]' determines where LaTeX will try to place your table. There are four places where LaTeX can possibly put a float; these are the same as that used with the 'figure' environment, and described there (*note figure::). The standard 'report' and 'article' classes use the default placement '[tbp]'. The body of the table is made up of whatever text, LaTeX commands, etc., you wish. The '\caption' command allows you to title your table. 9.24 'tabular' ============== Synopsis: \begin{tabular}[pos]{cols} column 1 entry & column 2 entry ... & column n entry \\ ... \end{tabular} or \begin{tabular*}{width}[pos]{cols} column 1 entry & column 2 entry ... & column n entry \\ ... \end{tabular*} These environments produce a box consisting of a sequence of rows of items, aligned vertically in columns. '\\' must be used to specify the end of each row of the table, except for the last, where it is optional--unless an '\hline' command (to put a rule below the table) follows. The mandatory and optional arguments consist of: 'width' Specifies the width of the 'tabular*' environment. There must be rubber space between columns that can stretch to fill out the specified width. 'pos' Specifies the vertical position; default is alignment on the centre of the environment. 't' align on top row 'b' align on bottom row 'cols' Specifies the column formatting. It consists of a sequence of the following specifiers, corresponding to the sequence of columns and intercolumn material. 'l' A column of left-aligned items. 'r' A column of right-aligned items. 'c' A column of centered items. '|' A vertical line the full height and depth of the environment. '@{TEXT}' This inserts TEXT in every row. An @-expression suppresses the intercolumn space normally inserted between columns; any desired space before the adjacent item must be included in TEXT. To insert commands that are automatically executed before a given column, you have to load the 'array' package and use the '>{...}' specifier. An '\extracolsep{wd}' command in an @-expression causes an extra space of width 'wd' to appear to the left of all subsequent columns, until countermanded by another '\extracolsep' command. Unlike ordinary intercolumn space, this extra space is not suppressed by an @-expression. An '\extracolsep' command can be used only in an @-expression in the 'cols' argument. 'p{WD}' Produces a column with each item typeset in a parbox of width WD, as if it were the argument of a '\parbox[t]{WD}' command. However, a '\\' may not appear in the item, except in the following situations: 1. inside an environment like 'minipage', 'array', or 'tabular'. 2. inside an explicit '\parbox'. 3. in the scope of a '\centering', '\raggedright', or '\raggedleft' declaration. The latter declarations must appear inside braces or an environment when used in a 'p'-column element. '*{NUM}{COLS}' Equivalent to NUM copies of COLS, where NUM is a positive integer and COLS is any list of column-specifiers, which may contain another '*-expression'. Parameters that control formatting: '\arrayrulewidth' Thickness of the rule created by '|', '\hline', and '\vline' in the 'tabular' and 'array' environments; the default is '.4pt'. '\arraystretch' Scaling of spacing between rows in the 'tabular' and 'array' environments; default is '1', for no scaling. '\doublerulesep' Horizontal distance between the vertical rules produced by '||' in the 'tabular' and 'array' environments; default is '2pt'. '\tabcolsep' Half the width of the space between columns; default is '6pt'. The following commands can be used inside a 'tabular' environment: 9.24.1 '\multicolumn' --------------------- Synopsis: \multicolumn{COLS}{POS}{TEXT} The '\multicolumn' command makes an entry that spans several columns. The first mandatory argument, COLS, specifies the number of columns to span. The second mandatory argument, POS, specifies the formatting of the entry; 'c' for centered, 'l' for flushleft, 'r' for flushright. The third mandatory argument, TEXT, specifies what text to put in the entry. Here's an example showing two columns separated by an en-dash; '\multicolumn' is used for the heading: \begin{tabular}{r@{--}l} \multicolumn{2}{c}{\bf Unicode}\cr 0x80&0x7FF \cr 0x800&0xFFFF \cr 0x10000&0x1FFFF \cr \end{tabular} 9.24.2 '\cline' --------------- Synopsis: \cline{I-J} The '\cline' command draws horizontal lines across the columns specified, beginning in column I and ending in column J, which are specified in the mandatory argument. 9.24.3 '\hline' --------------- The '\hline' command draws a horizontal line the width of the enclosing 'tabular' or 'array' environment. It's most commonly used to draw a line at the top, bottom, and between the rows of a table. 9.24.4 '\vline' --------------- The '\vline' command will draw a vertical line extending the full height and depth of its row. An '\hfill' command can be used to move the line to the edge of the column. It can also be used in an @-expression. 9.25 'thebibliography' ====================== Synopsis: \begin{thebibliography}{WIDEST-LABEL} \bibitem[LABEL]{CITE_KEY} ... \end{thebibliography} The 'thebibliography' environment produces a bibliography or reference list. In the 'article' class, this reference list is labelled "References"; in the 'report' class, it is labelled "Bibliography". You can change the label (in the standard classes) by redefining the command '\refname'. For instance, this eliminates it entirely: \renewcommand{\refname}{} The mandatory WIDEST-LABEL argument is text that, when typeset, is as wide as the widest item label produced by the '\bibitem' commands. It is typically given as '9' for bibliographies with less than 10 references, '99' for ones with less than 100, etc. 9.25.1 '\bibitem' ----------------- Synopsis: \bibitem[LABEL]{CITE_KEY} The '\bibitem' command generates an entry labelled by LABEL. If the LABEL argument is missing, a number is automatically generated using the 'enumi' counter. The CITE_KEY is any sequence of letters, numbers, and punctuation symbols not containing a comma. This command writes an entry to the '.aux' file containing the item's CITE_KEY and label. When the '.aux' file is read by the '\begin{document}' command, the item's 'label' is associated with 'cite_key', causing references to CITE_KEY with a '\cite' command (see next section) to produce the associated label. 9.25.2 '\cite' -------------- Synopsis: \cite[SUBCITE]{KEYS The KEYS argument is a list of one or more citation keys, separated by commas. This command generates an in-text citation to the references associated with KEYS by entries in the '.aux' file. The text of the optional SUBCITE argument appears after the citation. For example, '\cite[p.~314]{knuth}' might produce '[Knuth, p. 314]'. 9.25.3 '\nocite' ---------------- '\nocite{key_list}' The '\nocite' command produces no text, but writes 'key_list', which is a list of one or more citation keys, on the '.aux' file. 9.25.4 Using BibTeX ------------------- If you use the BibTeX program by Oren Patashnik (highly recommended if you need a bibliography of more than a couple of titles) to maintain your bibliography, you don't use the 'thebibliography' environment (*note thebibliography::). Instead, you include the lines \bibliographystyle{BIBSTYLE} \bibliography{BIBFILE1,BIBFILE2} The '\bibliographystyle' command does not produce any output of its own. Rather, it defines the style in which the bibliography will be produced: BIBSTYLE refers to a file BIBSTYLE'.bst', which defines how your citations will look. The standard STYLE names distributed with BibTeX are: 'alpha' Sorted alphabetically. Labels are formed from name of author and year of publication. 'plain' Sorted alphabetically. Labels are numeric. 'unsrt' Like 'plain', but entries are in order of citation. 'abbrv' Like 'plain', but more compact labels. In addition, numerous other BibTeX style files exist tailored to the demands of various publications. See . The '\bibliography' command is what actually produces the bibliography. The argument to '\bibliography' refers to files named 'BIBFILE.bib', which should contain your database in BibTeX format. Only the entries referred to via '\cite' and '\nocite' will be listed in the bibliography. 9.26 'theorem' ============== Synopsis: \begin{theorem} THEOREM-TEXT \end{theorem} The 'theorem' environment produces "Theorem N" in boldface followed by THEOREM-TEXT, where the numbering possibilities for N are described under '\newtheorem' (*note \newtheorem::). 9.27 'titlepage' ================ Synopsis: \begin{titlepage} TEXT \end{titlepage} The 'titlepage' environment creates a title page, i.e., a page with no printed page number or heading. It also causes the following page to be numbered page one. Formatting the title page is left to you. The '\today' command may be useful on title pages (*note \today::). You can use the '\maketitle' command (*note \maketitle::) to produce a standard title page without a 'titlepage' environment. 9.28 'verbatim' =============== Synopsis: \begin{verbatim} LITERAL-TEXT \end{verbatim} The 'verbatim' environment is a paragraph-making environment in which LaTeX produces exactly what you type in; for instance the '\' character produces a printed '\'. It turns LaTeX into a typewriter with carriage returns and blanks having the same effect that they would on a typewriter. The 'verbatim' uses a monospaced typewriter-like font ('\tt'). 9.28.1 '\verb' -------------- Synopsis: \verbCHARLITERAL-TEXTCHAR \verb*CHARLITERAL-TEXTCHAR The '\verb' command typesets LITERAL-TEXT as it is input, including special characters and spaces, using the typewriter ('\tt') font. No spaces are allowed between '\verb' or '\verb*' and the delimiter CHAR, which begins and ends the verbatim text. The delimiter must not appear in LITERAL-TEXT. The '*'-form differs only in that spaces are printed with a "visible space" character. 9.29 'verse' ============ Synopsis: \begin{verse} LINE1 \\ LINE2 \\ ... \end{verse} The 'verse' environment is designed for poetry, though you may find other uses for it. The margins are indented on the left and the right, paragraphs are not indented, and the text is not justified. Separate the lines of each stanza with '\\', and use one or more blank lines to separate the stanzas. 10 Line breaking **************** The first thing LaTeX does when processing ordinary text is to translate your input file into a sequence of glyphs and spaces. To produce a printed document, this sequence must be broken into lines (and these lines must be broken into pages). LaTeX usually does the line (and page) breaking for you, but in some environments, you do the line breaking yourself with the '\\' command, and you can always manually force breaks. 10.1 '\\'[*][MORESPACE] ======================= The '\\' command tells LaTeX to start a new line. It has an optional argument, MORESPACE, that specifies how much extra vertical space is to be inserted before the next line. This can be a negative amount. The '\\*' command is the same as the ordinary '\\' command except that it tells LaTeX not to start a new page after the line. 10.2 '\obeycr' & '\restorecr' ============================= The '\obeycr' command makes a return in the input file ('^^M', internally) the same as '\\' (followed by '\relax'). So each new line in the input will also be a new line in the output. '\restorecr' restores normal line-breaking behavior. 10.3 '\newline' =============== The '\newline' command breaks the line at the present point, with no stretching of the text before it. It can only be used in paragraph mode. 10.4 '\-' (discretionary hyphen) ================================ The '\-' command tells LaTeX that it may hyphenate the word at that point. LaTeX is very good at hyphenating, and it will usually find most of the correct hyphenation points, and almost never use an incorrect one. The '\-' command is used for the exceptional cases. When you insert '\-' commands in a word, the word will only be hyphenated at those points and not at any of the hyphenation points that LaTeX might otherwise have chosen. 10.5 '\fussy' ============= The declaration '\fussy' (which is the default) makes TeX picky about line breaking. This usually avoids too much space between words, at the cost of an occasional overfull box. This command cancels the effect of a previous '\sloppy' command (*note \sloppy::. 10.6 '\sloppy' ============== The declaration '\sloppy' makes TeX less fussy about line breaking. This will avoid overfull boxes, at the cost of loose interword spacing. Lasts until a '\fussy' command is issued (*note \fussy::). 10.7 '\hyphenation' =================== Synopsis: \hyphenation{WORD-ONE WORD-TWO} The '\hyphenation' command declares allowed hyphenation points with a '-' character in the given words. The words are separated by spaces. TeX will only hyphenate if the word matches exactly, no inflections are tried. Multiple '\hyphenation' commands accumulate. Some examples (the default TeX hyphenation patterns misses the hyphenations in these words): \hyphenation{ap-pen-dix col-umns data-base data-bases} 10.8 '\linebreak' & '\nolinebreak' ================================== Synopses: \linebreak[PRIORITY] \nolinebreak[PRIORITY] By default, the '\linebreak' ('\nolinebreak') command forces (prevents) a line break at the current position. For '\linebreak', the spaces in the line are stretched out so that it extends to the right margin as usual. With the optional argument PRIORITY, you can convert the command from a demand to a request. The PRIORITY must be a number from 0 to 4. The higher the number, the more insistent the request. 11 Page breaking **************** LaTeX starts new pages asynchronously, when enough material has accumulated to fill up a page. Usually this happens automatically, but sometimes you may want to influence the breaks. 11.1 '\cleardoublepage' ======================= The '\cleardoublepage' command ends the current page and causes all figures and tables that have so far appeared in the input to be printed. In a two-sided printing style, it also makes the next page a right-hand (odd-numbered) page, producing a blank page if necessary. 11.2 '\clearpage' ================= The '\clearpage' command ends the current page and causes all figures and tables that have so far appeared in the input to be printed. 11.3 '\newpage' =============== The '\newpage' command ends the current page, but does not clear floats (see '\clearpage' above). 11.4 '\enlargethispage' ======================= '\enlargethispage{size}' '\enlargethispage*{size}' Enlarge the '\textheight' for the current page by the specified amount; e.g. '\enlargethispage{\baselineskip}' will allow one additional line. The starred form tries to squeeze the material together on the page as much as possible. This is normally used together with an explicit '\pagebreak'. 11.5 '\pagebreak' & '\nopagebreak' ================================== Synopses: \pagebreak[PRIORITY] \nopagebreak[PRIORITY] By default, the '\pagebreak' ('\nopagebreak') command forces (prevents) a page break at the current position. With '\pagebreak', the vertical space on the page is stretched out where possible so that it extends to the normal bottom margin. With the optional argument PRIORITY, you can convert the '\pagebreak' command from a demand to a request. The number must be a number from 0 to 4. The higher the number, the more insistent the request is. 12 Footnotes ************ Footnotes can be produced in one of two ways. They can be produced with one command, the '\footnote' command. They can also be produced with two commands, the '\footnotemark' and the '\footnotetext' commands. 12.1 '\footnote' ================ Synopsis: \footnote[NUMBER]{TEXT} The '\footnote' command places the numbered footnote TEXT at the bottom of the current page. The optional argument NUMBER changes the default footnote number. This command can only be used in outer paragraph mode; i.e., you cannot use it in sectioning commands like '\chapter', in figures, tables or in a 'tabular' environment. (See following sections.) 12.2 '\footnotemark' ==================== With no optional argument, the '\footnotemark' command puts the current footnote number in the text. This command can be used in inner paragraph mode. You give the text of the footnote separately, with the '\footnotetext' command. This command can be used to produce several consecutive footnote markers referring to the same footnote with \footnotemark[\value{footnote}] after the first '\footnote' command. 12.3 '\footnotetext' ==================== Synopsis: \footnotetext[NUMBER]{TEXT} The '\footnotetext' command places TEXT at the bottom of the page as a footnote. This command can come anywhere after the '\footnotemark' command. The '\footnotetext' command must appear in outer paragraph mode. The optional argument NUMBER changes the default footnote number. 12.4 Symbolic footnotes ======================= If you want to use symbols for footnotes, rather than increasing numbers, redefine '\thefootnote' like this: \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\fnsymbol{footnote}} The '\fnsymbol' command produces a predefined series of symbols (*note \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol::). If you want to use a different symbol as your footnote mark, you'll need to also redefine '\@fnsymbol'. 12.5 Footnote parameters ======================== '\footnoterule' Produces the rule separating the main text on a page from the page's footnotes. Default dimensions: '0.4pt' thick (or wide), and '0.4\columnwidth' long in the standard document classes (except slides, where it does not appear). '\footnotesep' The height of the strut placed at the beginning of the footnote. By default, this is set to the normal strut for '\footnotesize' fonts (*note Font sizes::), therefore there is no extra space between footnotes. This is '6.65pt' for '10pt', '7.7pt' for '11pt', and '8.4pt' for '12pt'. 13 Definitions ************** LaTeX has support for making new commands of many different kinds. 13.1 '\newcommand' & '\renewcommand' ==================================== '\newcommand' and '\renewcommand' define and redefine a command, respectively. Synopses: \newcommand[*]{CMD}[NARGS][OPTARG]{DEFN} \renewcommand[*]{CMD}[NARGS][OPTARG]{DEFN} '*' The *-form of these commands requires that the arguments not contain multiple paragraphs of text (not '\long', in plain TeX terms). CMD The command name beginning with '\'. For '\newcommand', it must not be already defined and must not begin with '\end'; for '\renewcommand', it must already be defined. NARGS An optional integer from 1 to 9 specifying the number of arguments that the command will take. The default is for the command to have no arguments. OPTARG If this optional parameter is present, it means that the command's first argument is optional. The default value of the optional argument (i.e., if it is not specified in the call) is OPTARG, or, if that argument is present in the '\newcommand' but has an empty value, the string 'def'. DEFN The text to be substituted for every occurrence of 'cmd'; a construct of the form '#N' in DEFN is replaced by the text of the Nth argument. 13.2 '\newcounter' ================== Synopsis: \newcounter{CNT}[COUNTERNAME] The '\newcounter' command defines a new counter named CNT. The new counter is initialized to zero. Given the optional argument '[COUNTERNAME]', CNT will be reset whenever COUNTERNAME is incremented. *Note Counters::, for more information about counters. 13.3 '\newlength' ================= Synopsis: \newlength{\ARG} The '\newlength' command defines the mandatory argument as a 'length' command with a value of '0in'. The argument must be a control sequence, as in '\newlength{\foo}'. An error occurs if '\foo' is already defined. *Note Lengths::, for how to set the new length to a nonzero value, and for more information about lengths in general. 13.4 '\newsavebox' ================== Synopsis: \newsavebox{CMD} Defines '\CMD', which must be a command name not already defined, to refer to a new bin for storing boxes. 13.5 '\newenvironment' & '\renewenvironment' ============================================ Synopses: \newenvironment[*]{ENV}[NARGS][DEFAULT]{BEGDEF}{ENDDEF} \renewenvironment[*]{ENV}[NARGS]{BEGDEF}{ENDDEF} These commands define or redefine an environment ENV, that is, '\begin{ENV} ... \end{ENV}'. '*' The *-form of these commands requires that the arguments (not the contents of the environment) not contain multiple paragraphs of text. ENV The name of the environment. For '\newenvironment', ENV must not be an existing environment, and the command '\ENV' must be undefined. For '\renewenvironment', ENV must be the name of an existing environment. NARGS An integer from 1 to 9 denoting the number of arguments of the newly-defined environment. The default is no arguments. DEFAULT If this is specified, the first argument is optional, and DEFAULT gives the default value for that argument. BEGDEF The text expanded at every occurrence of '\begin{ENV}'; a construct of the form '#N' in BEGDEF is replaced by the text of the Nth argument. ENDDEF The text expanded at every occurrence of '\end{ENV}'. It may not contain any argument parameters. 13.6 '\newtheorem' ================== \newtheorem{NEWENV}{LABEL}[WITHIN] \newtheorem{NEWENV}[NUMBERED_LIKE]{LABEL} This command defines a theorem-like environment. Arguments: NEWENV The name of the environment to be defined; must not be the name of an existing environment or otherwise defined. LABEL The text printed at the beginning of the environment, before the number. For example, 'Theorem'. NUMBERED_LIKE (Optional.) The name of an already defined theorem-like environment; the new environment will be numbered just like NUMBERED_LIKE. WITHIN (Optional.) The name of an already defined counter, a sectional unit. The new theorem counter will be reset at the same time as the WITHIN counter. At most one of NUMBERED_LIKE and WITHIN can be specified, not both. 13.7 '\newfont' =============== Synopsis: \newfont{CMD}{FONTNAME} Defines a control sequence '\CMD', which must not already be defined, to make FONTNAME be the current font. The file looked for on the system is named 'FONTNAME.tfm'. This is a low-level command for setting up to use an individual font. More commonly, fonts are defined in families through '.fd' files. 13.8 '\protect' =============== Footnotes, line breaks, any command that has an optional argument, and many more are so-called "fragile" commands. When a fragile command is used in certain contexts, called "moving arguments", it must be preceded by '\protect'. In addition, any fragile commands within the arguments must have their own '\protect'. Some examples of moving arguments are '\caption' (*note figure::), '\thanks' (*note \maketitle::), and expressions in 'tabular' and 'array' environments (*note tabular::). Commands which are not fragile are called "robust". They must not be preceded by '\protect'. See also: 14 Counters *********** Everything LaTeX numbers for you has a counter associated with it. The name of the counter is the same as the name of the environment or command that produces the number, except with no '\'. ('enumi'-'enumiv' are used for the nested enumerate environment.) Below is a list of the counters used in LaTeX's standard document classes to control numbering. part paragraph figure enumi chapter subparagraph table enumii section page footnote enumiii subsection equation mpfootnote enumiv subsubsection 14.1 '\alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol': Printing counters ===================================================================== All of these commands take a single counter as an argument, for instance, '\alph{enumi}'. '\alph' prints COUNTER using lowercase letters: 'a', 'b', ... '\Alph' uses uppercase letters: 'A', 'B', ... '\arabic' uses Arabic numbers: '1', '2', ... '\roman' uses lowercase roman numerals: 'i', 'ii', ... '\roman' uses uppercase roman numerals: 'I', 'II', ... '\fnsymbol' prints the value of COUNTER in a specific sequence of nine symbols (conventionally used for labeling footnotes). The value of COUNTER must be between 1 and 9, inclusive. The symbols mostly aren't supported in Info, but here are the names: asterisk(*) dagger ddagger section-sign paragraph-sign parallel double-asterisk(**) double-dagger double-ddagger 14.2 '\usecounter{COUNTER}' =========================== Synopsis: \usecounter{COUNTER} The '\usecounter' command is used in the second argument of the 'list' environment to specify COUNTER to be used to number the list items. 14.3 '\value{COUNTER}' ====================== Synopsis: \value{COUNTER} The '\value' command produces the value of COUNTER. It can be used anywhere LaTeX expects a number, for example: \setcounter{myctr}{3} \addtocounter{myctr}{1} \hspace{\value{myctr}\parindent} 14.4 '\setcounter{COUNTER}{VALUE}' ================================== Synopsis: \setcounter{\COUNTER}{VALUE} The '\setcounter' command sets the value of \COUNTER to the VALUE argument. 14.5 '\addtocounter{COUNTER}{VALUE}' ==================================== The '\addtocounter' command increments COUNTER by the amount specified by the VALUE argument, which may be negative. 14.6 '\refstepcounter{COUNTER}' =============================== The '\refstepcounter' command works in the same way as '\stepcounter' *Note \stepcounter::, except it also defines the current '\ref' value to be the result of '\thecounter'. 14.7 '\stepcounter{COUNTER}' ============================ The '\stepcounter' command adds one to COUNTER and resets all subsidiary counters. 14.8 '\day \month \year': Predefined counters ============================================= LaTeX defines counters for the day of the month ('\day', 1-31), month of the year ('\month', 1-12), and year ('\year', Common Era). When TeX starts up, they are set to the current values on the system where TeX is running. They are not updated as the job progresses. The related command '\today' produces a string representing the current day (*note \today::). 15 Lengths ********** A 'length' is a measure of distance. Many LaTeX commands take a length as an argument. 15.1 '\setlength{\LEN}{VALUE}' ============================== The '\setlength' sets the value of \LEN to the VALUE argument, which can be expressed in any units that LaTeX understands, i.e., inches ('in'), millimeters ('mm'), points ('pt'), big points ('bp', etc. 15.2 \addtolength{\LEN}{AMOUNT} =============================== The '\addtolength' command increments a "length command" \LEN by the amount specified in the AMOUNT argument, which may be negative. 15.3 '\settodepth' ================== '\settodepth{\gnat}{text}' The '\settodepth' command sets the value of a 'length' command equal to the depth of the 'text' argument. 15.4 '\settoheight' =================== '\settoheight{\gnat}{text}' The '\settoheight' command sets the value of a 'length' command equal to the height of the 'text' argument. 15.5 '\settowidth{\LEN}{TEXT}' ============================== The '\settowidth' command sets the value of the command \LEN to the width of the TEXT argument. 15.6 Predefined lengths ======================= '\width' '\height' '\depth' '\totalheight' These length parameters can be used in the arguments of the box-making commands (*note Boxes::). They specify the natural width, etc., of the text in the box. '\totalheight' equals '\height' + '\depth'. To make a box with the text stretched to double the natural size, e.g., say '\makebox[2\width]{Get a stretcher}' 16 Making paragraphs ******************** A paragraph is ended by one or more completely blank lines--lines not containing even a '%'. A blank line should not appear where a new paragraph cannot be started, such as in math mode or in the argument of a sectioning command. 16.1 '\indent' ============== '\indent' produces a horizontal space whose width equals the width of the '\parindent' length, the normal paragraph indentation. It is used to add paragraph indentation where it would otherwise be suppressed. The default value for '\parindent' is '1em' in two-column mode, otherwise '15pt' for '10pt' documents, '17pt' for '11pt', and '1.5em' for '12pt'. 16.2 '\noindent' ================ When used at the beginning of the paragraph, '\noindent' suppresses any paragraph indentation. It has no effect when used in the middle of a paragraph. 16.3 '\parskip' =============== '\parskip' is a rubber length defining extra vertical space added before each paragraph. The default is '0pt plus1pt'. 16.4 Marginal notes =================== Synopsis: \marginpar[LEFT]{RIGHT} The '\marginpar' command creates a note in the margin. The first line of the note will have the same baseline as the line in the text where the '\marginpar' occurs. When you only specify the mandatory argument RIGHT, the text will be placed * in the right margin for one-sided layout; * in the outside margin for two-sided layout; * in the nearest margin for two-column layout. The command '\reversemarginpar' places subsequent marginal notes in the opposite (inside) margin. '\normalmarginpar' places them in the default position. When you specify both arguments, LEFT is used for the left margin, and RIGHT is used for the right margin. The first word will normally not be hyphenated; you can enable hyphenation there by beginning the node with '\hspace{0pt}'. These parameters affect the formatting of the note: '\marginparpush' Minimum vertical space between notes; default '7pt' for '12pt' documents, '5pt' else. '\marginparsep' Horizontal space between the main text and the note; default '11pt' for '10pt' documents, '10pt' else. '\marginparwidth' Width of the note itself; default for a one-sided '10pt' document is '90pt', '83pt' for '11pt', and '68pt' for '12pt'; '17pt' more in each case for a two-sided document. In two column mode, the default is '48pt'. The standard LaTeX routine for marginal notes does not prevent notes from falling off the bottom of the page. 17 Math formulas **************** There are three environments that put LaTeX in math mode: 'math' For formulas that appear right in the text. 'displaymath' For formulas that appear on their own line. 'equation' The same as the displaymath environment except that it adds an equation number in the right margin. The 'math' environment can be used in both paragraph and LR mode, but the 'displaymath' and 'equation' environments can be used only in paragraph mode. The 'math' and 'displaymath' environments are used so often that they have the following short forms: \(...\) instead of \begin{math}...\end{math} \[...\] instead of \begin{displaymath}...\end{displaymath} In fact, the 'math' environment is so common that it has an even shorter form: $ ... $ instead of \(...\) The '\boldmath' command changes math letters and symbols to be in a bold font. It is used _outside_ of math mode. Conversely, the '\unboldmath' command changes math glyphs to be in a normal font; it too is used _outside_ of math mode. The '\displaystyle' declaration forces the size and style of the formula to be that of 'displaymath', e.g., with limits above and below summations. For example $\displaystyle \sum_{n=0}^\infty x_n $ 17.1 Subscripts & superscripts ============================== To get an expression exp to appear as a subscript, you just type '_{'exp'}'. To get exp to appear as a superscript, you type '^{'exp'}'. LaTeX handles superscripted superscripts and all of that stuff in the natural way. It even does the right thing when something has both a subscript and a superscript. 17.2 Math symbols ================= LaTeX provides almost any mathematical symbol you're likely to need. The commands for generating them can be used only in math mode. For example, if you include '$\pi$' in your source, you will get the pi symbol (\pi) in your output. '\|' \| '\aleph' \aleph '\alpha' \alpha '\amalg' \amalg (binary operation) '\angle' \angle '\approx' \approx (relation) '\ast' \ast (binary operation) '\asymp' \asymp (relation) '\backslash' \ (delimiter) '\beta' \beta '\bigcap' \bigcap '\bigcirc' \bigcirc (binary operation) '\bigcup' \bigcup '\bigodot' \bigodot '\bigoplus' \bigoplus '\bigotimes' \bigotimes '\bigtriangledown' \bigtriangledown (binary operation) '\bigtriangleup' \bigtriangleup (binary operation) '\bigsqcup' \bigsqcup '\biguplus' \biguplus '\bigcap' \bigvee '\bigwedge' \bigwedge '\bot' \bot '\bowtie' \bowtie (relation) '\Box' (square open box symbol) '\bullet' \bullet (binary operation) '\cap' \cap (binary operation) '\cdot' \cdot (binary operation) '\chi' \chi '\circ' \circ (binary operation) '\clubsuit' \clubsuit '\cong' \cong (relation) '\coprod' \coprod '\cup' \cup (binary operation) '\dagger' \dagger (binary operation) '\dashv' \dashv (relation) '\ddagger' \dagger (binary operation) '\Delta' \Delta '\delta' \delta '\Diamond' bigger \diamond '\diamond' \diamond (binary operation) '\diamondsuit' \diamondsuit '\div' \div (binary operation) '\doteq' \doteq (relation) '\downarrow' \downarrow (delimiter) '\Downarrow' \Downarrow (delimiter) '\ell' \ell '\emptyset' \emptyset '\epsilon' \epsilon '\equiv' \equiv (relation) '\eta' \eta '\exists' \exists '\flat' \flat '\forall' \forall '\frown' \frown (relation) '\Gamma' \Gamma '\gamma' \gamma '\ge' \ge '\geq' \geq (relation) '\gets' \gets '\gg' \gg (relation) '\hbar' \hbar '\heartsuit' \heartsuit '\hookleftarrow' \hookleftarrow '\hookrightarrow' \hookrightarrow '\iff' \iff '\Im' \Im '\in' \in (relation) '\infty' \infty '\int' \int '\iota' \iota '\Join' condensed bowtie symbol (relation) '\kappa' \kappa '\Lambda' \Lambda '\lambda' \lambda '\land' \land '\langle' \langle (delimiter) '\lbrace' \lbrace (delimiter) '\lbrack' \lbrack (delimiter) '\lceil' \lceil (delimiter) '\le' \le '\leadsto' '\Leftarrow' \Leftarrow '\leftarrow' \leftarrow '\leftharpoondown' \leftharpoondown '\leftharpoonup' \leftharpoonup '\Leftrightarrow' \Leftrightarrow '\leftrightarrow' \leftrightarrow '\leq' \leq (relation) '\lfloor' \lfloor (delimiter) '\lhd' (left-pointing arrow head) '\ll' \ll (relation) '\lnot' \lnot '\longleftarrow' \longleftarrow '\longleftrightarrow' \longleftrightarrow '\longmapsto' \longmapsto '\longrightarrow' \longrightarrow '\lor' \lor '\mapsto' \mapsto '\mho' '\mid' \mid (relation) '\models' \models (relation) '\mp' \mp (binary operation) '\mu' \mu '\nabla' \nabla '\natural' \natural '\ne' \ne '\nearrow' \nearrow '\neg' \neg '\neq' \neq (relation) '\ni' \ni (relation) '\not' Overstrike a following operator with a /, as in \not=. '\notin' \ni '\nu' \nu '\nwarrow' \nwarrow '\odot' \odot (binary operation) '\oint' \oint '\Omega' \Omega '\omega' \omega '\ominus' \ominus (binary operation) '\oplus' \oplus (binary operation) '\oslash' \oslash (binary operation) '\otimes' \otimes (binary operation) '\owns' \owns '\parallel' \parallel (relation) '\partial' \partial '\perp' \perp (relation) '\phi' \phi '\Pi' \Pi '\pi' \pi '\pm' \pm (binary operation) '\prec' \prec (relation) '\preceq' \preceq (relation) '\prime' \prime '\prod' \prod '\propto' \propto (relation) '\Psi' \Psi '\psi' \psi '\rangle' \rangle (delimiter) '\rbrace' \rbrace (delimiter) '\rbrack' \rbrack (delimiter) '\rceil' \rceil (delimiter) '\Re' \Re '\rfloor' \rfloor '\rhd' (binary operation) '\rho' \rho '\Rightarrow' \Rightarrow '\rightarrow' \rightarrow '\rightharpoondown' \rightharpoondown '\rightharpoonup' \rightharpoonup '\rightleftharpoons' \rightleftharpoons '\searrow' \searrow '\setminus' \setminus (binary operation) '\sharp' \sharp '\Sigma' \Sigma '\sigma' \sigma '\sim' \sim (relation) '\simeq' \simeq (relation) '\smallint' \smallint '\smile' \smile (relation) '\spadesuit' \spadesuit '\sqcap' \sqcap (binary operation) '\sqcup' \sqcup (binary operation) '\sqsubset' (relation) '\sqsubseteq' \sqsubseteq (relation) '\sqsupset' (relation) '\sqsupseteq' \sqsupseteq (relation) '\star' \star (binary operation) '\subset' \subset (relation) '\subseteq' \subseteq (relation) '\succ' \succ (relation) '\succeq' \succeq (relation) '\sum' \sum '\supset' \supset (relation) '\supseteq' \supseteq (relation) '\surd' \surd '\swarrow' \swarrow '\tau' \tau '\theta' \theta '\times' \times (binary operation) '\to' \to '\top' \top '\triangle' \triangle '\triangleleft' \triangleleft (binary operation) '\triangleright' \triangleright (binary operation) '\unlhd' left-pointing arrowhead with line under (binary operation) '\unrhd' right-pointing arrowhead with line under (binary operation) '\Uparrow' \Uparrow (delimiter) '\uparrow' \uparrow (delimiter) '\Updownarrow' \Updownarrow (delimiter) '\updownarrow' \updownarrow (delimiter) '\uplus' \uplus (binary operation) '\Upsilon' \Upsilon '\upsilon' \upsilon '\varepsilon' \varepsilon '\varphi' \varphi '\varpi' \varpi '\varrho' \varrho '\varsigma' \varsigma '\vartheta' \vartheta '\vdash' \vdash (relation) '\vee' \vee (binary operation) '\Vert' \Vert (delimiter) '\vert' \vert (delimiter) '\wedge' \wedge (binary operation) '\wp' \wp '\wr' \wr (binary operation) '\Xi' \Xi '\xi' \xi '\zeta' \zeta 17.3 Math functions =================== These commands produce roman function names in math mode with proper spacing. '\arccos' \arccos '\arcsin' \arcsin '\arctan' \arctan '\arg' \arg '\bmod' Binary modulo operator (x \bmod y) '\cos' \cos '\cosh' \cosh '\cot' \cos '\coth' \cosh '\csc' \csc '\deg' \deg '\det' \deg '\dim' \dim '\exp' \exp '\gcd' \gcd '\hom' \hom '\inf' \inf '\ker' \ker '\lg' \lg '\lim' \lim '\liminf' \liminf '\limsup' \limsup '\ln' \ln '\log' \log '\max' \max '\min' \min '\pmod' parenthesized modulus, as in (\pmod 2^n - 1) '\Pr' \Pr '\sec' \sec '\sin' \sin '\sinh' \sinh '\sup' \sup '\tan' \tan '\tanh' \tanh 17.4 Math accents ================= LaTeX provides a variety of commands for producing accented letters in math. These are different from accents in normal text (*note Accents::). '\acute' Math acute accent: \acute{x}. '\bar' Math bar-over accent: \bar{x}. '\breve' Math breve accent: \breve{x}. '\check' Math ha'c' Both of these produce a medium space (2\over9\,quad). '\,' A thin space (1\over6\,quad); not restricted to math mode. '\!' A negative thin space (-{1\over6}\,quad). 17.6 Math miscellany ==================== '\*' A "discretionary" multiplication symbol, at which a line break is allowed. '\cdots' A horizontal ellipsis with the dots raised to the center of the line. '\ddots' A diagonal ellipsis: \ddots. '\frac{num}{den}' Produces the fraction 'num' divided by 'den'. '\left DELIM1 ... \right DELIM2' The two delimiters need not match; '.' acts as a null delimiter, producing no output. The delimiters are sized according to the math in between. Example: '\left( \sum_i=1^10 a_i \right]'. '\overbrace{TEXT}' Generates a brace over TEXT. For example, \overbrace{x+\cdots+x}^{k \rm\;times}. '\overline{TEXT}' Generates a horizontal line over TEX. For exampe, \overline{x+y}. '\sqrt[ROOT]{arg}' Produces the representation of the square root of ARG. The optional argument ROOT determines what root to produce. For example, the cube root of 'x+y' would be typed as '$\sqrt[3]{x+y}$'. '\stackrel{TEXT}{RELATION}' Puts TEXT above RELATION. For example, '\stackrel{f}{\longrightarrow}'. '\underbrace{math}' Generates MATH with a brace underneath. '\underline{text}' Causes TEXT, which may be either math mode or not, to be underlined. The line is always below the text, taking account of descenders. '\vdots' Produces a vertical ellipsis. 18 Modes ******** When LaTeX is processing your input text, it is always in one of three modes: * Paragraph mode * Math mode * Left-to-right mode, called LR mode for short LaTeX changes mode only when it goes up or down a staircase to a different level, though not all level changes produce mode changes. Mode changes occur only when entering or leaving an environment, or when LaTeX is processing the argument of certain text-producing commands. "Paragraph mode" is the most common; it's the one LaTeX is in when processing ordinary text. In that mode, LaTeX breaks your text into lines and breaks the lines into pages. LaTeX is in "math mode" when it's generating a mathematical formula. In "LR mode", as in paragraph mode, LaTeX considers the output that it produces to be a string of words with spaces between them. However, unlike paragraph mode, LaTeX keeps going from left to right; it never starts a new line in LR mode. Even if you put a hundred words into an '\mbox', LaTeX would keep typesetting them from left to right inside a single box, and then complain because the resulting box was too wide to fit on the line. LaTeX is in LR mode when it starts making a box with an '\mbox' command. You can get it to enter a different mode inside the box - for example, you can make it enter math mode to put a formula in the box. There are also several text-producing commands and environments for making a box that put LaTeX in paragraph mode. The box make by one of these commands or environments will be called a 'parbox'. When LaTeX is in paragraph mode while making a box, it is said to be in "inner paragraph mode". Its normal paragraph mode, which it starts out in, is called "outer paragraph mode". 19 Page styles ************** The '\documentclass' command determines the size and position of the page's head and foot. The page style determines what goes in them. 19.1 '\maketitle' ================= The '\maketitle' command generates a title on a separate title page--except in the 'article' class, where the title is placed at the top of the first page. Information used to produce the title is obtained from the following declarations: '\author{NAME \and NAME2}' The '\author' command declares the document author(s), where the argument is a list of authors separated by '\and' commands. Use '\\' to separate lines within a single author's entry--for example, to give the author's institution or address. '\date{TEXT}' The '\date' command declares TEXT to be the document's date. With no '\date' command, the current date (*note \today::) is used. '\thanks{TEXT}' The '\thanks' command produces a '\footnote' to the title, usually used for credit acknowledgements. '\title{TEXT}' The '\title' command declares TEXT to be the title of the document. Use '\\' to force a line break, as usual. 19.2 '\pagenumbering' ===================== Synopsis: \pagenumbering{STYLE} Specifies the style of page numbers, according to STYLE: 'arabic' arabic numerals 'roman' lowercase Roman numerals 'Roman' uppercase Roman numerals 'alph' lowercase letters 'Alph' uppercase letters 19.3 '\pagestyle' ================= Synopsis: \pagestyle{STYLE} The '\pagestyle' command specifies how the headers and footers are typeset from the current page onwards. Values for STYLE: 'plain' Just a plain page number. 'empty' Empty headers and footers, e.g., no page numbers. 'headings' Put running headers on each page. The document style specifies what goes in the headers. 'myheadings' Custom headers, specified via the '\markboth' or the '\markright' commands. Here are the descriptions of '\markboth' and '\markright': '\markboth{LEFT}{RIGHT}' Sets both the left and the right heading. A "left-hand heading" (LEFT) is generated by the last '\markboth' command before the end of the page, while a "right-hand heading" (RIGHT) is generated by the first '\markboth' or '\markright' that comes on the page if there is one, otherwise by the last one before the page. '\markright{RIGHT}' Sets the right heading, leaving the left heading unchanged. 19.4 '\thispagestyle{STYLE}' ============================ The '\thispagestyle' command works in the same manner as the '\pagestyle' command (see previous section) except that it changes to STYLE for the current page only. 20 Spaces ********* LaTeX has many ways to produce white (or filled) space. Another space-producing command is '\,' to produce a "thin" space (usually 1/6quad). It can be used in text mode, but is more often useful in math mode (*note Spacing in math mode::). 20.1 '\hspace' ============== Synopsis: \hspace[*]{LENGTH} The '\hspace' command adds horizontal space. The LENGTH argument can be expressed in any terms that LaTeX understands: points, inches, etc. It is a rubber length. You can add both negative and positive space with an '\hspace' command; adding negative space is like backspacing. LaTeX normally removes horizontal space that comes at the beginning or end of a line. To preserve this space, use the optional '*' form. 20.2 '\hfill' ============= The '\hfill' fill command produces a "rubber length" which has no natural space but can stretch or shrink horizontally as far as needed. The '\fill' parameter is the rubber length itself (technically, the glue value '0pt plus1fill'); thus, '\hspace\fill' is equivalent to '\hfill'. 20.3 '\SPACE' ============= The '\ ' (space) command produces a normal interword space. It's useful after punctuation which shouldn't end a sentence. For example 'Knuth's article in Proc.\ Amer.\ Math\. Soc.\ is fundamental'. It is also often used after control sequences, as in '\TeX\ is a nice system.' In normal circumstances, '\' and '\' are equivalent to '\ '. 20.4 '\@' ========= The '\@' command makes the following punctuation character end a sentence even if it normally would not. This is typically used after a capital letter. Here are side-by-side examples with and without '\@': ... in C\@. Pascal, though ... ... in C. Pascal, though ... produces ... in C. Pascal, though ... ... in C. Pascal, though ... 20.5 '\thinspace' ================= '\thinspace' produces an unbreakable and unstretchable space that is 1/6 of an em. This is the proper space to use in nested quotes, as in '". 20.6 '\/' ========= The '\/' command produces an "italic correction". This is a small space defined by the font designer for a given character, to avoid the character colliding with whatever follows. The italic f character typically has a large italic correction value. If the following character is a period or comma, it's not necessary to insert an italic correction, since those punctuation symbols have a very small height. However, with semicolons or colons, as well as normal letters, it can help. Compare f: f; (in the TeX output, the 'f's are nicely separated) with f: f;. Despite the name, roman characters can also have an italic correction. Compare pdfTeX (in the TeX output, there is a small space after the 'f') with pdfTeX. 20.7 '\hrulefill' ================= The '\hrulefill' fill command produces a "rubber length" which can stretch or shrink horizontally. It will be filled with a horizontal rule. 20.8 '\dotfill' =============== The '\dotfill' command produces a "rubber length" that fills with dots instead of just white space. 20.9 '\addvspace' ================= '\addvspace{length}' The '\addvspace' command normally adds a vertical space of height length. However, if vertical space has already been added to the same point in the output by a previous '\addvspace' command, then this command will not add more space than needed to make the natural length of the total vertical space equal to 'length'. 20.10 '\bigskip \medskip \smallskip' ==================================== These commands produce a given amount of space. '\bigskip' The same as '\vspace{bigskipamount}', ordinarily about one line space (with stretch and shrink). '\medskip' The same as '\vspace{medskipamount}', ordinarily about half of a line space (with stretch and shrink). '\smallskip' The same as '\vspace{smallskipamount}', ordinarily about a quarter of a line space (with stretch and shrink). The '\...amount' parameters are determined by the document class. 20.11 '\vfill' ============== The '\vfill' fill command produces a rubber length (glue) which can stretch or shrink vertically as far as needed. It's equivalent to '\vspace{\fill}' (*note \hfill::). 20.12 '\vspace[*]{LENGTH}' ========================== Synopsis: \vspace[*]{LENGTH} The '\vspace' command adds the vertical space LENGTH, i.e., a rubber length. LENGTH can be negative or positive. Ordinarily, LaTeX removes vertical space added by '\vspace' at the top or bottom of a page. With the optional '*' argument, the space is not removed. 21 Boxes ******** All the predefined length parameters (*note Predefined lengths::) can be used in the arguments of the box-making commands. 21.1 '\mbox{TEXT}' ================== The '\mbox' command creates a box just wide enough to hold the text created by its argument. The TEXT is not broken into lines, so it can be used to prevent hyphenation. 21.2 '\fbox' and '\framebox' ============================ Synopses: \fbox{TEXT} \framebox[WIDTH][POSITION]{TEXT} The '\fbox' and '\framebox' commands are like '\mbox', except that they put a frame around the outside of the box being created. In addition, the '\framebox' command allows for explicit specification of the box width with the optional WIDTH argument (a dimension), and positioning with the optional POSITION argument. Both commands produce a rule of thickness '\fboxrule' (default '.4pt'), and leave a space of '\fboxsep' (default '3pt') between the rule and the contents of the box. *Note \framebox (picture)::, for the '\framebox' command in the 'picture' environment. 21.3 'lrbox' ============ '\begin{lrbox}{cmd} text \end{lrbox}' This is the environment form of '\sbox'. The text inside the environment is saved in the box 'cmd', which must have been declared with '\newsavebox'. 21.4 '\makebox' =============== Synopsis: \makebox[WIDTH][POSITION]{TEXT} The '\makebox' command creates a box just wide enough to contain the TEXT specified. The width of the box is specified by the optional WIDTH argument. The position of the text within the box is determined by the optional POSITION argument, which may take the following values: 'c' Centered (default). 'l' Flush left. 'r' Flush right. 's' Stretch (justify) across entire WIDTH; TEXT must contain stretchable space for this to work. '\makebox' is also used within the picture environment *note \makebox (picture)::. 21.5 '\parbox' ============== Synopsis: \parbox[POSITION][HEIGHT][INNER-POS]{WIDTH}{TEXT} The '\parbox' command produces a box whose contents are created in 'paragraph' mode. It should be used to make a box small pieces of text, with nothing fancy inside. In particular, you shouldn't use any paragraph-making environments inside a '\parbox' argument. For larger pieces of text, including ones containing a paragraph-making environment, you should use a 'minipage' environment (*note minipage::). '\parbox' has two mandatory arguments: WIDTH the width of the parbox; TEXT the text that goes inside the parbox. The optional POSITION argument allows you to align either the top or bottom line in the parbox with the baseline of the surrounding text (default is top). The optional HEIGHT argument overrides the natural height of the box. The INNER-POS argument controls the placement of the text inside the box, as follows; if it is not specified, POSITION is used. 't' text is placed at the top of the box. 'c' text is centered in the box. 'b' text is placed at the bottom of the box. 's' stretch vertically; the text must contain vertically stretchable space for this to work. 21.6 '\raisebox' ================ Synopsis: \raisebox{distance}[HEIGHT][DEPTH]{text} The '\raisebox' command raises or lowers TEXT. The first mandatory argument specifies how high TEXT is to be raised (or lowered if it is a negative amount). TEXT itself is processed in LR mode. The optional arguments HEIGHT and DEPTH are dimensions. If they are specified, LaTeX treats TEXT as extending a certain distance above the baseline (height) or below (depth), ignoring its natural height and depth. 21.7 '\savebox' =============== Synopsis: \savebox{\BOXCMD}[WIDTH][POS]{TEXT} This command typeset TEXT in a box just as with '\makebox' (*note \makebox::), except that instead of printing the resulting box, it saves it in the box labeled \BOXCMD, which must have been declared with '\newsavebox' (*note \newsavebox::). 21.8 '\sbox{\BOXCMD}{TEXT}' =========================== Synopsis: \sbox{\BOXCMD}{TEXT} '\sbox' types TEXT in a box just as with '\mbox' (*note \mbox::) except that instead of the resulting box being included in the normal output, it is saved in the box labeled \BOXCMD. \BOXCMD must have been previously declared with '\newsavebox' (*note \newsavebox::). 21.9 '\usebox{\BOXCMD' ====================== Synopsis: \usebox{\BOXCMD} '\usebox' produces the box most recently saved in the bin \BOXCMD by a '\savebox' command (*note \savebox::). 22 Special insertions ********************* LaTeX provides commands for inserting characters that have a special meaning do not correspond to simple characters you can type. 22.1 Reserved characters ======================== The following characters play a special role in LaTeX and are called "reserved characters" or "special characters". # $ % & ~ _ ^ \ { } Whenever you write one of these characters into your file, LaTeX will do something special. If you simply want the character to be printed as itself, include a '\' in front of the character. For example, '\$' will produce '$' in your output. One exception to this rule is '\' itself, because '\\' has its own special (context-dependent) meaning. A roman \ is produced by typing '$\backslash$' in your file, and a typewriter '\' is produced by using '\' in a verbatim command (*note verbatim::). Also, '\~' and '\^' place tilde and circumflex accents over the following letter, as in o~ and o^ (*note Accents::); to get a standalone '~' or '^', you can again use a verbatim command. Finally, you can access any character of the current font once you know its number by using the '\symbol' command. For example, the visible space character used in the '\verb*' command has the code decimal 32, so it can be typed as '\symbol{32}'. You can also specify octal numbers with ''' or hexadecimal numbers with '"', so the previous example could also be written as '\symbol{'40}' or '\symbol{"20}'. 22.2 Text symbols ================= LaTeX provides commands to generate a number of non-letter symbols in running text. Some of these, especially the more obscure ones, are not available in OT1; you may need to load the 'textcomp' package. '\copyright' '\textcopyright' The copyright symbol, (C). '\dag' The dagger symbol (in text). '\ddag' The double dagger symbol (in text). '\LaTeX' The LaTeX logo. '\guillemotleft (<<)' '\guillemotright (>>)' '\guilsinglleft (<)' '\guilsinglright (>)' Double and single angle quotation marks, commonly used in French: <<, >>, <, >. '\ldots' '\dots' '\textellipsis' An ellipsis (three dots at the baseline): '...'. '\ldots' and '\dots' also work in math mode. '\lq' Left (opening) quote: '. '\P' '\textparagraph' Paragraph sign (pilcrow). '\pounds' '\textsterling' English pounds sterling: #. '\quotedblbase (,,)' '\quotesinglbase (,)' Double and single quotation marks on the baseline: ,, and ,. '\rq' Right (closing) quote: '. '\S' Section symbol. '\TeX' The TeX logo. '\textasciicircum' ASCII circumflex: ^. '\textasciitilde' ASCII tilde: ~. '\textasteriskcentered' Centered asterisk: *. '\textbackslash' Backslash: \. '\textbar' Vertical bar: |. '\textbardbl' Double vertical bar. '\textbigcircle' Big circle symbol. '\textbraceleft' Left brace: {. '\textbraceright' Right brace: }. '\textbullet' Bullet: *. '\textcircled{LETTER}' LETTER in a circle, as in (R). '\textcompwordmark' '\textcapitalwordmark' '\textascenderwordmark' Composite word mark (invisible). The '\textcapital...' form has the cap height of the font, while the '\textascender...' form has the ascender height. '\textdagger' Dagger: \dag. '\textdaggerdbl' Double dagger: \ddag. '\textdollar (or '$')' Dollar sign: $. '\textemdash (or '---')' Em-dash: -- (for punctuation). '\textendash (or '--')' En-dash: -- (for ranges). '\texteuro' The Euro symbol: Euro. '\textexclamdown (or '!`')' Upside down exclamation point: !. '\textgreater' Greater than: >. '\textless' Less than: <. '\textleftarrow' Left arrow. '\textordfeminine' '\textordmasculine' Feminine and masculine ordinal symbols: a, o. '\textperiodcentered' Centered period: \cdot. '\textquestiondown (or '?`')' Upside down questionation point: ?. '\textquotedblleft (or '``')' Double left quote: ". '\textquotedblright (or ''')' Double right quote: ". '\textquoteleft (or '`')' Single left quote: '. '\textquoteright (or ''')' Single right quote: '. '\textquotestraightbase' '\textquotestraightdblbase' Single and double straight quotes on the baseline. '\textregistered' Registered symbol: (R). '\textrightarrow' Right arrow. '\textthreequartersemdash' "Three-quarters" em-dash, between en-dash and em-dash. '\texttrademark' Trademark symbol: ^{\hbox{TM}}. '\texttwelveudash' "Two-thirds" em-dash, between en-dash and em-dash. '\textunderscore' Underscore: _. '\textvisiblespace' Visible space symbol. 22.3 Accents ============ LaTeX has wide support for many of the world's scripts and languages, through the 'babel' package and related support. This section does not attempt to cover all that support. It merely lists the core LaTeX commands for creating accented characters. The '\capital...' commands produce alternative forms for use with capital letters. These are not available with OT1. '\"' '\capitaldieresis' Produces an umlaut (dieresis), as in o". '\'' '\capitalacute' Produces an acute accent, as in o'. In the 'tabbing' environment, pushes current column to the right of the previous column (*note tabbing::). '\.' Produces a dot accent over the following, as in o.. '\=' '\capitalmacron' Produces a macron (overbar) accent over the following, as in o=. '\^' '\capitalcircumflex' Produces a circumflex (hat) accent over the following, as in o^. '\`' '\capitalgrave' Produces a grave accent over the following, as in o`. In the 'tabbing' environment, move following text to the right margin (*note tabbing::). '\~' '\capitaltilde' Produces a tilde accent over the following, as in n~. '\b' Produces a bar accent under the following, as in o_. '\c' '\capitalcedilla' Produces a cedilla accent under the following, as in c,. '\d' '\capitaldotaccent' Produces a dot accent under the following, as in .o. '\H' '\capitalhungarumlaut' Produces a long Hungarian umlaut accent over the following, as in o''. '\i' Produces a dotless i, as in 'i'. '\j' Produces a dotless j, as in 'j'. '\k' '\capitalogonek' Produces a letter with ogonek, as in 'o;'. Not available in the OT1 encoding. '\r' '\capitalring' Produces a ring accent, as in 'o*'. '\t' '\capitaltie' '\newtie' '\capitalnewtie' Produces a tie-after accent, as in 'oo['. The '\newtie' form is centered in its box. '\u' '\capitalbreve' Produces a breve accent, as in 'o('. '\underbar' Not exactly an accent, this produces a bar under the argument text. The argument is always processed in horizontal mode. The bar is always a fixed position under the baseline, thus crossing through descenders. See also '\underline' in *note Math miscellany::. '\v' '\capitalcaron' Produces a ha'c) or (the multi-lingual) 'xindy' (). This results in a '.ind' file, which can then be read to typeset the index. The index is usually generated with the '\printindex' command. This is defined in the 'makeidx' package, so '\usepackage{makeidx}' needs to be in the preamble. The rubber length '\indexspace' is inserted before each new letter in the printed index; its default value is '10pt plus5pt minus3pt'. The 'showidx' package causes each index entries to be shown in the margin on the page where the entry appears. This can help in preparing the index. The 'multind' package supports multiple indexes. See also the TeX FAQ entry on this topic, . 25 Letters ********** You can use LaTeX to typeset letters, both personal and business. The 'letter' document class is designed to make a number of letters at once, although you can make just one if you so desire. Your '.tex' source file has the same minimum commands as the other document classes, i.e., you must have the following commands as a minimum: \documentclass{letter} \begin{document} ... letters ... \end{document} Each letter is a 'letter' environment, whose argument is the name and address of the recipient. For example, you might have: \begin{letter}{Mr. Joe Smith\\ 2345 Princess St. \\ Edinburgh, EH1 1AA} ... \end{letter} The letter itself begins with the '\opening' command. The text of the letter follows. It is typed as ordinary LaTeX input. Commands that make no sense in a letter, like '\chapter', do not work. The letter closes with a '\closing' command. After the 'closing', you can have additional material. The '\cc' command produces the usual "cc: ...". There's also a similar '\encl' command for a list of enclosures. With both these commands, use '\\' to separate the items. These commands are used with the 'letter' class. 25.1 \address{RETURN-ADDRESS} ============================= The '\address' specifies the return address of a letter, as it should appear on the letter and the envelope. Separate lines of the address should be separated by '\\' commands. If you do not make an '\address' declaration, then the letter will be formatted for copying onto your organisation's standard letterhead. (*Note Overview::, for details on your local implementation). If you give an '\address' declaration, then the letter will be formatted as a personal letter. 25.2 '\cc' ========== Synopsis: \cc{NAME1\\NAME2} Produce a list of NAMEs the letter was copied to. Each name is printed on a separate line. 25.3 '\closing' =============== Synopsis: \closing{text} A letter closes with a '\closing' command, for example, \closing{Best Regards,} 25.4 '\encl' ============ Synopsis: \encl{LINE1\\LINE2} Declare a list of one more enclosures. 25.5 '\location' ================ '\location{address}' This modifies your organisation's standard address. This only appears if the 'firstpage' pagestyle is selected. 25.6 '\makelabels' ================== '\makelabels{number}' If you issue this command in the preamble, LaTeX will create a sheet of address labels. This sheet will be output before the letters. 25.7 '\name' ============ '\name{June Davenport}' Your name, used for printing on the envelope together with the return address. 25.8 '\opening{TEXT}' ===================== Synopsis: \opening{TEXT} A letter begins with the '\opening' command. The mandatory argument, TEXT, is whatever text you wish to start your letter. For instance: \opening{Dear Joe,} 25.9 '\ps' ========== Use the '\ps' command to start a postscript in a letter, after '\closing'. 25.10 '\signature{TEXT}' ======================== Your name, as it should appear at the end of the letter underneath the space for your signature. '\\' starts a new line within TEXT as usual. 25.11 '\startbreaks' ==================== '\startbreaks' Used after a '\stopbreaks' command to allow page breaks again. 25.12 '\stopbreaks' =================== '\stopbreaks' Inhibit page breaks until a '\startbreaks' command occurs. 25.13 '\telephone' ================== '\telephone{number}' This is your telephone number. This only appears if the 'firstpage' pagestyle is selected. 26 Terminal input/output ************************ 26.1 '\typein[CMD]{MSG}' ======================== Synopsis: \typein[\CMD]{MSG} '\typein' prints MSG on the terminal and causes LaTeX to stop and wait for you to type a line of input, ending with return. If the optional \CMD argument is omitted, the typed input is processed as if it had been included in the input file in place of the '\typein' command. If the \CMD argument is present, it must be a command name. This command name is then defined or redefined to be the typed input. 26.2 '\typeout{MSG}' ==================== Synopsis: \typeout{MSG} Prints 'msg' on the terminal and in the 'log' file. Commands in 'msg' that are defined with '\newcommand' or '\renewcommand' (among others) are replaced by their definitions before being printed. LaTeX's usual rules for treating multiple spaces as a single space and ignoring spaces after a command name apply to 'msg'. A '\space' command in 'msg' causes a single space to be printed, independent of surrounding spaces. A '^^J' in 'msg' prints a newline. 27 Command line *************** The input file specification indicates the file to be formatted; TeX uses '.tex' as a default file extension. If you omit the input file entirely, TeX accepts input from the terminal. You specify command options by supplying a string as a parameter to the command; e.g. latex '\nonstopmode\input foo.tex' will process 'foo.tex' without pausing after every error. If LaTeX stops in the middle of the document and gives you a '*' prompt, it is waiting for input. You can type '\stop' (and return) and it will prematurely end the document. Appendix A Document templates ***************************** Although not reference material, perhaps these document templates will be useful. Additional template resources are listed . A.1 'book' template =================== \documentclass{book} \title{Book Class Template} \author{Alex Author} \begin{document} \maketitle \chapter{First} Some text. \chapter{Second} Some other text. \section{A subtopic} The end. \end{document} A.2 'beamer' template ===================== The 'beamer' class creates slides presentations. \documentclass{beamer} \title{Beamer Class template} \author{Alex Author} \date{July 31, 2007} \begin{document} \maketitle % without [fragile], any {verbatim} code gets mysterious errors. \begin{frame}[fragile] \frametitle{First Slide} \begin{verbatim} This is \verbatim! \end{verbatim} \end{frame} \end{document} One web resource for this: . A.3 'tugboat' template ====================== 'TUGboat' is the journal of the TeX Users Group, . \documentclass{ltugboat} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage{ifpdf} \ifpdf \usepackage[breaklinks,hidelinks]{hyperref} \else \usepackage{url} \fi \title{Example \TUB\ article} % repeat info for each author. \author{First Last} \address{Street Address \\ Town, Postal \\ Country} \netaddress{user (at) example dot org} \personalURL{http://example.org/~user/} \begin{document} \maketitle \begin{abstract} This is an example article for \TUB{}. \end{abstract} \section{Introduction} This is an example article for \TUB, from \url{http://tug.org/TUGboat/location.html}. We recommend the graphicx package for image inclusions, and the hyperref package for active url's (in the \acro{PDF} output). Nowadays \TUB\ is produced using \acro{PDF} files exclusively. The \texttt{ltugboat} class provides these abbreviations and many more: % verbatim blocks are often better in \small \begin{verbatim}[\small] \AllTeX \AMS \AmS \AmSLaTeX \AmSTeX \aw \AW \BibTeX \CTAN \DTD \HTML \ISBN \ISSN \LaTeXe \Mc \mf \MFB \mtex \PCTeX \pcTeX \PiC \PiCTeX \plain \POBox \PS \SC \SGML \SliTeX \TANGLE \TB \TP \TUB \TUG \tug \UG \UNIX \VAX \XeT \WEB \WEAVE \Dash \dash \vellipsis \bull \cents \Dag \careof \thinskip \acro{FRED} -> {\small[er] fred} % please use! \cs{fred} -> \fred \env{fred} -> \begin{fred} \meta{fred} -> \nth{n} -> 1st, 2nd, ... \sfrac{3/4} -> 3/4 \booktitle{Book of Fred} \end{verbatim} For more information, see the ltubguid document at: \url{http://mirror.ctan.org/macros/latex/contrib/tugboat} (we recommend using \verb|mirror.ctan.org| for \CTAN\ references). Email \verb|tugboat@tug.org| if problems or questions. \bibliographystyle{plain} % we recommend the plain bibliography style \nocite{book-minimal} % just making the bibliography non-empty \bibliography{xampl} % xampl.bib comes with BibTeX \makesignature \end{document} Concept Index ************* * Menu: * '*' prompt: Command line. (line 5079) * *-form of defining new commands: \newcommand & \renewcommand. (line 2550) * *-form of environment commands: \newenvironment & \renewenvironment. (line 2627) * *-form of sectioning commands: Sectioning. (line 843) * '.glo' file: Glossaries. (line 4836) * '.idx' file: Indexes. (line 4852) * '.ind' file: Indexes. (line 4866) * 'see' and 'see also' index entries: Indexes. (line 4859) * abstracts: abstract. (line 940) * accents: Accents. (line 4534) * accents, mathematical: Math accents. (line 3760) * accessing any character of a font: Reserved characters. (line 4348) * acute accent: Accents. (line 4548) * acute accent, math: Math accents. (line 3765) * ae ligature: Non-English characters. (line 4637) * align environment, from 'amsmath': eqnarray. (line 1120) * aligning equations: eqnarray. (line 1120) * alignment via tabbing: tabbing. (line 1834) * amsmath package, replacing 'eqnarray': eqnarray. (line 1120) * appendix, creating: Sectioning. (line 849) * aring: Non-English characters. (line 4633) * arrays, math: array. (line 951) * arrow, left, in text: Text symbols. (line 4482) * arrow, right, in text: Text symbols. (line 4514) * ascender height: Text symbols. (line 4450) * ASCII circumflex, in text: Text symbols. (line 4415) * ASCII tilde, in text: Text symbols. (line 4418) * asterisk, centered, in text: Text symbols. (line 4421) * author, for titlepage: \maketitle. (line 3928) * auxiliary file: Overview. (line 320) * backslash, in text: Text symbols. (line 4424) * bar, double vertical, in text: Text symbols. (line 4430) * bar, vertical, in text: Text symbols. (line 4427) * bar-over accent: Accents. (line 4557) * bar-over accent, math: Math accents. (line 3768) * bar-under accent: Accents. (line 4574) * basics of LaTeX: Overview. (line 283) * bibliography, creating (automatically): Using BibTeX. (line 2177) * bibliography, creating (manually): thebibliography. (line 2113) * bibTeX, using: Using BibTeX. (line 2177) * big circle symbols, in text: Text symbols. (line 4433) * black boxes, omitting: Document class options. (line 393) * bold font: Font styles. (line 547) * bold math: Font styles. (line 527) * bold typewriter, avoiding: description. (line 1045) * boxes: Boxes. (line 4163) * brace, left, in text: Text symbols. (line 4436) * brace, right, in text: Text symbols. (line 4439) * breaking lines: Line breaking. (line 2297) * breaking pages: Page breaking. (line 2398) * breve accent: Accents. (line 4613) * breve accent, math: Math accents. (line 3771) * bug reporting: About this document. (line 253) * bullet symbol: Math symbols. (line 3097) * bullet, in text: Text symbols. (line 4442) * bulleted lists: itemize. (line 1374) * calligraphic letters for math: Font styles. (line 550) * cap height: Text symbols. (line 4450) * caron accent: Accents. (line 4623) * case sensitivity of LaTeX: Overview. (line 332) * cc list, in letters: \cc. (line 4938) * cedilla accent: Accents. (line 4578) * centered asterisk, in text: Text symbols. (line 4421) * centered period, in text: Text symbols. (line 4489) * centering text, declaration for: \centering. (line 1010) * centering text, environment for: center. (line 996) * characters, accented: Accents. (line 4534) * characters, non-English: Non-English characters. (line 4628) * characters, reserved: Reserved characters. (line 4329) * check accent: Accents. (line 4623) * check accent, math: Math accents. (line 3774) * circle symbol, big, in text: Text symbols. (line 4433) * circled letter, in text: Text symbols. (line 4445) * circumflex accent: Accents. (line 4561) * circumflex accent, math: Math accents. (line 3786) * circumflex, ASCII, in text: Text symbols. (line 4415) * class options: Document class options. (line 372) * classes of documents: Document classes. (line 355) * closing letters: \closing. (line 4948) * closing quote: Text symbols. (line 4406) * code, typesetting: verbatim. (line 2244) * command line: Command line. (line 5070) * commands, defining new ones: \newcommand & \renewcommand. (line 2543) * composite word mark, in text: Text symbols. (line 4450) * computer programs, typesetting: verbatim. (line 2244) * copyright symbol: Text symbols. (line 4366) * counters, a list of: Counters. (line 2720) * counters, defining new: \newcounter. (line 2579) * counters, getting value of: \value. (line 2778) * counters, setting: \setcounter. (line 2792) * creating letters: Letters. (line 4889) * creating pictures: picture. (line 1546) * creating tables: table. (line 1925) * credit footnote: \maketitle. (line 3938) * cross references: Cross references. (line 870) * cross referencing with page number: \pageref. (line 908) * cross referencing, symbolic: \ref. (line 918) * currency, dollar: Text symbols. (line 4461) * currency, euro: Text symbols. (line 4470) * dagger, double, in text: Text symbols. (line 4458) * dagger, in text: Text symbols. (line 4369) * dagger, in text <1>: Text symbols. (line 4455) * date, for titlepage: \maketitle. (line 3934) * 'datetime' package: \today. (line 4702) * defining a new command: \newcommand & \renewcommand. (line 2543) * defining new environments: \newenvironment & \renewenvironment. (line 2618) * defining new fonts: \newfont. (line 2685) * defining new theorems: \newtheorem. (line 2657) * definitions: Definitions. (line 2538) * description lists, creating: description. (line 1033) * dieresis accent: Accents. (line 4544) * discretionary multiplication: Math miscellany. (line 3831) * displaying quoted text with paragraph indentation: quotation. (line 1804) * displaying quoted text without paragraph indentation: quote. (line 1819) * document class options: Document class options. (line 372) * document classes: Document classes. (line 355) * document templates: Document templates. (line 5086) * dollar sign: Text symbols. (line 4461) * dot accent: Accents. (line 4553) * dot over accent, math: Math accents. (line 3780) * dot-over accent: Accents. (line 4553) * dot-under accent: Accents. (line 4582) * dotless i: Accents. (line 4590) * dotless i, math: Math accents. (line 3789) * dotless j: Accents. (line 4593) * dotless j, math: Math accents. (line 3792) * double angle quotation marks: Text symbols. (line 4381) * double dagger, in text: Text symbols. (line 4372) * double dagger, in text <1>: Text symbols. (line 4458) * double dot accent, math: Math accents. (line 3777) * double guillemets: Text symbols. (line 4381) * double left quote: Text symbols. (line 4495) * double low-9 quotation mark: Text symbols. (line 4403) * double quote, straight base: Text symbols. (line 4508) * double right quote: Text symbols. (line 4498) * double spacing: Low-level font commands. (line 655) * double vertical bar, in text: Text symbols. (line 4430) * e-dash: Text symbols. (line 4467) * ellipsis: Text symbols. (line 4387) * em-dash: Text symbols. (line 4464) * em-dash, three-quarters: Text symbols. (line 4517) * em-dash, two-thirds: Text symbols. (line 4523) * emphasis: Font styles. (line 479) * emphasis <1>: Font styles. (line 553) * enclosure list: \encl. (line 4958) * ending & starting: Starting & ending. (line 338) * enlarge current page: \enlargethispage. (line 2425) * environments: Environments. (line 930) * environments, defining: \newenvironment & \renewenvironment. (line 2618) * equation number, cross referencing: \ref. (line 918) * equation numbers, omitting: eqnarray. (line 1143) * equations, aligning: eqnarray. (line 1120) * equations, environment for: equation. (line 1155) * es-zet German letter: Non-English characters. (line 4669) * eth, Icelandic letter: Non-English characters. (line 4641) * euro symbol: Text symbols. (line 4470) * exclamation point, upside-down: Text symbols. (line 4473) * exponent: Subscripts & superscripts. (line 3007) * external files, creating: filecontents. (line 1279) * feminine ordinal symbol: Text symbols. (line 4486) * figure number, cross referencing: \ref. (line 918) * figures, footnotes in: minipage. (line 1533) * figures, inserting: figure. (line 1168) * fixed-width font: Font styles. (line 571) * 'float' package: figure. (line 1196) * 'float' package <1>: figure. (line 1200) * flushing floats and starting a page: \clearpage. (line 2413) * font commands, low-level: Low-level font commands. (line 609) * font sizes: Font sizes. (line 583) * font styles: Font styles. (line 455) * fonts: Fonts. (line 449) * fonts, new commands for: \newfont. (line 2685) * footer style: \pagestyle. (line 3972) * footer, parameters for: Page layout parameters. (line 749) * footnote number, cross referencing: \ref. (line 918) * footnote parameters: Footnote parameters. (line 2522) * footnotes in figures: minipage. (line 1533) * footnotes, creating: Footnotes. (line 2458) * footnotes, symbolic instead of numbered: Symbolic footnotes. (line 2509) * formulas, environment for: equation. (line 1155) * formulas, math: Math formulas. (line 2971) * fragile commands: \protect. (line 2699) * French quotation marks: Text symbols. (line 4381) * functions, math: Math functions. (line 3652) * global options: Document class options. (line 372) * global options <1>: Document class options. (line 442) * glossaries: Glossaries. (line 4834) * grave accent: Accents. (line 4565) * grave accent, math: Math accents. (line 3783) * greater than symbol, in text: Text symbols. (line 4476) * greek letters: Math symbols. (line 3016) * ha'c: tabbing. (line 1859) * \> <1>: Spacing in math mode. (line 3821) * \> (tabbing): tabbing. (line 1858) * \@: \AT. (line 4060) * \@fnsymbol: Symbolic footnotes. (line 2514) * \a (tabbing): tabbing. (line 1888) * \a' (acute accent in tabbing): tabbing. (line 1889) * \a= (macron accent in tabbing): tabbing. (line 1889) * \aa (aa): Non-English characters. (line 4633) * \AA (AA): Non-English characters. (line 4633) * \acute: Math accents. (line 3764) * \addcontentsline{EXT}{UNIT}{TEXT}: \addcontentsline. (line 4790) * \address: \address. (line 4925) * \addtocontents{EXT}{TEXT}: \addtocontents. (line 4819) * \addtocounter: \addtocounter. (line 2802) * \addtolength: \addtolength. (line 2845) * \addvspace: \addvspace. (line 4112) * \ae (ae): Non-English characters. (line 4637) * \AE (AE): Non-English characters. (line 4637) * \aleph: Math symbols. (line 3024) * \alph: \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol. (line 2738) * \Alph: \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol. (line 2741) * \Alph example: enumerate. (line 1115) * \alpha: Math symbols. (line 3027) * \alsoname: Indexes. (line 4863) * \amalg: Math symbols. (line 3030) * \and for '\author': \maketitle. (line 3928) * \angle: Math symbols. (line 3033) * \appendix: Sectioning. (line 849) * \approx: Math symbols. (line 3036) * \arabic: \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol. (line 2744) * \arccos: Math functions. (line 3655) * \arcsin: Math functions. (line 3658) * \arctan: Math functions. (line 3661) * \arg: Math functions. (line 3664) * \arraycolsep: array. (line 986) * \arrayrulewidth: tabular. (line 2046) * \arraystretch: tabular. (line 2050) * \ast: Math symbols. (line 3039) * \asymp: Math symbols. (line 3042) * \author{NAME \and NAME2}: \maketitle. (line 3927) * \a` (grave accent in tabbing): tabbing. (line 1889) * \b (bar-under accent): Accents. (line 4574) * \backslash: Math symbols. (line 3045) * \backslash <1>: Reserved characters. (line 4339) * \bar: Math accents. (line 3767) * \baselineskip: Low-level font commands. (line 649) * \baselinestretch: Low-level font commands. (line 655) * \begin: Environments. (line 930) * \beta: Math symbols. (line 3048) * \bf: Font styles. (line 546) * \bfseries: Font styles. (line 485) * \bibitem: \bibitem. (line 2138) * \bibliography: Using BibTeX. (line 2177) * \bibliographystyle: Using BibTeX. (line 2177) * \bigcap: Math symbols. (line 3051) * \bigcap <1>: Math symbols. (line 3081) * \bigcirc: Math symbols. (line 3054) * \bigcup: Math symbols. (line 3057) * \bigodot: Math symbols. (line 3060) * \bigoplus: Math symbols. (line 3063) * \bigotimes: Math symbols. (line 3066) * \bigskip: \bigskip \medskip \smallskip. (line 4126) * \bigskipamount: \bigskip \medskip \smallskip. (line 4126) * \bigsqcup: Math symbols. (line 3075) * \bigtriangledown: Math symbols. (line 3069) * \bigtriangleup: Math symbols. (line 3072) * \biguplus: Math symbols. (line 3078) * \bigwedge: Math symbols. (line 3084) * \bmod: Math functions. (line 3667) * \boldmath: Math formulas. (line 2994) * \bot: Math symbols. (line 3087) * \bottomfraction: figure. (line 1229) * \bottomnumber: figure. (line 1262) * \bowtie: Math symbols. (line 3090) * \Box: Math symbols. (line 3093) * \breve: Math accents. (line 3770) * \bullet: Math symbols. (line 3096) * \c (cedilla accent): Accents. (line 4578) * \cal: Font styles. (line 549) * \cap: Math symbols. (line 3099) * \capitalacute: Accents. (line 4548) * \capitalbreve: Accents. (line 4613) * \capitalcaron: Accents. (line 4623) * \capitalcedilla: Accents. (line 4578) * \capitalcircumflex: Accents. (line 4561) * \capitaldieresis: Accents. (line 4544) * \capitaldotaccent: Accents. (line 4582) * \capitalgrave: Accents. (line 4565) * \capitalhungarumlaut: Accents. (line 4586) * \capitalmacron: Accents. (line 4557) * \capitalnewtie: Accents. (line 4608) * \capitalogonek: Accents. (line 4597) * \capitalring: Accents. (line 4602) * \capitaltie: Accents. (line 4608) * \capitaltilde: Accents. (line 4571) * \caption: figure. (line 1222) * \cc: \cc. (line 4938) * \cdot: Math symbols. (line 3102) * \cdots: Math miscellany. (line 3834) * \centering: \centering. (line 1010) * \chapter: Sectioning. (line 821) * \check: Math accents. (line 3773) * \chi: Math symbols. (line 3105) * \circ: Math symbols. (line 3108) * \circle: \circle. (line 1616) * \cite: \cite. (line 2155) * \cleardoublepage: \cleardoublepage. (line 2405) * \clearpage: \clearpage. (line 2413) * \cline: \cline. (line 2088) * \closing: \closing. (line 4948) * \clubsuit: Math symbols. (line 3111) * \columnsep: \twocolumn. (line 700) * \columnseprule: \twocolumn. (line 703) * \columnwidth: \twocolumn. (line 707) * \cong: Math symbols. (line 3114) * \contentsline: \addcontentsline. (line 4813) * \coprod: Math symbols. (line 3117) * \copyright: Text symbols. (line 4364) * \cos: Math functions. (line 3670) * \cosh: Math functions. (line 3673) * \cot: Math functions. (line 3676) * \coth: Math functions. (line 3679) * \csc: Math functions. (line 3682) * \cup: Math symbols. (line 3120) * \d (dot-under accent): Accents. (line 4582) * \dag: Text symbols. (line 4368) * \dagger: Math symbols. (line 3123) * \dashbox: \dashbox. (line 1667) * \dashv: Math symbols. (line 3126) * \date{TEXT}: \maketitle. (line 3933) * \day: \day \month \year. (line 2821) * \dblfloatpagefraction: \twocolumn. (line 718) * \dblfloatsep: \twocolumn. (line 722) * \dbltextfloatsep: \twocolumn. (line 727) * \dbltopfraction: \twocolumn. (line 713) * \ddag: Text symbols. (line 4371) * \ddagger: Math symbols. (line 3129) * \ddot: Math accents. (line 3776) * \ddots: Math miscellany. (line 3838) * \deg: Math functions. (line 3685) * \Delta: Math symbols. (line 3132) * \delta: Math symbols. (line 3135) * \depth: Predefined lengths. (line 2877) * \det: Math functions. (line 3688) * \dh (ae): Non-English characters. (line 4641) * \DH (AE): Non-English characters. (line 4641) * \Diamond: Math symbols. (line 3138) * \diamond: Math symbols. (line 3141) * \diamondsuit: Math symbols. (line 3144) * \dim: Math functions. (line 3691) * \displaystyle: Math formulas. (line 2999) * \div: Math symbols. (line 3147) * \dj: Non-English characters. (line 4645) * \DJ: Non-English characters. (line 4645) * \documentclass: Document classes. (line 355) * \documentclass, commands before: filecontents. (line 1287) * \dot: Math accents. (line 3779) * \doteq: Math symbols. (line 3150) * \dotfill: \dotfill. (line 4106) * \dots: Text symbols. (line 4385) * \doublerulesep: tabular. (line 2054) * \downarrow: Math symbols. (line 3153) * \Downarrow: Math symbols. (line 3156) * \ell: Math symbols. (line 3159) * \em: Font styles. (line 552) * \emph: Font styles. (line 479) * \emptyset: Math symbols. (line 3162) * \encl: \encl. (line 4958) * \end: Environments. (line 930) * \enlargethispage: \enlargethispage. (line 2425) * \enumi: enumerate. (line 1105) * \enumii: enumerate. (line 1105) * \enumiii: enumerate. (line 1105) * \enumiv: enumerate. (line 1105) * \epsilon: Math symbols. (line 3165) * \equiv: Math symbols. (line 3168) * \eta: Math symbols. (line 3171) * \evensidemargin: Document class options. (line 416) * \exists: Math symbols. (line 3174) * \exp: Math functions. (line 3694) * \extracolsep: tabular. (line 2017) * \fbox: \fbox and \framebox. (line 4176) * \fboxrule: \framebox (picture). (line 1661) * \fboxrule <1>: \fbox and \framebox. (line 4188) * \fboxsep: \framebox (picture). (line 1661) * \fboxsep <1>: \fbox and \framebox. (line 4188) * \fill: \hfill. (line 4042) * \flat: Math symbols. (line 3177) * \floatpagefraction: figure. (line 1232) * \floatsep: figure. (line 1247) * \flushbottom: \flushbottom. (line 734) * \fnsymbol: \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol. (line 2753) * \fnsymbol, and footnotes: Symbolic footnotes. (line 2514) * \fontencoding: Low-level font commands. (line 614) * \fontfamily: Low-level font commands. (line 617) * \fontseries: Low-level font commands. (line 626) * \fontshape: Low-level font commands. (line 637) * \fontsize: Low-level font commands. (line 649) * \footnote: \footnote. (line 2465) * \footnotemark: \footnotemark. (line 2480) * \footnoterule: Footnote parameters. (line 2522) * \footnotesep: Footnote parameters. (line 2528) * \footnotesize: Font sizes. (line 588) * \footnotetext: \footnotetext. (line 2495) * \footskip: Page layout parameters. (line 759) * \forall: Math symbols. (line 3180) * \frac: Math miscellany. (line 3842) * \frac{num}{den}: Math miscellany. (line 3841) * \frame: \frame. (line 1682) * \framebox: \framebox (picture). (line 1653) * \framebox <1>: \fbox and \framebox. (line 4176) * \frown: Math symbols. (line 3183) * \fussy: \fussy. (line 2347) * \Gamma: Math symbols. (line 3186) * \gamma: Math symbols. (line 3189) * \gcd: Math functions. (line 3697) * \ge: Math symbols. (line 3192) * \geq: Math symbols. (line 3195) * \gets: Math symbols. (line 3198) * \gg: Math symbols. (line 3201) * \glossary: Glossaries. (line 4836) * \glossaryentry: Glossaries. (line 4839) * \grave: Math accents. (line 3782) * \guillemotleft (<<): Text symbols. (line 4377) * \guillemotright (>>): Text symbols. (line 4378) * \guilsinglleft (<): Text symbols. (line 4379) * \guilsinglright (>): Text symbols. (line 4380) * \H (Hungarian umlaut accent): Accents. (line 4586) * \hat: Math accents. (line 3785) * \hbar: Math symbols. (line 3204) * \headheight: Page layout parameters. (line 749) * \headsep: Page layout parameters. (line 754) * \heartsuit: Math symbols. (line 3207) * \height: Predefined lengths. (line 2875) * \hfill: \hfill. (line 4039) * \hline: \hline. (line 2099) * \hom: Math functions. (line 3700) * \hookleftarrow: Math symbols. (line 3210) * \hookrightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3213) * \hrulefill: \hrulefill. (line 4099) * \hsize: Page layout parameters. (line 799) * \hspace: \hspace. (line 4024) * \huge: Font sizes. (line 588) * \Huge: Font sizes. (line 588) * \hyphenation: \hyphenation. (line 2365) * \i (dotless i): Accents. (line 4590) * \iff: Math symbols. (line 3216) * \ij (ij): Non-English characters. (line 4649) * \IJ (IJ): Non-English characters. (line 4649) * \Im: Math symbols. (line 3219) * \imath: Math accents. (line 3788) * \in: Math symbols. (line 3222) * \include: \include. (line 4720) * \includeonly: \includeonly. (line 4738) * \indent: \indent. (line 2900) * \index: Indexes. (line 4852) * \indexentry: Indexes. (line 4855) * \inf: Math functions. (line 3703) * \infty: Math symbols. (line 3225) * \input: \input. (line 4752) * \int: Math symbols. (line 3228) * \intextsep: figure. (line 1251) * \iota: Math symbols. (line 3231) * \it: Font styles. (line 555) * \item: description. (line 1041) * \item <1>: enumerate. (line 1095) * \item <2>: itemize. (line 1374) * \itemindent: itemize. (line 1417) * \itemsep: itemize. (line 1439) * \itshape: Font styles. (line 476) * \j (dotless j): Accents. (line 4593) * \jmath: Math accents. (line 3791) * \Join: Math symbols. (line 3234) * \k (ogonek): Accents. (line 4597) * \kappa: Math symbols. (line 3237) * \ker: Math functions. (line 3706) * \kill: tabbing. (line 1893) * \l (/l): Non-English characters. (line 4653) * \L (/L): Non-English characters. (line 4653) * \label: \label. (line 876) * \labelenumi: enumerate. (line 1109) * \labelenumii: enumerate. (line 1109) * \labelenumiii: enumerate. (line 1109) * \labelenumiv: enumerate. (line 1109) * \labelitemi: itemize. (line 1397) * \labelitemii: itemize. (line 1397) * \labelitemiii: itemize. (line 1397) * \labelitemiv: itemize. (line 1397) * \labelsep: itemize. (line 1420) * \labelwidth: itemize. (line 1423) * \Lambda: Math symbols. (line 3240) * \lambda: Math symbols. (line 3243) * \land: Math symbols. (line 3246) * \langle: Math symbols. (line 3249) * \large: Font sizes. (line 588) * \Large: Font sizes. (line 588) * \LARGE: Font sizes. (line 588) * \LaTeX: Text symbols. (line 4374) * \lbrace: Math symbols. (line 3252) * \lbrack: Math symbols. (line 3255) * \lceil: Math symbols. (line 3258) * \ldots: Text symbols. (line 4384) * \le: Math symbols. (line 3261) * \leadsto: Math symbols. (line 3264) * \left DELIM1 ... \right DELIM2: Math miscellany. (line 3844) * \Leftarrow: Math symbols. (line 3266) * \leftarrow: Math symbols. (line 3269) * \lefteqn: eqnarray. (line 1148) * \leftharpoondown: Math symbols. (line 3272) * \leftharpoonup: Math symbols. (line 3275) * \leftmargin: itemize. (line 1404) * \leftmargini: itemize. (line 1404) * \leftmarginii: itemize. (line 1404) * \leftmarginiii: itemize. (line 1404) * \leftmarginiv: itemize. (line 1404) * \leftmarginv: itemize. (line 1404) * \leftmarginvi: itemize. (line 1404) * \Leftrightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3278) * \leftrightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3281) * \leq: Math symbols. (line 3284) * \lfloor: Math symbols. (line 3287) * \lg: Math functions. (line 3709) * \lhd: Math symbols. (line 3290) * \lim: Math functions. (line 3712) * \liminf: Math functions. (line 3715) * \limsup: Math functions. (line 3718) * \line: \line. (line 1693) * \linebreak: \linebreak & \nolinebreak. (line 2381) * \linespread: Low-level font commands. (line 662) * \linethickness: \linethickness. (line 1708) * \linewidth: Page layout parameters. (line 764) * \listoffigures: Tables of contents. (line 4780) * \listoftables: Tables of contents. (line 4780) * \listparindent: itemize. (line 1426) * \ll: Math symbols. (line 3293) * \ln: Math functions. (line 3721) * \lnot: Math symbols. (line 3296) * \location: \location. (line 4967) * \log: Math functions. (line 3724) * \longleftarrow: Math symbols. (line 3299) * \longleftrightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3302) * \longmapsto: Math symbols. (line 3305) * \longrightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3308) * \lor: Math symbols. (line 3311) * \lq: Text symbols. (line 4390) * \makebox: \makebox. (line 4208) * \makebox (picture): \makebox (picture). (line 1627) * \makeglossary: Glossaries. (line 4834) * \makeindex: Indexes. (line 4849) * \makelabels: \makelabels. (line 4975) * \maketitle: \maketitle. (line 3922) * \mapsto: Math symbols. (line 3314) * \marginpar: Marginal notes. (line 2924) * \marginparpush: Marginal notes. (line 2951) * \marginparsep: Marginal notes. (line 2955) * \marginparwidth: Marginal notes. (line 2959) * \markboth{LEFT}{RIGHT}: \pagestyle. (line 3995) * \markright{RIGHT}: \pagestyle. (line 4002) * \mathbf: Font styles. (line 509) * \mathcal: Font styles. (line 525) * \mathnormal: Font styles. (line 522) * \mathring: Math accents. (line 3794) * \mathrm: Font styles. (line 506) * \mathsf: Font styles. (line 512) * \mathtt: Font styles. (line 515) * \mathversion: Font styles. (line 527) * \max: Math functions. (line 3727) * \mbox: \mbox. (line 4169) * \mdseries: Font styles. (line 482) * \medskip: \bigskip \medskip \smallskip. (line 4130) * \medskipamount: \bigskip \medskip \smallskip. (line 4130) * \mho: Math symbols. (line 3317) * \mid: Math symbols. (line 3319) * \min: Math functions. (line 3730) * \models: Math symbols. (line 3322) * \month: \day \month \year. (line 2821) * \mp: Math symbols. (line 3325) * \mu: Math symbols. (line 3328) * \multicolumn: \multicolumn. (line 2066) * \multiput: \multiput. (line 1732) * \nabla: Math symbols. (line 3331) * \name: \name. (line 4983) * \natural: Math symbols. (line 3334) * \ne: Math symbols. (line 3337) * \nearrow: Math symbols. (line 3340) * \neg: Math symbols. (line 3343) * \neq: Math symbols. (line 3346) * \newcommand: \newcommand & \renewcommand. (line 2543) * \newcounter: \newcounter. (line 2579) * \newenvironment: \newenvironment & \renewenvironment. (line 2618) * \newfont: \newfont. (line 2685) * \newlength: \newlength. (line 2594) * \newline: \newline. (line 2328) * \NEWLINE: \SPACE. (line 4049) * \newpage: \newpage. (line 2419) * \newsavebox: \newsavebox. (line 2608) * \newtheorem: \newtheorem. (line 2657) * \newtie: Accents. (line 4608) * \ng: Non-English characters. (line 4657) * \NG: Non-English characters. (line 4657) * \ni: Math symbols. (line 3349) * \nocite: \nocite. (line 2169) * \nofiles: Tables of contents. (line 4784) * \noindent: \noindent. (line 2911) * \nolinebreak: \linebreak & \nolinebreak. (line 2381) * \nonumber: eqnarray. (line 1143) * \nopagebreak: \pagebreak & \nopagebreak. (line 2440) * \normalfont: Font styles. (line 503) * \normalmarginpar: Marginal notes. (line 2939) * \normalsize: Font sizes. (line 588) * \not: Math symbols. (line 3352) * \notin: Math symbols. (line 3355) * \nu: Math symbols. (line 3358) * \nwarrow: Math symbols. (line 3361) * \o (/o): Non-English characters. (line 4661) * \O (/O): Non-English characters. (line 4661) * \obeycr: \obeycr & \restorecr. (line 2319) * \oddsidemargin: Document class options. (line 416) * \odot: Math symbols. (line 3364) * \oe (oe): Non-English characters. (line 4665) * \OE (OE): Non-English characters. (line 4665) * \oint: Math symbols. (line 3367) * \oldstylenums: Font styles. (line 531) * \Omega: Math symbols. (line 3370) * \omega: Math symbols. (line 3373) * \ominus: Math symbols. (line 3376) * \onecolumn: \onecolumn. (line 684) * \opening: \opening. (line 4991) * \oplus: Math symbols. (line 3379) * \oslash: Math symbols. (line 3382) * \otimes: Math symbols. (line 3385) * \oval: \oval. (line 1742) * \overbrace{TEXT}: Math miscellany. (line 3849) * \overline{TEXT}: Math miscellany. (line 3853) * \owns: Math symbols. (line 3388) * \P: Text symbols. (line 4393) * \pagebreak: \pagebreak & \nopagebreak. (line 2440) * \pagenumbering: \pagenumbering. (line 3948) * \pageref: \pageref. (line 908) * \pagestyle: \pagestyle. (line 3972) * \paragraph: Sectioning. (line 826) * \parallel: Math symbols. (line 3391) * \parbox: \parbox. (line 4233) * \parindent: minipage. (line 1529) * \parindent <1>: \indent. (line 2900) * \parsep: itemize. (line 1444) * \parskip: \parskip. (line 2918) * \parskip example: itemize. (line 1460) * \part: Sectioning. (line 820) * \partial: Math symbols. (line 3394) * \partopsep: itemize. (line 1454) * \perp: Math symbols. (line 3397) * \phi: Math symbols. (line 3400) * \Pi: Math symbols. (line 3403) * \pi: Math symbols. (line 3406) * \pm: Math symbols. (line 3409) * \pmod: Math functions. (line 3733) * \poptabs: tabbing. (line 1899) * \poptabs <1>: tabbing. (line 1900) * \pounds: Text symbols. (line 4397) * \Pr: Math functions. (line 3736) * \prec: Math symbols. (line 3412) * \preceq: Math symbols. (line 3415) * \prime: Math symbols. (line 3418) * \prod: Math symbols. (line 3421) * \propto: Math symbols. (line 3424) * \protect: \protect. (line 2699) * \ps: \ps. (line 5003) * \Psi: Math symbols. (line 3427) * \psi: Math symbols. (line 3430) * \pushtabs: tabbing. (line 1902) * \put: \put. (line 1766) * \quotedblbase (,,): Text symbols. (line 4401) * \quotesinglbase (,): Text symbols. (line 4402) * \r (ring accent): Accents. (line 4602) * \raggedbottom: \raggedbottom. (line 743) * \raggedleft: \raggedleft. (line 1361) * \raggedright: \raggedright. (line 1335) * \raisebox: \raisebox. (line 4273) * \rangle: Math symbols. (line 3433) * \rbrace: Math symbols. (line 3436) * \rbrack: Math symbols. (line 3439) * \rceil: Math symbols. (line 3442) * \Re: Math symbols. (line 3445) * \ref: \ref. (line 918) * \refstepcounter: \refstepcounter. (line 2808) * \renewenvironment: \newenvironment & \renewenvironment. (line 2618) * \restorecr: \obeycr & \restorecr. (line 2319) * \reversemarginpar: Marginal notes. (line 2939) * \rfloor: Math symbols. (line 3448) * \rhd: Math symbols. (line 3451) * \rho: Math symbols. (line 3454) * \right: Math miscellany. (line 3845) * \Rightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3457) * \rightarrow: Math symbols. (line 3460) * \rightharpoondown: Math symbols. (line 3463) * \rightharpoonup: Math symbols. (line 3466) * \rightleftharpoons: Math symbols. (line 3469) * \rightmargin: itemize. (line 1430) * \rm: Font styles. (line 558) * \rmfamily: Font styles. (line 473) * \roman: \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol. (line 2747) * \roman <1>: \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol. (line 2750) * \rq: Text symbols. (line 4405) * \rule: \rule. (line 4678) * \S: Text symbols. (line 4408) * \savebox: \savebox. (line 4289) * \sbox: \sbox. (line 4301) * \sc: Font styles. (line 561) * \scriptsize: Font sizes. (line 588) * \scshape: Font styles. (line 497) * \searrow: Math symbols. (line 3472) * \sec: Math functions. (line 3739) * \section: Sectioning. (line 823) * \seename: Indexes. (line 4863) * \selectfont: Low-level font commands. (line 668) * \setcounter: \setcounter. (line 2792) * \setlength: \setlength. (line 2838) * \setminus: Math symbols. (line 3475) * \settodepth: \settodepth. (line 2851) * \settoheight: \settoheight. (line 2859) * \settowidth: \settowidth. (line 2867) * \sf: Font styles. (line 564) * \sffamily: Font styles. (line 494) * \sharp: Math symbols. (line 3478) * \shortstack: \shortstack. (line 1774) * \Sigma: Math symbols. (line 3481) * \sigma: Math symbols. (line 3484) * \signature: \signature. (line 5009) * \sim: Math symbols. (line 3487) * \simeq: Math symbols. (line 3490) * \sin: Math functions. (line 3742) * \sinh: Math functions. (line 3745) * \sl: Font styles. (line 567) * \slshape: Font styles. (line 491) * \small: Font sizes. (line 588) * \smallint: Math symbols. (line 3493) * \smallskip: \bigskip \medskip \smallskip. (line 4134) * \smallskipamount: \bigskip \medskip \smallskip. (line 4134) * \smile: Math symbols. (line 3496) * \SPACE: \SPACE. (line 4049) * \spadesuit: Math symbols. (line 3499) * \sqcap: Math symbols. (line 3502) * \sqcup: Math symbols. (line 3505) * \sqrt[ROOT]{arg}: Math miscellany. (line 3856) * \sqsubset: Math symbols. (line 3508) * \sqsubseteq: Math symbols. (line 3511) * \sqsupset: Math symbols. (line 3514) * \sqsupseteq: Math symbols. (line 3517) * \ss (ss): Non-English characters. (line 4669) * \SS (SS): Non-English characters. (line 4669) * \stackrel{TEXT}{RELATION}: Math miscellany. (line 3862) * \star: Math symbols. (line 3520) * \startbreaks: \startbreaks. (line 5015) * \stepcounter: \stepcounter. (line 2815) * \stop: Command line. (line 5079) * \stopbreaks: \stopbreaks. (line 5022) * \subparagraph: Sectioning. (line 827) * \subsection: Sectioning. (line 824) * \subset: Math symbols. (line 3523) * \subseteq: Math symbols. (line 3526) * \subsubsection: Sectioning. (line 825) * \succ: Math symbols. (line 3529) * \succeq: Math symbols. (line 3532) * \sum: Math symbols. (line 3535) * \sup: Math functions. (line 3748) * \supset: Math symbols. (line 3538) * \supseteq: Math symbols. (line 3541) * \surd: Math symbols. (line 3544) * \swarrow: Math symbols. (line 3547) * \symbol: Reserved characters. (line 4348) * \t (tie-after accent): Accents. (line 4608) * \TAB: \SPACE. (line 4049) * \tabbingsep: tabbing. (line 1907) * \tabcolsep: tabular. (line 2058) * \tableofcontents: Tables of contents. (line 4770) * \tan: Math functions. (line 3751) * \tanh: Math functions. (line 3754) * \tau: Math symbols. (line 3550) * \telephone: \telephone. (line 5029) * \TeX: Text symbols. (line 4411) * \textascenderwordmark: Text symbols. (line 4449) * \textasciicircum: Text symbols. (line 4414) * \textasciitilde: Text symbols. (line 4417) * \textasteriskcentered: Text symbols. (line 4420) * \textbackslash: Text symbols. (line 4423) * \textbar: Text symbols. (line 4426) * \textbardbl: Text symbols. (line 4429) * \textbf: Font styles. (line 485) * \textbigcircle: Text symbols. (line 4432) * \textbraceleft: Text symbols. (line 4435) * \textbraceright: Text symbols. (line 4438) * \textbullet: Text symbols. (line 4441) * \textcapitalwordmark: Text symbols. (line 4448) * \textcircled{LETTER}: Text symbols. (line 4444) * \textcompwordmark: Text symbols. (line 4447) * \textcopyright: Text symbols. (line 4365) * \textdagger: Text symbols. (line 4454) * \textdaggerdbl: Text symbols. (line 4457) * \textdollar (or '$'): Text symbols. (line 4460) * \textellipsis: Text symbols. (line 4386) * \textemdash (or '---'): Text symbols. (line 4463) * \textendash (or '--'): Text symbols. (line 4466) * \texteuro: Text symbols. (line 4469) * \textexclamdown (or '!`'): Text symbols. (line 4472) * \textfloatsep: figure. (line 1256) * \textfraction: figure. (line 1236) * \textgreater: Text symbols. (line 4475) * \textheight: Page layout parameters. (line 772) * \textit: Font styles. (line 476) * \textleftarrow: Text symbols. (line 4481) * \textless: Text symbols. (line 4478) * \textmd: Font styles. (line 482) * \textnormal: Font styles. (line 503) * \textordfeminine: Text symbols. (line 4484) * \textordmasculine: Text symbols. (line 4485) * \textparagraph: Text symbols. (line 4394) * \textperiodcentered: Text symbols. (line 4488) * \textquestiondown (or '?`'): Text symbols. (line 4491) * \textquotedblleft (or '``'): Text symbols. (line 4494) * \textquotedblright (or '''): Text symbols. (line 4497) * \textquoteleft (or '`'): Text symbols. (line 4500) * \textquoteright (or '''): Text symbols. (line 4503) * \textquotestraightbase: Text symbols. (line 4506) * \textquotestraightdblbase: Text symbols. (line 4507) * \textregistered: Text symbols. (line 4510) * \textrightarrow: Text symbols. (line 4513) * \textrm: Font styles. (line 473) * \textsc: Font styles. (line 497) * \textsf: Font styles. (line 494) * \textsl: Font styles. (line 491) * \textsterling: Text symbols. (line 4398) * \textthreequartersemdash: Text symbols. (line 4516) * \texttrademark: Text symbols. (line 4519) * \texttt: Font styles. (line 500) * \texttwelveudash: Text symbols. (line 4522) * \textunderscore: Text symbols. (line 4525) * \textup: Font styles. (line 488) * \textvisiblespace: Text symbols. (line 4528) * \textwidth: Page layout parameters. (line 779) * \th (th): Non-English characters. (line 4673) * \TH (TH): Non-English characters. (line 4673) * \thanks{TEXT}: \maketitle. (line 3937) * \theta: Math symbols. (line 3553) * \thicklines: \thicklines. (line 1718) * \thinlines: \thinlines. (line 1725) * \thinspace: \thinspace. (line 4075) * \thispagestyle: \thispagestyle. (line 4008) * \tilde: Math accents. (line 3797) * \times: Math symbols. (line 3556) * \tiny: Font sizes. (line 588) * \title{TEXT}: \maketitle. (line 3941) * \to: Math symbols. (line 3559) * \today: \today. (line 4697) * \top: Math symbols. (line 3562) * \topfraction: figure. (line 1241) * \topmargin: Page layout parameters. (line 803) * \topnumber: figure. (line 1266) * \topsep: itemize. (line 1448) * \topskip: Page layout parameters. (line 810) * \totalheight: Predefined lengths. (line 2879) * \totalnumber: figure. (line 1270) * \triangle: Math symbols. (line 3565) * \triangleleft: Math symbols. (line 3568) * \triangleright: Math symbols. (line 3571) * \tt: Font styles. (line 570) * \ttfamily: Font styles. (line 500) * \twocolumn: \twocolumn. (line 690) * \typein: \typein. (line 5040) * \typeout: \typeout. (line 5054) * \u (breve accent): Accents. (line 4613) * \unboldmath: Math formulas. (line 2994) * \underbar: Accents. (line 4616) * \underbrace{math}: Math miscellany. (line 3866) * \underline{text}: Math miscellany. (line 3869) * \unitlength: picture. (line 1550) * \unlhd: Math symbols. (line 3574) * \unrhd: Math symbols. (line 3577) * \Uparrow: Math symbols. (line 3580) * \uparrow: Math symbols. (line 3583) * \Updownarrow: Math symbols. (line 3586) * \updownarrow: Math symbols. (line 3589) * \uplus: Math symbols. (line 3592) * \upshape: Font styles. (line 488) * \Upsilon: Math symbols. (line 3595) * \upsilon: Math symbols. (line 3598) * \usebox: \usebox. (line 4313) * \usecounter: \usecounter. (line 2767) * \usefont: Low-level font commands. (line 672) * \usepackage: Document class options. (line 435) * \v (breve accent): Accents. (line 4623) * \value: \value. (line 2778) * \varepsilon: Math symbols. (line 3601) * \varphi: Math symbols. (line 3604) * \varpi: Math symbols. (line 3607) * \varrho: Math symbols. (line 3610) * \varsigma: Math symbols. (line 3613) * \vartheta: Math symbols. (line 3616) * \vdash: Math symbols. (line 3619) * \vdots: Math miscellany. (line 3874) * \vdots <1>: Math miscellany. (line 3875) * \vec: Math accents. (line 3800) * \vector: \vector. (line 1793) * \vee: Math symbols. (line 3622) * \verb: \verb. (line 2261) * \Vert: Math symbols. (line 3625) * \vert: Math symbols. (line 3628) * \vfill: \vfill. (line 4142) * \vline: \vline. (line 2106) * \vspace: \vspace. (line 4149) * \wedge: Math symbols. (line 3631) * \widehat: Math accents. (line 3803) * \widehat <1>: Math accents. (line 3806) * \width: Predefined lengths. (line 2873) * \wp: Math symbols. (line 3634) * \wr: Math symbols. (line 3637) * \Xi: Math symbols. (line 3640) * \xi: Math symbols. (line 3643) * \year: \day \month \year. (line 2821) * \zeta: Math symbols. (line 3646) * \[: Math formulas. (line 2981) * \\ (for 'array'): array. (line 971) * \\ (for 'center'): center. (line 1003) * \\ (for 'eqnarray'): eqnarray. (line 1135) * \\ (for 'flushright'): flushright. (line 1354) * \\ (for '\shortstack' objects): \shortstack. (line 1788) * \\ (tabbing): tabbing. (line 1852) * \\ for 'flushleft': flushleft. (line 1328) * \\ for letters: Letters. (line 4915) * \\ for 'tabular': tabular. (line 1969) * \\ for 'verse': verse. (line 2289) * \\ for '\author': \maketitle. (line 3928) * \\ for '\title': \maketitle. (line 3942) * \\ force line break: \\. (line 2309) * \\* (for 'eqnarray'): eqnarray. (line 1140) * \]: Math formulas. (line 2981) * \^: Reserved characters. (line 4344) * \^ (circumflex accent): Accents. (line 4561) * \_: Reserved characters. (line 4334) * \` (grave accent): Accents. (line 4565) * \` (tabbing): tabbing. (line 1879) * \{: Reserved characters. (line 4334) * \|: Math symbols. (line 3021) * \}: Reserved characters. (line 4334) * \~: Reserved characters. (line 4344) * \~ (tilde accent): Accents. (line 4571) * ^: Subscripts & superscripts. (line 3007) * _: Subscripts & superscripts. (line 3007) * {...} for required arguments: Overview. (line 326) * a4paper option: Document class options. (line 385) * a5paper option: Document class options. (line 385) * abstract environment: abstract. (line 940) * array environment: array. (line 951) * article class: Document classes. (line 362) * b5paper option: Document class options. (line 385) * book class: Document classes. (line 362) * center environment: center. (line 996) * description environment: description. (line 1033) * displaymath environment: displaymath. (line 1056) * displaymath environment <1>: Math formulas. (line 2971) * document environment: document. (line 1076) * draft option: Document class options. (line 390) * enumerate environment: enumerate. (line 1082) * eqnarray environment: eqnarray. (line 1120) * equation environment: equation. (line 1155) * equation environment <1>: Math formulas. (line 2971) * executivepaper option: Document class options. (line 385) * figure: figure. (line 1168) * filecontents: filecontents. (line 1279) * final option: Document class options. (line 390) * fleqn option: Document class options. (line 390) * flushleft environment: flushleft. (line 1322) * flushright environment: flushright. (line 1348) * indexspace: Indexes. (line 4875) * itemize environment: itemize. (line 1374) * landscape option: Document class options. (line 390) * latex command: Overview. (line 293) * email address: About this document. (line 253) * legalpaper option: Document class options. (line 385) * leqno option: Document class options. (line 390) * letter: letter. (line 1476) * letter class: Document classes. (line 362) * letterpaper option: Document class options. (line 385) * list: list. (line 1481) * lR box: picture. (line 1606) * lrbox: lrbox. (line 4198) * lualatex command: Overview. (line 307) * math environment: math. (line 1506) * math environment <1>: Math formulas. (line 2971) * minipage environment: minipage. (line 1518) * notitlepage option: Document class options. (line 390) * onecolumn option: Document class options. (line 410) * oneside option: Document class options. (line 410) * openany option: Document class options. (line 410) * openbib option: Document class options. (line 390) * openright option: Document class options. (line 410) * pdflatex command: Overview. (line 301) * picture: picture. (line 1546) * printindex: Indexes. (line 4871) * quotation: quotation. (line 1804) * quote: quote. (line 1819) * report class: Document classes. (line 362) * secnumdepth counter: Sectioning. (line 859) * slides class: Document classes. (line 362) * tabbing environment: tabbing. (line 1834) * table: table. (line 1925) * tabular environment: tabular. (line 1952) * textcomp package: Text symbols. (line 4360) * thebibliography: thebibliography. (line 2113) * theorem environment: theorem. (line 2214) * titlepage environment: titlepage. (line 2227) * titlepage option: Document class options. (line 390) * twocolumn option: Document class options. (line 410) * twoside option: Document class options. (line 410) * verbatim environment: verbatim. (line 2244) * verse environment: verse. (line 2278) * xelatex command: Overview. (line 310)