South East Double Arrow in Latex












1














Just wondering how I can produce a south-east double arrow like this:



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    You could just use rotatebox{-45}{$Rightarrow$}, where rotatebox requires the graphicx package. See here for more informations on how to look up symbols.
    – marmot
    4 hours ago












  • awesome marmot thank you !
    – user175199
    4 hours ago






  • 2




    A variation on @marmot's suggestion: If the southeast-pointing double arrow is a relational operator, consider defining a macro called SEarrow as follows: newcommandSEarrow{mathrel{rotatebox[origin=c]{-45}{$Rightarrow$}}}. Then, in the body of the document, write $XSEarrow Y$.
    – Mico
    4 hours ago








  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Werner
    2 hours ago
















1














Just wondering how I can produce a south-east double arrow like this:



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    You could just use rotatebox{-45}{$Rightarrow$}, where rotatebox requires the graphicx package. See here for more informations on how to look up symbols.
    – marmot
    4 hours ago












  • awesome marmot thank you !
    – user175199
    4 hours ago






  • 2




    A variation on @marmot's suggestion: If the southeast-pointing double arrow is a relational operator, consider defining a macro called SEarrow as follows: newcommandSEarrow{mathrel{rotatebox[origin=c]{-45}{$Rightarrow$}}}. Then, in the body of the document, write $XSEarrow Y$.
    – Mico
    4 hours ago








  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Werner
    2 hours ago














1












1








1







Just wondering how I can produce a south-east double arrow like this:



enter image description here










share|improve this question















Just wondering how I can produce a south-east double arrow like this:



enter image description here







symbols






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago









Alan Munn

158k27425700




158k27425700










asked 4 hours ago









user175199

334




334








  • 3




    You could just use rotatebox{-45}{$Rightarrow$}, where rotatebox requires the graphicx package. See here for more informations on how to look up symbols.
    – marmot
    4 hours ago












  • awesome marmot thank you !
    – user175199
    4 hours ago






  • 2




    A variation on @marmot's suggestion: If the southeast-pointing double arrow is a relational operator, consider defining a macro called SEarrow as follows: newcommandSEarrow{mathrel{rotatebox[origin=c]{-45}{$Rightarrow$}}}. Then, in the body of the document, write $XSEarrow Y$.
    – Mico
    4 hours ago








  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Werner
    2 hours ago














  • 3




    You could just use rotatebox{-45}{$Rightarrow$}, where rotatebox requires the graphicx package. See here for more informations on how to look up symbols.
    – marmot
    4 hours ago












  • awesome marmot thank you !
    – user175199
    4 hours ago






  • 2




    A variation on @marmot's suggestion: If the southeast-pointing double arrow is a relational operator, consider defining a macro called SEarrow as follows: newcommandSEarrow{mathrel{rotatebox[origin=c]{-45}{$Rightarrow$}}}. Then, in the body of the document, write $XSEarrow Y$.
    – Mico
    4 hours ago








  • 3




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Werner
    2 hours ago








3




3




You could just use rotatebox{-45}{$Rightarrow$}, where rotatebox requires the graphicx package. See here for more informations on how to look up symbols.
– marmot
4 hours ago






You could just use rotatebox{-45}{$Rightarrow$}, where rotatebox requires the graphicx package. See here for more informations on how to look up symbols.
– marmot
4 hours ago














awesome marmot thank you !
– user175199
4 hours ago




awesome marmot thank you !
– user175199
4 hours ago




2




2




A variation on @marmot's suggestion: If the southeast-pointing double arrow is a relational operator, consider defining a macro called SEarrow as follows: newcommandSEarrow{mathrel{rotatebox[origin=c]{-45}{$Rightarrow$}}}. Then, in the body of the document, write $XSEarrow Y$.
– Mico
4 hours ago






A variation on @marmot's suggestion: If the southeast-pointing double arrow is a relational operator, consider defining a macro called SEarrow as follows: newcommandSEarrow{mathrel{rotatebox[origin=c]{-45}{$Rightarrow$}}}. Then, in the body of the document, write $XSEarrow Y$.
– Mico
4 hours ago






3




3




Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
2 hours ago




Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Werner
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














Requires LuaLaTeX (or XeLaTeX):



documentclass{article}
usepackage{unicode-math}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here





You could also load the symbol from another font, e.g. txfonts.



documentclass{article}
DeclareSymbolFont{symbolsC}{U}{txsyc}{m}{n}
DeclareMathSymbol{Searrow}{mathrel}{symbolsC}{117}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • +1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
    – Mico
    48 mins ago













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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














Requires LuaLaTeX (or XeLaTeX):



documentclass{article}
usepackage{unicode-math}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here





You could also load the symbol from another font, e.g. txfonts.



documentclass{article}
DeclareSymbolFont{symbolsC}{U}{txsyc}{m}{n}
DeclareMathSymbol{Searrow}{mathrel}{symbolsC}{117}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • +1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
    – Mico
    48 mins ago


















3














Requires LuaLaTeX (or XeLaTeX):



documentclass{article}
usepackage{unicode-math}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here





You could also load the symbol from another font, e.g. txfonts.



documentclass{article}
DeclareSymbolFont{symbolsC}{U}{txsyc}{m}{n}
DeclareMathSymbol{Searrow}{mathrel}{symbolsC}{117}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • +1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
    – Mico
    48 mins ago
















3












3








3






Requires LuaLaTeX (or XeLaTeX):



documentclass{article}
usepackage{unicode-math}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here





You could also load the symbol from another font, e.g. txfonts.



documentclass{article}
DeclareSymbolFont{symbolsC}{U}{txsyc}{m}{n}
DeclareMathSymbol{Searrow}{mathrel}{symbolsC}{117}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer












Requires LuaLaTeX (or XeLaTeX):



documentclass{article}
usepackage{unicode-math}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here





You could also load the symbol from another font, e.g. txfonts.



documentclass{article}
DeclareSymbolFont{symbolsC}{U}{txsyc}{m}{n}
DeclareMathSymbol{Searrow}{mathrel}{symbolsC}{117}
begin{document}
$Searrow$
end{document}


enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









Henri Menke

70k8156260




70k8156260












  • +1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
    – Mico
    48 mins ago




















  • +1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
    – Mico
    48 mins ago


















+1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
– Mico
48 mins ago






+1. You may want to add that Searrow, Nearrow, etc are provided automatically by the newtxmath and newpxmath font packages. (In a way, this isn't surprising as newtxmath and newpxmath are derived from txfonts and pxfonts, respectively.)
– Mico
48 mins ago




















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