Fraction line is small and off to the side. How do I fix this? [closed]












0















This is what I input to get this



$lim_{hto(0}$ ( frac{h($h^2$+2xh+h)}{h} ) \









share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Kurt, siracusa, Raaja, Mico Feb 2 at 5:05



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SE!

    – Kurt
    Feb 2 at 1:14






  • 5





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a simple typo. hto(0 should be hto 0 without ( and $h^2$ should just be h^2.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:21













  • Possible duplicate of What are good learning resources for a LaTeX beginner?

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:23











  • @HenriMenke There are several such typos. Nick, try $lim_{hto0} frac{h(h^2+2xh+h)}{h}$.

    – marmot
    Feb 2 at 1:23













  • @marmot Yes, however I think it's pointless to just post a corrected version of the equation as an answer. OP would profit more from reading an introductory text to LaTeX.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:24
















0















This is what I input to get this



$lim_{hto(0}$ ( frac{h($h^2$+2xh+h)}{h} ) \









share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Kurt, siracusa, Raaja, Mico Feb 2 at 5:05



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SE!

    – Kurt
    Feb 2 at 1:14






  • 5





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a simple typo. hto(0 should be hto 0 without ( and $h^2$ should just be h^2.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:21













  • Possible duplicate of What are good learning resources for a LaTeX beginner?

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:23











  • @HenriMenke There are several such typos. Nick, try $lim_{hto0} frac{h(h^2+2xh+h)}{h}$.

    – marmot
    Feb 2 at 1:23













  • @marmot Yes, however I think it's pointless to just post a corrected version of the equation as an answer. OP would profit more from reading an introductory text to LaTeX.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:24














0












0








0








This is what I input to get this



$lim_{hto(0}$ ( frac{h($h^2$+2xh+h)}{h} ) \









share|improve this question
















This is what I input to get this



$lim_{hto(0}$ ( frac{h($h^2$+2xh+h)}{h} ) \






math-mode fractions






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 2 at 1:23









Henri Menke

73.2k8162273




73.2k8162273










asked Feb 2 at 0:58









nick Lnick L

1




1




closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Kurt, siracusa, Raaja, Mico Feb 2 at 5:05



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Kurt, siracusa, Raaja, Mico Feb 2 at 5:05



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SE!

    – Kurt
    Feb 2 at 1:14






  • 5





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a simple typo. hto(0 should be hto 0 without ( and $h^2$ should just be h^2.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:21













  • Possible duplicate of What are good learning resources for a LaTeX beginner?

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:23











  • @HenriMenke There are several such typos. Nick, try $lim_{hto0} frac{h(h^2+2xh+h)}{h}$.

    – marmot
    Feb 2 at 1:23













  • @marmot Yes, however I think it's pointless to just post a corrected version of the equation as an answer. OP would profit more from reading an introductory text to LaTeX.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:24














  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SE!

    – Kurt
    Feb 2 at 1:14






  • 5





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a simple typo. hto(0 should be hto 0 without ( and $h^2$ should just be h^2.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:21













  • Possible duplicate of What are good learning resources for a LaTeX beginner?

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:23











  • @HenriMenke There are several such typos. Nick, try $lim_{hto0} frac{h(h^2+2xh+h)}{h}$.

    – marmot
    Feb 2 at 1:23













  • @marmot Yes, however I think it's pointless to just post a corrected version of the equation as an answer. OP would profit more from reading an introductory text to LaTeX.

    – Henri Menke
    Feb 2 at 1:24








1




1





Welcome to TeX.SE!

– Kurt
Feb 2 at 1:14





Welcome to TeX.SE!

– Kurt
Feb 2 at 1:14




5




5





I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a simple typo. hto(0 should be hto 0 without ( and $h^2$ should just be h^2.

– Henri Menke
Feb 2 at 1:21







I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a simple typo. hto(0 should be hto 0 without ( and $h^2$ should just be h^2.

– Henri Menke
Feb 2 at 1:21















Possible duplicate of What are good learning resources for a LaTeX beginner?

– Henri Menke
Feb 2 at 1:23





Possible duplicate of What are good learning resources for a LaTeX beginner?

– Henri Menke
Feb 2 at 1:23













@HenriMenke There are several such typos. Nick, try $lim_{hto0} frac{h(h^2+2xh+h)}{h}$.

– marmot
Feb 2 at 1:23







@HenriMenke There are several such typos. Nick, try $lim_{hto0} frac{h(h^2+2xh+h)}{h}$.

– marmot
Feb 2 at 1:23















@marmot Yes, however I think it's pointless to just post a corrected version of the equation as an answer. OP would profit more from reading an introductory text to LaTeX.

– Henri Menke
Feb 2 at 1:24





@marmot Yes, however I think it's pointless to just post a corrected version of the equation as an answer. OP would profit more from reading an introductory text to LaTeX.

– Henri Menke
Feb 2 at 1:24










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