How do I reproduce a calligraphic Z (that looks like an L) from a text by Abramowitz and Stegun?
I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.
This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.
So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?
Other Info.
I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.
The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L}
but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.
Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.
Response to duplicate issues.
How to look up a symbol or ...
I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...
How to do the 'curvy L' ...
My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".
Scanned Symbol
symbols
add a comment |
I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.
This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.
So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?
Other Info.
I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.
The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L}
but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.
Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.
Response to duplicate issues.
How to look up a symbol or ...
I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...
How to do the 'curvy L' ...
My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".
Scanned Symbol
symbols
1
Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
21 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
16 hours ago
add a comment |
I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.
This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.
So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?
Other Info.
I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.
The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L}
but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.
Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.
Response to duplicate issues.
How to look up a symbol or ...
I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...
How to do the 'curvy L' ...
My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".
Scanned Symbol
symbols
I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.
This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.
So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?
Other Info.
I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.
The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L}
but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.
Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.
Response to duplicate issues.
How to look up a symbol or ...
I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...
How to do the 'curvy L' ...
My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".
Scanned Symbol
symbols
symbols
edited 1 hour ago
asked yesterday
user151522
1557
1557
1
Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
21 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
16 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
21 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
16 hours ago
1
1
Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
21 hours ago
Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
21 hours ago
1
1
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
16 hours ago
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
16 hours ago
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using
usepackage{mathrsfs}
mathscr{Z}
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
add a comment |
I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.
documentclass{article}
usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
usepackage{frcursive}
begin{document}
begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}
textcursive{L Z}
begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
end{document}
add a comment |
The following also works
usepackage{calrsfs}
mathcal{Z}
add a comment |
I recommend you use unicode-math
when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal
and mathscr
to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.
For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal
available, you would do something like:
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage{unicode-math}
defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}
setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
You can instead load any system font as your mathscr
and mathcal
fonts.
If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa
. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso
or boondoxo
for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs
.
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage{textcomp}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
add a comment |
You can use mathcal
usepackage{unicode-math}
mathcal{Z}
New contributor
add a comment |
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using
usepackage{mathrsfs}
mathscr{Z}
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
add a comment |
This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using
usepackage{mathrsfs}
mathscr{Z}
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
add a comment |
This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using
usepackage{mathrsfs}
mathscr{Z}
This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using
usepackage{mathrsfs}
mathscr{Z}
edited 20 hours ago
Camille Goudeseune
201110
201110
answered yesterday
Karlo
1,51721427
1,51721427
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
add a comment |
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
– user151522
3 hours ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
@user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
– albert
1 hour ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
Scanned symbol has been added to question.
– user151522
58 mins ago
add a comment |
I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.
documentclass{article}
usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
usepackage{frcursive}
begin{document}
begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}
textcursive{L Z}
begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
end{document}
add a comment |
I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.
documentclass{article}
usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
usepackage{frcursive}
begin{document}
begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}
textcursive{L Z}
begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
end{document}
add a comment |
I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.
documentclass{article}
usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
usepackage{frcursive}
begin{document}
begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}
textcursive{L Z}
begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
end{document}
I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.
documentclass{article}
usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
usepackage{frcursive}
begin{document}
begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}
textcursive{L Z}
begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
end{document}
answered 22 hours ago
AndréC
8,00511443
8,00511443
add a comment |
add a comment |
The following also works
usepackage{calrsfs}
mathcal{Z}
add a comment |
The following also works
usepackage{calrsfs}
mathcal{Z}
add a comment |
The following also works
usepackage{calrsfs}
mathcal{Z}
The following also works
usepackage{calrsfs}
mathcal{Z}
edited 22 hours ago
answered 22 hours ago
user151522
1557
1557
add a comment |
add a comment |
I recommend you use unicode-math
when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal
and mathscr
to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.
For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal
available, you would do something like:
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage{unicode-math}
defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}
setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
You can instead load any system font as your mathscr
and mathcal
fonts.
If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa
. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso
or boondoxo
for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs
.
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage{textcomp}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
add a comment |
I recommend you use unicode-math
when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal
and mathscr
to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.
For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal
available, you would do something like:
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage{unicode-math}
defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}
setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
You can instead load any system font as your mathscr
and mathcal
fonts.
If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa
. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso
or boondoxo
for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs
.
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage{textcomp}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
add a comment |
I recommend you use unicode-math
when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal
and mathscr
to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.
For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal
available, you would do something like:
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage{unicode-math}
defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}
setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
You can instead load any system font as your mathscr
and mathcal
fonts.
If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa
. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso
or boondoxo
for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs
.
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage{textcomp}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
I recommend you use unicode-math
when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal
and mathscr
to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.
For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal
available, you would do something like:
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage{unicode-math}
defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}
setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
You can instead load any system font as your mathscr
and mathcal
fonts.
If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa
. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso
or boondoxo
for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs
.
documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage{textcomp}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}
begin{document}
( mathscr{Z} )
end{document}
edited 1 hour ago
answered 15 hours ago
Davislor
4,8221024
4,8221024
add a comment |
add a comment |
You can use mathcal
usepackage{unicode-math}
mathcal{Z}
New contributor
add a comment |
You can use mathcal
usepackage{unicode-math}
mathcal{Z}
New contributor
add a comment |
You can use mathcal
usepackage{unicode-math}
mathcal{Z}
New contributor
You can use mathcal
usepackage{unicode-math}
mathcal{Z}
New contributor
edited 22 mins ago
CarLaTeX
29.8k447127
29.8k447127
New contributor
answered 44 mins ago
Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ
93
93
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
21 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
16 hours ago