LaTeX:Symbols
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This article will provide a short list of commonly used LaTeX symbols.
Contents |
Operators
Relations
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \le | ![]() | \ge | ![]() | \neq |
![]() | \sim | ![]() | \ll | ![]() | \gg |
![]() | \doteq | ![]() | \simeq | ![]() | \subset |
![]() | \supset | ![]() | \approx | ![]() | \asymp |
![]() | \subseteq | ![]() | \supseteq | ![]() | \cong |
![]() | \smile | ![]() | \sqsubset | ![]() | \sqsupset |
![]() | \equiv | ![]() | \frown | ![]() | \sqsubseteq |
![]() | \sqsupseteq | ![]() | \propto | ![]() | \bowtie |
![]() | \in | ![]() | \ni | ![]() | \prec |
![]() | \succ | ![]() | \vdash | ![]() | \dashv |
![]() | \preceq | ![]() | \succeq | ![]() | \models |
![]() | \perp | ![]() | \parallel | | \| |
![]() | \mid |
Negations of many of these relations can be formed by just putting \not before the symbol, or by slipping an n between the \ and the word. Here are a few examples, plus a few other negations; it works for many of the others as well.
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \nmid | ![]() | \nleq | ![]() | \ngeq |
![]() | \nsim | ![]() | \ncong | ![]() | \nparallel |
![]() | \not< | ![]() | \not> | ![]() | \not= |
![]() | \not\le | ![]() | \not\ge | ![]() | \not\sim |
![]() | \not\approx | ![]() | \not\cong | ![]() | \not\equiv |
![]() | \not\parallel | ![]() | \nless | ![]() | \ngtr |
![]() | \lneq | ![]() | \gneq | ![]() | \lnsim |
![]() | \lneqq | ![]() | \gneqq |
Greek Letters
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \alpha | ![]() | \beta | ![]() | \gamma | ![]() | \delta |
![]() | \epsilon | ![]() | \varepsilon | ![]() | \zeta | ![]() | \eta |
![]() | \theta | ![]() | \vartheta | ![]() | \iota | ![]() | \kappa |
![]() | \lambda | ![]() | \mu | ![]() | \nu | ![]() | \xi |
![]() | \pi | ![]() | \varpi | ![]() | \rho | ![]() | \varrho |
![]() | \sigma | ![]() | \varsigma | ![]() | \tau | ![]() | \upsilon |
![]() | \phi | ![]() | \varphi | ![]() | \chi | ![]() | \psi |
![]() | \omega |
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \Gamma | ![]() | \Delta | ![]() | \Theta | ![]() | \Lambda |
![]() | \Xi | ![]() | \Pi | ![]() | \Sigma | ![]() | \Upsilon |
![]() | \Phi | ![]() | \Psi |
Arrows
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \gets | ![]() | \to |
![]() | \leftarrow | ![]() | \Leftarrow |
![]() | \rightarrow | ![]() | \Rightarrow |
![]() | \leftrightarrow | ![]() | \Leftrightarrow |
![]() | \mapsto | ![]() | \hookleftarrow |
![]() | \leftharpoonup | ![]() | \leftharpoondown |
![]() | \rightleftharpoons | ![]() | \longleftarrow |
![]() | \Longleftarrow | ![]() | \longrightarrow |
![]() | \Longrightarrow | ![]() | \longleftrightarrow |
![]() | \Longleftrightarrow | ![]() | \longmapsto |
![]() | \hookrightarrow | ![]() | \rightharpoonup |
![]() | \rightharpoondown | ![]() | \leadsto |
![]() | \uparrow | ![]() | \Uparrow |
![]() | \downarrow | ![]() | \Downarrow |
![]() | \updownarrow | ![]() | \Updownarrow |
![]() | \nearrow | ![]() | \searrow |
![]() | \swarrow | ![]() | \nwarrow |
Dots
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \ldots 2 | ![]() | \vdots | ![]() | \cdots 2 | ![]() | \ddots |
(The '2's after \ldots and \cdots are only present to make the distinction between the two clear.)
Accents
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \hat{x} | ![]() | \check{x} | ![]() | \dot{x} |
![]() | \breve{x} | ![]() | \acute{x} | ![]() | \ddot{x} |
![]() | \grave{x} | ![]() | \tilde{x} | ![]() | \mathring{x} |
![]() | \bar{x} | ![]() | \vec{x} |
When applying accents to i and j, you can use \imath and \jmath to keep the dots from interfering with the accents:
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \vec{\jmath} | ![]() | \tilde{\imath} |
\tilde and \hat have wide versions that allow you to accent an expression:
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \widehat{3+x} | ![]() | \widetilde{abc} |
Others
Command Symbols
Some symbols are used in commands so they need to be treated in a special way
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \$ | ![]() | \& | ![]() | \% | ![]() | \# |
![]() | \_ | ![]() | \{ | ![]() | \} | ![]() | \backslash |
European Language Symbols
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | {\oe} | ![]() | {\ae} | ![]() | {\aa} | ![]() | {\o} |
![]() | {\OE} | ![]() | {\AE} | ![]() | {\AA} | ![]() | {\O} |
![]() | {\l} | ![]() | {\ss} | ![]() | !` | ||
![]() | {\L} | ![]() | {\SS} | ![]() | ?` |
Bracketing Symbols
In mathematics, sometimes we need to enclose expressions in brackets or braces or parentheses. Some of these work just as you'd imagine in LaTeX; type ( and ) for parentheses, [ and ] for brackets, and | and | for absolute value. However, other symbols have special commands:
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \{ | ![]() | \} | ![]() | \| |
![]() | \backslash | ![]() | \lfloor | ![]() | \rfloor |
![]() | \lceil | ![]() | \rceil | ![]() | \langle |
![]() | \rangle |
You might notice that if you use any of these to typeset an expression that is vertically large, like
- (\frac{a}{x} )^2
the parentheses don't come out the right size:
If we put \left and \right before the relevant parentheses, we get a prettier expression:
- \left(\frac{a}{x} \right)^2
gives
\left and \right can also be used to resize the following symbols:
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \uparrow | ![]() | \downarrow | ![]() | \updownarrow |
![]() | \Uparrow | ![]() | \Downarrow | ![]() | \Updownarrow |
Multi-Size Symbols
Some symbols render differently in regular math mode and in display mode (display mode occurs when you use, $$...$$, or
). Read more in the commands section of the guide about how symbols which take arguments above and below the symbols, such as a summation symbol, behave in the two modes.
In each of the following, the two images show the symbol in regular mode, then in display mode.
| Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command | Symbol | Command |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | \sum | ![]() | \int | ![]() | \oint |
![]() | \prod | ![]() | \coprod | ![]() | \bigcap |
![]() | \bigcup | ![]() | \bigsqcup | ![]() | \bigvee |
![]() | \bigwedge | ![]() | \bigodot | ![]() | \bigotimes |
![]() | \bigoplus | ![]() | \biguplus |
(The two integral symbols render fine in a full LaTeX document .)
Examples
- x^y is the same as x^{y}.
- x_y is the same as x_{y}.
- BUT x^10 is not the same as x^{10}.
instead of
.












































































































































































































































































