How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?












549














I know what my symbol or character looks like, but I don't know what the command is or which math alphabet it came from. How do I go about finding this out?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    @AlanMunn -- asking you since you edited the question ... maybe "extend" the title to "how to look up a symbol or the style of a math alphabet"? many, many questions are about alphabet styles, not just other symbols, and this doesn't seem to be obvious.
    – barbara beeton
    Jun 5 '13 at 12:59
















549














I know what my symbol or character looks like, but I don't know what the command is or which math alphabet it came from. How do I go about finding this out?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    @AlanMunn -- asking you since you edited the question ... maybe "extend" the title to "how to look up a symbol or the style of a math alphabet"? many, many questions are about alphabet styles, not just other symbols, and this doesn't seem to be obvious.
    – barbara beeton
    Jun 5 '13 at 12:59














549












549








549


262





I know what my symbol or character looks like, but I don't know what the command is or which math alphabet it came from. How do I go about finding this out?










share|improve this question















I know what my symbol or character looks like, but I don't know what the command is or which math alphabet it came from. How do I go about finding this out?







symbols






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edited Jul 17 '14 at 5:58









Mico

273k30369756




273k30369756










asked Jul 26 '10 at 19:28









machinaut

5,14651915




5,14651915








  • 1




    @AlanMunn -- asking you since you edited the question ... maybe "extend" the title to "how to look up a symbol or the style of a math alphabet"? many, many questions are about alphabet styles, not just other symbols, and this doesn't seem to be obvious.
    – barbara beeton
    Jun 5 '13 at 12:59














  • 1




    @AlanMunn -- asking you since you edited the question ... maybe "extend" the title to "how to look up a symbol or the style of a math alphabet"? many, many questions are about alphabet styles, not just other symbols, and this doesn't seem to be obvious.
    – barbara beeton
    Jun 5 '13 at 12:59








1




1




@AlanMunn -- asking you since you edited the question ... maybe "extend" the title to "how to look up a symbol or the style of a math alphabet"? many, many questions are about alphabet styles, not just other symbols, and this doesn't seem to be obvious.
– barbara beeton
Jun 5 '13 at 12:59




@AlanMunn -- asking you since you edited the question ... maybe "extend" the title to "how to look up a symbol or the style of a math alphabet"? many, many questions are about alphabet styles, not just other symbols, and this doesn't seem to be obvious.
– barbara beeton
Jun 5 '13 at 12:59










16 Answers
16






active

oldest

votes


















667















  1. You can look things up in the Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list. It can usually be easily accessed with texdoc symbols or texdoc symbols-a4 (in MiKTeX the latter only).



  2. Another good option is to try the web-based software Detexify, which allows you to draw the symbol and tries to recognize what you've drawn. Here is a screenshot:




    Screenshot




  3. If you are using the package unicode-math, then besides using any Unicode character list, the list of all supported symbols (texdoc unimath-symbols) is very useful as it also lists which symbols are available in the various fonts.



The above techniques provide an adequate way of finding symbols but are not necessarily foolproof since you sometimes need to know what you're looking for in order to find it. For example, in Typing Following notation in Latex it may not be apparent that "vector fields in differential geometry" are somehow related to "bowties". To that end, searching for a symbol rotated 90 degrees or flipped horizontally, say, might lead you in the right direction.






share|improve this answer



















  • 17




    Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
    – Joseph Wright
    Jul 26 '10 at 19:38






  • 5




    Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
    – Nils Schmidt
    Jul 28 '10 at 22:59








  • 14




    Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
    – TJ Ellis
    May 31 '11 at 19:49








  • 10




    It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
    – Jake
    Oct 21 '11 at 6:25






  • 5




    @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
    – Tom Bombadil
    Sep 2 '12 at 20:06





















140














Theres lots of ways of doing this, but the two I've found to be most useful are these:




  • Detexify Allows you to draw the symbol, and then guesses based on similar symbols. This is great for me because I don't always remember the name of the symbol, and even if I know the name, I may not have the correct name.


  • AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide This short pdf gives an overview of AMS LaTeX functionality, and includes a pretty thorough list of most of the math symbols (un)commonly used in proofs and formulas.







share|improve this answer

















  • 7




    +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
    – Norman Gray
    Jul 26 '10 at 20:25






  • 1




    Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
    – Lover of Structure
    Mar 13 '13 at 5:22










  • Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
    – Bacon Bits
    Dec 29 '17 at 22:17





















84














The old school way is to look it up in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (warning: 4 MB PDF file).



The new hotness is to use DeTeXify which uses handwriting recognition to look the symbol up for you.



DeTeXify even comes in an iPhone/Andriod app- you can get a free version or pay for one. The only difference is that with the paid app you are making a donation to the developer- the feature set is exactly the same.



The author is planning to work on a mobile version of the website that will supplant these apps.






share|improve this answer



















  • 5




    When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
    – thymaro
    Feb 2 at 11:02










  • It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
    – evaristegd
    Sep 26 at 0:57



















80














I often look up the relevant topic on Wikipedia, (e.g. Set theory) and look at the source there. Wikipedia uses LaTeX for math markup as well.






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  • This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
    – Colin McLarty
    Dec 13 '16 at 17:04



















66














For uncommon symbols, instead of search documentation on-line or in a big PDF to find packages and commands to include in my code, I have found useful sometimes to compile the whole table of characters of a font (even in the working document) to quickly find, for example, the skull of the omding font that is char194. Of course, you have first to know that you have a font file with that name (omding.tfm) but then is easy:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{fonttable}
begin{document}
fonttable{omding}
fontomding=omding
omding char194
end{document}


MWE
You can also search for a skull the in Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list, or paint a skull in Detexify, or remember the easy command "skull" (and do not forget load the skull package and enter in math mode) o try to find a dingbat or ding{whatever}... but when I want a skull (really never) must be that of white bones (just try the other methods if you don't know what I mean).






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    36














    There's also an iPhone app for Detexify, which I've used occasionally, for some reason ...



    Links (on the US iTunes App Store): free version and supporter version ($0.99, same functionality).






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
      – Reb.Cabin
      Nov 2 '15 at 16:17



















    29














    TL;DR



    Direct link to the online service



    This service allows classification by drawing (even works on mobile devices!) and by text:



    enter image description here



    Some information



    The handwriting recognition toolkit (hwrt) is one possibility to classify you recordings. There are still many rough edges and the software gets updated on a daily basis (04.12.2014). The user interface is in a browser and looks like this:



    enter image description here



    The installation is explained in the documentation. If you have trouble or have an idea how to improve it, just leave a comment or write an email (info@martin-thoma.de).



    This is a part of my bachelor's thesis. The thesis, some presentations and links to all software projects are on http://martin-thoma.com/write-math/






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
      – Tim
      Dec 4 '14 at 18:26










    • after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
      – Tim
      Dec 4 '14 at 19:06










    • @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
      – Tim
      Dec 17 '14 at 18:33












    • @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
      – Martin Thoma
      Apr 18 '15 at 20:02



















    27














    I've just come across this list http://milde.users.sourceforge.net/LUCR/Math/unimathsymbols.pdf which lists characters using unicode numbers, their representation, and their (La)TeX command, together with other useful information.



    Here's a random sample of what it looks like:



    symbol list including unicode






    share|improve this answer

















    • 2




      This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
      – Speravir
      Mar 19 '14 at 4:58



















    24














    This reference has yet to fail me; it has all the symbols typeset along with the foo command needed to generate them. There's also this PDF, which is considerably better put-together and covers other symbols besides the base math ones






    share|improve this answer





























      20














      The LaTeX wikibook Mathematics section has been very helpful for me.






      share|improve this answer





























        19














        In case you are using TeXstudio or Texmaker, you can browse the built-in catalog of symbols and find the symbol you need in the appropriate category of symbols (see the image below). It is very convenient, as by clicking on the symbol it gets automatically inserted into your document.



        TeXstudio symbol catalog



        Moreover, if you're using TeXstudio on Windows, you can use Wizards -> Math Assistant... which enables you to draw symbols and it translates them into text.



        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer





























          15














          Some utilities for lookup symbols in Unicode:




          • ent2latex: A Perl script to translate Unicode symbols to LaTeX commands. (However, it doesn't utilize math fonts.)


          • kcharset: A KDE application to lookup Unicode. (Well, you can input some symbols in Unicode directly, or lookup the corresponding LaTeX command by ent2latex.)







          share|improve this answer





























            13














            I use the Daum Equation editor then just copy and paste the code at the bottom (you can specify Tex,LaTeX, etc.) and even favourite the equations/symbols to avoid having to re-look them up every time you use them.
            Not sure if they have EVERY symbol, but it has been a good reference for me so far!






            share|improve this answer





























              7














              fontawesome provides access to a host of web-related icons (or symbols) provided by the included Font Awesome font.



              enter image description here



              documentclass{article}

              usepackage{fontawesome}

              setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

              begin{document}

              These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

              faBicycle
              faCodeFork
              faDiamond
              faFirefox
              faFortAwesome
              faGears
              faJsfiddle
              faLinux

              end{document}


              However, if you want access to the latest-and-greatest web-related icons from the font and are running XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX, you can download the font directly. Here you can also search the list of available icons to identify a symbol.



              enter image description here



              documentclass{article}

              usepackage{fontspec}

              newfontfamily{fa}{FontAwesome_0.otf}% http://fontawesome.io/

              setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

              begin{document}

              These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

              fa
              symbol{"F2B9} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/address-book/
              symbol{"F2DC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/snowflake-o/
              symbol{"F2C5} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/free-code-camp/
              symbol{"F2CC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/shower/
              symbol{"F2DD} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/superpowers/
              symbol{"F2D6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/grav/
              symbol{"F2C6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/telegram/
              symbol{"F2CE} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/podcast/

              end{document}





              share|improve this answer





























                2














                If you use Mac, there is an app named "Texpad 2" from which you can pick most symbols:



                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer































                  1














                  My book "Schnell and Ziel mit LaTeX2e" (only available in German) has a symbol index with a lookup method inspired by Chinese dictionaries: The mathematical symbols are ordered by the number and type of strokes needed to draw them. The index includes the symbols from plain TeX, AMS symbols, and LaTeX symbols.



                  As far as I know, this index has not been copied by other authors.






                  share|improve this answer




















                    protected by Claudio Fiandrino Jun 21 '13 at 12:04



                    Thank you for your interest in this question.
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                    16 Answers
                    16






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes








                    16 Answers
                    16






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    active

                    oldest

                    votes






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    667















                    1. You can look things up in the Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list. It can usually be easily accessed with texdoc symbols or texdoc symbols-a4 (in MiKTeX the latter only).



                    2. Another good option is to try the web-based software Detexify, which allows you to draw the symbol and tries to recognize what you've drawn. Here is a screenshot:




                      Screenshot




                    3. If you are using the package unicode-math, then besides using any Unicode character list, the list of all supported symbols (texdoc unimath-symbols) is very useful as it also lists which symbols are available in the various fonts.



                    The above techniques provide an adequate way of finding symbols but are not necessarily foolproof since you sometimes need to know what you're looking for in order to find it. For example, in Typing Following notation in Latex it may not be apparent that "vector fields in differential geometry" are somehow related to "bowties". To that end, searching for a symbol rotated 90 degrees or flipped horizontally, say, might lead you in the right direction.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 17




                      Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
                      – Joseph Wright
                      Jul 26 '10 at 19:38






                    • 5




                      Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
                      – Nils Schmidt
                      Jul 28 '10 at 22:59








                    • 14




                      Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
                      – TJ Ellis
                      May 31 '11 at 19:49








                    • 10




                      It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
                      – Jake
                      Oct 21 '11 at 6:25






                    • 5




                      @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
                      – Tom Bombadil
                      Sep 2 '12 at 20:06


















                    667















                    1. You can look things up in the Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list. It can usually be easily accessed with texdoc symbols or texdoc symbols-a4 (in MiKTeX the latter only).



                    2. Another good option is to try the web-based software Detexify, which allows you to draw the symbol and tries to recognize what you've drawn. Here is a screenshot:




                      Screenshot




                    3. If you are using the package unicode-math, then besides using any Unicode character list, the list of all supported symbols (texdoc unimath-symbols) is very useful as it also lists which symbols are available in the various fonts.



                    The above techniques provide an adequate way of finding symbols but are not necessarily foolproof since you sometimes need to know what you're looking for in order to find it. For example, in Typing Following notation in Latex it may not be apparent that "vector fields in differential geometry" are somehow related to "bowties". To that end, searching for a symbol rotated 90 degrees or flipped horizontally, say, might lead you in the right direction.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 17




                      Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
                      – Joseph Wright
                      Jul 26 '10 at 19:38






                    • 5




                      Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
                      – Nils Schmidt
                      Jul 28 '10 at 22:59








                    • 14




                      Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
                      – TJ Ellis
                      May 31 '11 at 19:49








                    • 10




                      It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
                      – Jake
                      Oct 21 '11 at 6:25






                    • 5




                      @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
                      – Tom Bombadil
                      Sep 2 '12 at 20:06
















                    667












                    667








                    667







                    1. You can look things up in the Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list. It can usually be easily accessed with texdoc symbols or texdoc symbols-a4 (in MiKTeX the latter only).



                    2. Another good option is to try the web-based software Detexify, which allows you to draw the symbol and tries to recognize what you've drawn. Here is a screenshot:




                      Screenshot




                    3. If you are using the package unicode-math, then besides using any Unicode character list, the list of all supported symbols (texdoc unimath-symbols) is very useful as it also lists which symbols are available in the various fonts.



                    The above techniques provide an adequate way of finding symbols but are not necessarily foolproof since you sometimes need to know what you're looking for in order to find it. For example, in Typing Following notation in Latex it may not be apparent that "vector fields in differential geometry" are somehow related to "bowties". To that end, searching for a symbol rotated 90 degrees or flipped horizontally, say, might lead you in the right direction.






                    share|improve this answer















                    1. You can look things up in the Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list. It can usually be easily accessed with texdoc symbols or texdoc symbols-a4 (in MiKTeX the latter only).



                    2. Another good option is to try the web-based software Detexify, which allows you to draw the symbol and tries to recognize what you've drawn. Here is a screenshot:




                      Screenshot




                    3. If you are using the package unicode-math, then besides using any Unicode character list, the list of all supported symbols (texdoc unimath-symbols) is very useful as it also lists which symbols are available in the various fonts.



                    The above techniques provide an adequate way of finding symbols but are not necessarily foolproof since you sometimes need to know what you're looking for in order to find it. For example, in Typing Following notation in Latex it may not be apparent that "vector fields in differential geometry" are somehow related to "bowties". To that end, searching for a symbol rotated 90 degrees or flipped horizontally, say, might lead you in the right direction.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:35









                    Community

                    1




                    1










                    answered Jul 26 '10 at 19:32









                    Rebekah

                    7,4631129




                    7,4631129








                    • 17




                      Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
                      – Joseph Wright
                      Jul 26 '10 at 19:38






                    • 5




                      Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
                      – Nils Schmidt
                      Jul 28 '10 at 22:59








                    • 14




                      Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
                      – TJ Ellis
                      May 31 '11 at 19:49








                    • 10




                      It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
                      – Jake
                      Oct 21 '11 at 6:25






                    • 5




                      @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
                      – Tom Bombadil
                      Sep 2 '12 at 20:06
















                    • 17




                      Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
                      – Joseph Wright
                      Jul 26 '10 at 19:38






                    • 5




                      Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
                      – Nils Schmidt
                      Jul 28 '10 at 22:59








                    • 14




                      Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
                      – TJ Ellis
                      May 31 '11 at 19:49








                    • 10




                      It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
                      – Jake
                      Oct 21 '11 at 6:25






                    • 5




                      @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
                      – Tom Bombadil
                      Sep 2 '12 at 20:06










                    17




                    17




                    Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
                    – Joseph Wright
                    Jul 26 '10 at 19:38




                    Yup, Detexify has become the best way to do this
                    – Joseph Wright
                    Jul 26 '10 at 19:38




                    5




                    5




                    Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
                    – Nils Schmidt
                    Jul 28 '10 at 22:59






                    Would you mind to change the link from "this website" to "Detexify"? Nice answer though!
                    – Nils Schmidt
                    Jul 28 '10 at 22:59






                    14




                    14




                    Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
                    – TJ Ellis
                    May 31 '11 at 19:49






                    Detexify is particularly useful if you get it on a device with a touch screen (there are Android/iPhone apps for it) -- personally, I find it rather difficult to draw with my mouse, but finger works fine :)
                    – TJ Ellis
                    May 31 '11 at 19:49






                    10




                    10




                    It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
                    – Jake
                    Oct 21 '11 at 6:25




                    It's worth pointing out that the Select from the complete list! link in the results list will display the symbols list ordered by score, so it's more useful than the intimidating term complete list might suggest.
                    – Jake
                    Oct 21 '11 at 6:25




                    5




                    5




                    @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
                    – Tom Bombadil
                    Sep 2 '12 at 20:06






                    @DavidPoole: For Wikipedia articles, try clicking the [edit] button. It will show you the source, for math it is almost the same as LaTeX. It's a nice way to find out certain things, and also usefull for copying entire formulas ;)
                    – Tom Bombadil
                    Sep 2 '12 at 20:06













                    140














                    Theres lots of ways of doing this, but the two I've found to be most useful are these:




                    • Detexify Allows you to draw the symbol, and then guesses based on similar symbols. This is great for me because I don't always remember the name of the symbol, and even if I know the name, I may not have the correct name.


                    • AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide This short pdf gives an overview of AMS LaTeX functionality, and includes a pretty thorough list of most of the math symbols (un)commonly used in proofs and formulas.







                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 7




                      +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
                      – Norman Gray
                      Jul 26 '10 at 20:25






                    • 1




                      Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
                      – Lover of Structure
                      Mar 13 '13 at 5:22










                    • Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
                      – Bacon Bits
                      Dec 29 '17 at 22:17


















                    140














                    Theres lots of ways of doing this, but the two I've found to be most useful are these:




                    • Detexify Allows you to draw the symbol, and then guesses based on similar symbols. This is great for me because I don't always remember the name of the symbol, and even if I know the name, I may not have the correct name.


                    • AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide This short pdf gives an overview of AMS LaTeX functionality, and includes a pretty thorough list of most of the math symbols (un)commonly used in proofs and formulas.







                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 7




                      +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
                      – Norman Gray
                      Jul 26 '10 at 20:25






                    • 1




                      Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
                      – Lover of Structure
                      Mar 13 '13 at 5:22










                    • Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
                      – Bacon Bits
                      Dec 29 '17 at 22:17
















                    140












                    140








                    140






                    Theres lots of ways of doing this, but the two I've found to be most useful are these:




                    • Detexify Allows you to draw the symbol, and then guesses based on similar symbols. This is great for me because I don't always remember the name of the symbol, and even if I know the name, I may not have the correct name.


                    • AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide This short pdf gives an overview of AMS LaTeX functionality, and includes a pretty thorough list of most of the math symbols (un)commonly used in proofs and formulas.







                    share|improve this answer












                    Theres lots of ways of doing this, but the two I've found to be most useful are these:




                    • Detexify Allows you to draw the symbol, and then guesses based on similar symbols. This is great for me because I don't always remember the name of the symbol, and even if I know the name, I may not have the correct name.


                    • AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide This short pdf gives an overview of AMS LaTeX functionality, and includes a pretty thorough list of most of the math symbols (un)commonly used in proofs and formulas.








                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Jul 26 '10 at 19:32









                    machinaut

                    5,14651915




                    5,14651915








                    • 7




                      +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
                      – Norman Gray
                      Jul 26 '10 at 20:25






                    • 1




                      Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
                      – Lover of Structure
                      Mar 13 '13 at 5:22










                    • Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
                      – Bacon Bits
                      Dec 29 '17 at 22:17
















                    • 7




                      +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
                      – Norman Gray
                      Jul 26 '10 at 20:25






                    • 1




                      Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
                      – Lover of Structure
                      Mar 13 '13 at 5:22










                    • Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
                      – Bacon Bits
                      Dec 29 '17 at 22:17










                    7




                    7




                    +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
                    – Norman Gray
                    Jul 26 '10 at 20:25




                    +1 for the magic combination of detexify and the AMS guide
                    – Norman Gray
                    Jul 26 '10 at 20:25




                    1




                    1




                    Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
                    – Lover of Structure
                    Mar 13 '13 at 5:22




                    Detexify is great, but I wouldn't say that the coverage of the Short Math Guide for LaTeX is representative.
                    – Lover of Structure
                    Mar 13 '13 at 5:22












                    Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
                    – Bacon Bits
                    Dec 29 '17 at 22:17






                    Your link to the AMS LaTeX Short Math Guide appears to be broken. This appears to be the home page, but it, too lists the same FTP address. The entire site ftp.ams.org is there and you can connect with FTP, but you can't retrieve a site listing or change directory.
                    – Bacon Bits
                    Dec 29 '17 at 22:17













                    84














                    The old school way is to look it up in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (warning: 4 MB PDF file).



                    The new hotness is to use DeTeXify which uses handwriting recognition to look the symbol up for you.



                    DeTeXify even comes in an iPhone/Andriod app- you can get a free version or pay for one. The only difference is that with the paid app you are making a donation to the developer- the feature set is exactly the same.



                    The author is planning to work on a mobile version of the website that will supplant these apps.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 5




                      When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
                      – thymaro
                      Feb 2 at 11:02










                    • It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
                      – evaristegd
                      Sep 26 at 0:57
















                    84














                    The old school way is to look it up in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (warning: 4 MB PDF file).



                    The new hotness is to use DeTeXify which uses handwriting recognition to look the symbol up for you.



                    DeTeXify even comes in an iPhone/Andriod app- you can get a free version or pay for one. The only difference is that with the paid app you are making a donation to the developer- the feature set is exactly the same.



                    The author is planning to work on a mobile version of the website that will supplant these apps.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 5




                      When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
                      – thymaro
                      Feb 2 at 11:02










                    • It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
                      – evaristegd
                      Sep 26 at 0:57














                    84












                    84








                    84






                    The old school way is to look it up in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (warning: 4 MB PDF file).



                    The new hotness is to use DeTeXify which uses handwriting recognition to look the symbol up for you.



                    DeTeXify even comes in an iPhone/Andriod app- you can get a free version or pay for one. The only difference is that with the paid app you are making a donation to the developer- the feature set is exactly the same.



                    The author is planning to work on a mobile version of the website that will supplant these apps.






                    share|improve this answer














                    The old school way is to look it up in the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (warning: 4 MB PDF file).



                    The new hotness is to use DeTeXify which uses handwriting recognition to look the symbol up for you.



                    DeTeXify even comes in an iPhone/Andriod app- you can get a free version or pay for one. The only difference is that with the paid app you are making a donation to the developer- the feature set is exactly the same.



                    The author is planning to work on a mobile version of the website that will supplant these apps.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Aug 3 '16 at 10:02









                    Au101

                    6,99632252




                    6,99632252










                    answered Jul 26 '10 at 19:33









                    Sharpie

                    10.7k24154




                    10.7k24154








                    • 5




                      When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
                      – thymaro
                      Feb 2 at 11:02










                    • It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
                      – evaristegd
                      Sep 26 at 0:57














                    • 5




                      When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
                      – thymaro
                      Feb 2 at 11:02










                    • It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
                      – evaristegd
                      Sep 26 at 0:57








                    5




                    5




                    When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
                    – thymaro
                    Feb 2 at 11:02




                    When you see a warning about a 4 MP download in 2018, you can only guess how much the world of the Internet has changed in the last decade. I remember when clicking on a download encompassing more than the dreaded 1'000'000 bytes was worth going afk and making coffee. Today, it took me 3 seconds to load that PDF (on my school's network, admittedly, but it wouldn't be much different at home.)
                    – thymaro
                    Feb 2 at 11:02












                    It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
                    – evaristegd
                    Sep 26 at 0:57




                    It looks like the iPhone app was made unavailable in the US AppStore some years ago, and it still is as of today.
                    – evaristegd
                    Sep 26 at 0:57











                    80














                    I often look up the relevant topic on Wikipedia, (e.g. Set theory) and look at the source there. Wikipedia uses LaTeX for math markup as well.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
                      – Colin McLarty
                      Dec 13 '16 at 17:04
















                    80














                    I often look up the relevant topic on Wikipedia, (e.g. Set theory) and look at the source there. Wikipedia uses LaTeX for math markup as well.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
                      – Colin McLarty
                      Dec 13 '16 at 17:04














                    80












                    80








                    80






                    I often look up the relevant topic on Wikipedia, (e.g. Set theory) and look at the source there. Wikipedia uses LaTeX for math markup as well.






                    share|improve this answer












                    I often look up the relevant topic on Wikipedia, (e.g. Set theory) and look at the source there. Wikipedia uses LaTeX for math markup as well.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Jul 26 '10 at 19:33









                    Daniel Egeberg

                    2,7901516




                    2,7901516












                    • This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
                      – Colin McLarty
                      Dec 13 '16 at 17:04


















                    • This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
                      – Colin McLarty
                      Dec 13 '16 at 17:04
















                    This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
                    – Colin McLarty
                    Dec 13 '16 at 17:04




                    This has the advantage that you also get advice on whether others are using the symbol you had in mind for this role. You may find many people use something else--which you might prefer once you see it.
                    – Colin McLarty
                    Dec 13 '16 at 17:04











                    66














                    For uncommon symbols, instead of search documentation on-line or in a big PDF to find packages and commands to include in my code, I have found useful sometimes to compile the whole table of characters of a font (even in the working document) to quickly find, for example, the skull of the omding font that is char194. Of course, you have first to know that you have a font file with that name (omding.tfm) but then is easy:



                    documentclass{article}
                    usepackage{fonttable}
                    begin{document}
                    fonttable{omding}
                    fontomding=omding
                    omding char194
                    end{document}


                    MWE
                    You can also search for a skull the in Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list, or paint a skull in Detexify, or remember the easy command "skull" (and do not forget load the skull package and enter in math mode) o try to find a dingbat or ding{whatever}... but when I want a skull (really never) must be that of white bones (just try the other methods if you don't know what I mean).






                    share|improve this answer




























                      66














                      For uncommon symbols, instead of search documentation on-line or in a big PDF to find packages and commands to include in my code, I have found useful sometimes to compile the whole table of characters of a font (even in the working document) to quickly find, for example, the skull of the omding font that is char194. Of course, you have first to know that you have a font file with that name (omding.tfm) but then is easy:



                      documentclass{article}
                      usepackage{fonttable}
                      begin{document}
                      fonttable{omding}
                      fontomding=omding
                      omding char194
                      end{document}


                      MWE
                      You can also search for a skull the in Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list, or paint a skull in Detexify, or remember the easy command "skull" (and do not forget load the skull package and enter in math mode) o try to find a dingbat or ding{whatever}... but when I want a skull (really never) must be that of white bones (just try the other methods if you don't know what I mean).






                      share|improve this answer


























                        66












                        66








                        66






                        For uncommon symbols, instead of search documentation on-line or in a big PDF to find packages and commands to include in my code, I have found useful sometimes to compile the whole table of characters of a font (even in the working document) to quickly find, for example, the skull of the omding font that is char194. Of course, you have first to know that you have a font file with that name (omding.tfm) but then is easy:



                        documentclass{article}
                        usepackage{fonttable}
                        begin{document}
                        fonttable{omding}
                        fontomding=omding
                        omding char194
                        end{document}


                        MWE
                        You can also search for a skull the in Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list, or paint a skull in Detexify, or remember the easy command "skull" (and do not forget load the skull package and enter in math mode) o try to find a dingbat or ding{whatever}... but when I want a skull (really never) must be that of white bones (just try the other methods if you don't know what I mean).






                        share|improve this answer














                        For uncommon symbols, instead of search documentation on-line or in a big PDF to find packages and commands to include in my code, I have found useful sometimes to compile the whole table of characters of a font (even in the working document) to quickly find, for example, the skull of the omding font that is char194. Of course, you have first to know that you have a font file with that name (omding.tfm) but then is easy:



                        documentclass{article}
                        usepackage{fonttable}
                        begin{document}
                        fonttable{omding}
                        fontomding=omding
                        omding char194
                        end{document}


                        MWE
                        You can also search for a skull the in Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list, or paint a skull in Detexify, or remember the easy command "skull" (and do not forget load the skull package and enter in math mode) o try to find a dingbat or ding{whatever}... but when I want a skull (really never) must be that of white bones (just try the other methods if you don't know what I mean).







                        share|improve this answer














                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer








                        edited Sep 26 '12 at 2:36

























                        answered Sep 2 '12 at 19:48









                        Fran

                        51.3k6112175




                        51.3k6112175























                            36














                            There's also an iPhone app for Detexify, which I've used occasionally, for some reason ...



                            Links (on the US iTunes App Store): free version and supporter version ($0.99, same functionality).






                            share|improve this answer



















                            • 1




                              This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
                              – Reb.Cabin
                              Nov 2 '15 at 16:17
















                            36














                            There's also an iPhone app for Detexify, which I've used occasionally, for some reason ...



                            Links (on the US iTunes App Store): free version and supporter version ($0.99, same functionality).






                            share|improve this answer



















                            • 1




                              This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
                              – Reb.Cabin
                              Nov 2 '15 at 16:17














                            36












                            36








                            36






                            There's also an iPhone app for Detexify, which I've used occasionally, for some reason ...



                            Links (on the US iTunes App Store): free version and supporter version ($0.99, same functionality).






                            share|improve this answer














                            There's also an iPhone app for Detexify, which I've used occasionally, for some reason ...



                            Links (on the US iTunes App Store): free version and supporter version ($0.99, same functionality).







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Jan 10 '12 at 20:29









                            doncherry

                            34.7k23134208




                            34.7k23134208










                            answered Jul 26 '10 at 19:42









                            Scott Morrison

                            3,88052730




                            3,88052730








                            • 1




                              This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
                              – Reb.Cabin
                              Nov 2 '15 at 16:17














                            • 1




                              This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
                              – Reb.Cabin
                              Nov 2 '15 at 16:17








                            1




                            1




                            This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
                            – Reb.Cabin
                            Nov 2 '15 at 16:17




                            This item seems no longer available in the US Store. Pity.
                            – Reb.Cabin
                            Nov 2 '15 at 16:17











                            29














                            TL;DR



                            Direct link to the online service



                            This service allows classification by drawing (even works on mobile devices!) and by text:



                            enter image description here



                            Some information



                            The handwriting recognition toolkit (hwrt) is one possibility to classify you recordings. There are still many rough edges and the software gets updated on a daily basis (04.12.2014). The user interface is in a browser and looks like this:



                            enter image description here



                            The installation is explained in the documentation. If you have trouble or have an idea how to improve it, just leave a comment or write an email (info@martin-thoma.de).



                            This is a part of my bachelor's thesis. The thesis, some presentations and links to all software projects are on http://martin-thoma.com/write-math/






                            share|improve this answer



















                            • 1




                              Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 18:26










                            • after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 19:06










                            • @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
                              – Tim
                              Dec 17 '14 at 18:33












                            • @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
                              – Martin Thoma
                              Apr 18 '15 at 20:02
















                            29














                            TL;DR



                            Direct link to the online service



                            This service allows classification by drawing (even works on mobile devices!) and by text:



                            enter image description here



                            Some information



                            The handwriting recognition toolkit (hwrt) is one possibility to classify you recordings. There are still many rough edges and the software gets updated on a daily basis (04.12.2014). The user interface is in a browser and looks like this:



                            enter image description here



                            The installation is explained in the documentation. If you have trouble or have an idea how to improve it, just leave a comment or write an email (info@martin-thoma.de).



                            This is a part of my bachelor's thesis. The thesis, some presentations and links to all software projects are on http://martin-thoma.com/write-math/






                            share|improve this answer



















                            • 1




                              Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 18:26










                            • after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 19:06










                            • @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
                              – Tim
                              Dec 17 '14 at 18:33












                            • @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
                              – Martin Thoma
                              Apr 18 '15 at 20:02














                            29












                            29








                            29






                            TL;DR



                            Direct link to the online service



                            This service allows classification by drawing (even works on mobile devices!) and by text:



                            enter image description here



                            Some information



                            The handwriting recognition toolkit (hwrt) is one possibility to classify you recordings. There are still many rough edges and the software gets updated on a daily basis (04.12.2014). The user interface is in a browser and looks like this:



                            enter image description here



                            The installation is explained in the documentation. If you have trouble or have an idea how to improve it, just leave a comment or write an email (info@martin-thoma.de).



                            This is a part of my bachelor's thesis. The thesis, some presentations and links to all software projects are on http://martin-thoma.com/write-math/






                            share|improve this answer














                            TL;DR



                            Direct link to the online service



                            This service allows classification by drawing (even works on mobile devices!) and by text:



                            enter image description here



                            Some information



                            The handwriting recognition toolkit (hwrt) is one possibility to classify you recordings. There are still many rough edges and the software gets updated on a daily basis (04.12.2014). The user interface is in a browser and looks like this:



                            enter image description here



                            The installation is explained in the documentation. If you have trouble or have an idea how to improve it, just leave a comment or write an email (info@martin-thoma.de).



                            This is a part of my bachelor's thesis. The thesis, some presentations and links to all software projects are on http://martin-thoma.com/write-math/







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Mar 4 '15 at 12:24

























                            answered Dec 4 '14 at 18:02









                            Martin Thoma

                            8,492657159




                            8,492657159








                            • 1




                              Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 18:26










                            • after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 19:06










                            • @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
                              – Tim
                              Dec 17 '14 at 18:33












                            • @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
                              – Martin Thoma
                              Apr 18 '15 at 20:02














                            • 1




                              Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 18:26










                            • after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
                              – Tim
                              Dec 4 '14 at 19:06










                            • @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
                              – Tim
                              Dec 17 '14 at 18:33












                            • @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
                              – Martin Thoma
                              Apr 18 '15 at 20:02








                            1




                            1




                            Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
                            – Tim
                            Dec 4 '14 at 18:26




                            Hehe, I would list the same results even as a human for this drawing
                            – Tim
                            Dec 4 '14 at 18:26












                            after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
                            – Tim
                            Dec 4 '14 at 19:06




                            after using python -m pip install hwrt it starts installing. I'll feedback later.
                            – Tim
                            Dec 4 '14 at 19:06












                            @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
                            – Tim
                            Dec 17 '14 at 18:33






                            @ moose I'm sorry but now error: package directory hwrt does not exist appears when I try to install by python setup.py install. Maybe it would be easier to provide a complete portable version for testing (without third party modules needed).
                            – Tim
                            Dec 17 '14 at 18:33














                            @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
                            – Martin Thoma
                            Apr 18 '15 at 20:02




                            @TimS. Is this still a problem? Could we talk about it via email (info@martin-thoma.de) or via GitHub issue?
                            – Martin Thoma
                            Apr 18 '15 at 20:02











                            27














                            I've just come across this list http://milde.users.sourceforge.net/LUCR/Math/unimathsymbols.pdf which lists characters using unicode numbers, their representation, and their (La)TeX command, together with other useful information.



                            Here's a random sample of what it looks like:



                            symbol list including unicode






                            share|improve this answer

















                            • 2




                              This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
                              – Speravir
                              Mar 19 '14 at 4:58
















                            27














                            I've just come across this list http://milde.users.sourceforge.net/LUCR/Math/unimathsymbols.pdf which lists characters using unicode numbers, their representation, and their (La)TeX command, together with other useful information.



                            Here's a random sample of what it looks like:



                            symbol list including unicode






                            share|improve this answer

















                            • 2




                              This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
                              – Speravir
                              Mar 19 '14 at 4:58














                            27












                            27








                            27






                            I've just come across this list http://milde.users.sourceforge.net/LUCR/Math/unimathsymbols.pdf which lists characters using unicode numbers, their representation, and their (La)TeX command, together with other useful information.



                            Here's a random sample of what it looks like:



                            symbol list including unicode






                            share|improve this answer












                            I've just come across this list http://milde.users.sourceforge.net/LUCR/Math/unimathsymbols.pdf which lists characters using unicode numbers, their representation, and their (La)TeX command, together with other useful information.



                            Here's a random sample of what it looks like:



                            symbol list including unicode







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jun 21 '13 at 11:52









                            Loop Space

                            111k29302601




                            111k29302601








                            • 2




                              This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
                              – Speravir
                              Mar 19 '14 at 4:58














                            • 2




                              This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
                              – Speravir
                              Mar 19 '14 at 4:58








                            2




                            2




                            This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
                            – Speravir
                            Mar 19 '14 at 4:58




                            This seems also to be useful: mirror.ctan.org/biblio/biber/documentation/utf8-macro-map.html.
                            – Speravir
                            Mar 19 '14 at 4:58











                            24














                            This reference has yet to fail me; it has all the symbols typeset along with the foo command needed to generate them. There's also this PDF, which is considerably better put-together and covers other symbols besides the base math ones






                            share|improve this answer


























                              24














                              This reference has yet to fail me; it has all the symbols typeset along with the foo command needed to generate them. There's also this PDF, which is considerably better put-together and covers other symbols besides the base math ones






                              share|improve this answer
























                                24












                                24








                                24






                                This reference has yet to fail me; it has all the symbols typeset along with the foo command needed to generate them. There's also this PDF, which is considerably better put-together and covers other symbols besides the base math ones






                                share|improve this answer












                                This reference has yet to fail me; it has all the symbols typeset along with the foo command needed to generate them. There's also this PDF, which is considerably better put-together and covers other symbols besides the base math ones







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Jul 26 '10 at 19:31









                                Michael Mrozek

                                10.2k11624




                                10.2k11624























                                    20














                                    The LaTeX wikibook Mathematics section has been very helpful for me.






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      20














                                      The LaTeX wikibook Mathematics section has been very helpful for me.






                                      share|improve this answer
























                                        20












                                        20








                                        20






                                        The LaTeX wikibook Mathematics section has been very helpful for me.






                                        share|improve this answer












                                        The LaTeX wikibook Mathematics section has been very helpful for me.







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Sep 27 '10 at 0:44









                                        philosodad

                                        8941121




                                        8941121























                                            19














                                            In case you are using TeXstudio or Texmaker, you can browse the built-in catalog of symbols and find the symbol you need in the appropriate category of symbols (see the image below). It is very convenient, as by clicking on the symbol it gets automatically inserted into your document.



                                            TeXstudio symbol catalog



                                            Moreover, if you're using TeXstudio on Windows, you can use Wizards -> Math Assistant... which enables you to draw symbols and it translates them into text.



                                            enter image description here






                                            share|improve this answer


























                                              19














                                              In case you are using TeXstudio or Texmaker, you can browse the built-in catalog of symbols and find the symbol you need in the appropriate category of symbols (see the image below). It is very convenient, as by clicking on the symbol it gets automatically inserted into your document.



                                              TeXstudio symbol catalog



                                              Moreover, if you're using TeXstudio on Windows, you can use Wizards -> Math Assistant... which enables you to draw symbols and it translates them into text.



                                              enter image description here






                                              share|improve this answer
























                                                19












                                                19








                                                19






                                                In case you are using TeXstudio or Texmaker, you can browse the built-in catalog of symbols and find the symbol you need in the appropriate category of symbols (see the image below). It is very convenient, as by clicking on the symbol it gets automatically inserted into your document.



                                                TeXstudio symbol catalog



                                                Moreover, if you're using TeXstudio on Windows, you can use Wizards -> Math Assistant... which enables you to draw symbols and it translates them into text.



                                                enter image description here






                                                share|improve this answer












                                                In case you are using TeXstudio or Texmaker, you can browse the built-in catalog of symbols and find the symbol you need in the appropriate category of symbols (see the image below). It is very convenient, as by clicking on the symbol it gets automatically inserted into your document.



                                                TeXstudio symbol catalog



                                                Moreover, if you're using TeXstudio on Windows, you can use Wizards -> Math Assistant... which enables you to draw symbols and it translates them into text.



                                                enter image description here







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Apr 18 '15 at 14:34









                                                Augustin

                                                3,15911217




                                                3,15911217























                                                    15














                                                    Some utilities for lookup symbols in Unicode:




                                                    • ent2latex: A Perl script to translate Unicode symbols to LaTeX commands. (However, it doesn't utilize math fonts.)


                                                    • kcharset: A KDE application to lookup Unicode. (Well, you can input some symbols in Unicode directly, or lookup the corresponding LaTeX command by ent2latex.)







                                                    share|improve this answer


























                                                      15














                                                      Some utilities for lookup symbols in Unicode:




                                                      • ent2latex: A Perl script to translate Unicode symbols to LaTeX commands. (However, it doesn't utilize math fonts.)


                                                      • kcharset: A KDE application to lookup Unicode. (Well, you can input some symbols in Unicode directly, or lookup the corresponding LaTeX command by ent2latex.)







                                                      share|improve this answer
























                                                        15












                                                        15








                                                        15






                                                        Some utilities for lookup symbols in Unicode:




                                                        • ent2latex: A Perl script to translate Unicode symbols to LaTeX commands. (However, it doesn't utilize math fonts.)


                                                        • kcharset: A KDE application to lookup Unicode. (Well, you can input some symbols in Unicode directly, or lookup the corresponding LaTeX command by ent2latex.)







                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        Some utilities for lookup symbols in Unicode:




                                                        • ent2latex: A Perl script to translate Unicode symbols to LaTeX commands. (However, it doesn't utilize math fonts.)


                                                        • kcharset: A KDE application to lookup Unicode. (Well, you can input some symbols in Unicode directly, or lookup the corresponding LaTeX command by ent2latex.)








                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                        answered Oct 9 '12 at 2:39









                                                        Xiè Jìléi

                                                        635418




                                                        635418























                                                            13














                                                            I use the Daum Equation editor then just copy and paste the code at the bottom (you can specify Tex,LaTeX, etc.) and even favourite the equations/symbols to avoid having to re-look them up every time you use them.
                                                            Not sure if they have EVERY symbol, but it has been a good reference for me so far!






                                                            share|improve this answer


























                                                              13














                                                              I use the Daum Equation editor then just copy and paste the code at the bottom (you can specify Tex,LaTeX, etc.) and even favourite the equations/symbols to avoid having to re-look them up every time you use them.
                                                              Not sure if they have EVERY symbol, but it has been a good reference for me so far!






                                                              share|improve this answer
























                                                                13












                                                                13








                                                                13






                                                                I use the Daum Equation editor then just copy and paste the code at the bottom (you can specify Tex,LaTeX, etc.) and even favourite the equations/symbols to avoid having to re-look them up every time you use them.
                                                                Not sure if they have EVERY symbol, but it has been a good reference for me so far!






                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                I use the Daum Equation editor then just copy and paste the code at the bottom (you can specify Tex,LaTeX, etc.) and even favourite the equations/symbols to avoid having to re-look them up every time you use them.
                                                                Not sure if they have EVERY symbol, but it has been a good reference for me so far!







                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                share|improve this answer










                                                                answered Nov 10 '13 at 22:22









                                                                Melanie

                                                                300210




                                                                300210























                                                                    7














                                                                    fontawesome provides access to a host of web-related icons (or symbols) provided by the included Font Awesome font.



                                                                    enter image description here



                                                                    documentclass{article}

                                                                    usepackage{fontawesome}

                                                                    setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                    begin{document}

                                                                    These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                    faBicycle
                                                                    faCodeFork
                                                                    faDiamond
                                                                    faFirefox
                                                                    faFortAwesome
                                                                    faGears
                                                                    faJsfiddle
                                                                    faLinux

                                                                    end{document}


                                                                    However, if you want access to the latest-and-greatest web-related icons from the font and are running XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX, you can download the font directly. Here you can also search the list of available icons to identify a symbol.



                                                                    enter image description here



                                                                    documentclass{article}

                                                                    usepackage{fontspec}

                                                                    newfontfamily{fa}{FontAwesome_0.otf}% http://fontawesome.io/

                                                                    setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                    begin{document}

                                                                    These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                    fa
                                                                    symbol{"F2B9} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/address-book/
                                                                    symbol{"F2DC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/snowflake-o/
                                                                    symbol{"F2C5} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/free-code-camp/
                                                                    symbol{"F2CC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/shower/
                                                                    symbol{"F2DD} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/superpowers/
                                                                    symbol{"F2D6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/grav/
                                                                    symbol{"F2C6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/telegram/
                                                                    symbol{"F2CE} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/podcast/

                                                                    end{document}





                                                                    share|improve this answer


























                                                                      7














                                                                      fontawesome provides access to a host of web-related icons (or symbols) provided by the included Font Awesome font.



                                                                      enter image description here



                                                                      documentclass{article}

                                                                      usepackage{fontawesome}

                                                                      setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                      begin{document}

                                                                      These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                      faBicycle
                                                                      faCodeFork
                                                                      faDiamond
                                                                      faFirefox
                                                                      faFortAwesome
                                                                      faGears
                                                                      faJsfiddle
                                                                      faLinux

                                                                      end{document}


                                                                      However, if you want access to the latest-and-greatest web-related icons from the font and are running XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX, you can download the font directly. Here you can also search the list of available icons to identify a symbol.



                                                                      enter image description here



                                                                      documentclass{article}

                                                                      usepackage{fontspec}

                                                                      newfontfamily{fa}{FontAwesome_0.otf}% http://fontawesome.io/

                                                                      setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                      begin{document}

                                                                      These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                      fa
                                                                      symbol{"F2B9} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/address-book/
                                                                      symbol{"F2DC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/snowflake-o/
                                                                      symbol{"F2C5} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/free-code-camp/
                                                                      symbol{"F2CC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/shower/
                                                                      symbol{"F2DD} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/superpowers/
                                                                      symbol{"F2D6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/grav/
                                                                      symbol{"F2C6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/telegram/
                                                                      symbol{"F2CE} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/podcast/

                                                                      end{document}





                                                                      share|improve this answer
























                                                                        7












                                                                        7








                                                                        7






                                                                        fontawesome provides access to a host of web-related icons (or symbols) provided by the included Font Awesome font.



                                                                        enter image description here



                                                                        documentclass{article}

                                                                        usepackage{fontawesome}

                                                                        setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                        begin{document}

                                                                        These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                        faBicycle
                                                                        faCodeFork
                                                                        faDiamond
                                                                        faFirefox
                                                                        faFortAwesome
                                                                        faGears
                                                                        faJsfiddle
                                                                        faLinux

                                                                        end{document}


                                                                        However, if you want access to the latest-and-greatest web-related icons from the font and are running XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX, you can download the font directly. Here you can also search the list of available icons to identify a symbol.



                                                                        enter image description here



                                                                        documentclass{article}

                                                                        usepackage{fontspec}

                                                                        newfontfamily{fa}{FontAwesome_0.otf}% http://fontawesome.io/

                                                                        setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                        begin{document}

                                                                        These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                        fa
                                                                        symbol{"F2B9} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/address-book/
                                                                        symbol{"F2DC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/snowflake-o/
                                                                        symbol{"F2C5} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/free-code-camp/
                                                                        symbol{"F2CC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/shower/
                                                                        symbol{"F2DD} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/superpowers/
                                                                        symbol{"F2D6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/grav/
                                                                        symbol{"F2C6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/telegram/
                                                                        symbol{"F2CE} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/podcast/

                                                                        end{document}





                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                        fontawesome provides access to a host of web-related icons (or symbols) provided by the included Font Awesome font.



                                                                        enter image description here



                                                                        documentclass{article}

                                                                        usepackage{fontawesome}

                                                                        setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                        begin{document}

                                                                        These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                        faBicycle
                                                                        faCodeFork
                                                                        faDiamond
                                                                        faFirefox
                                                                        faFortAwesome
                                                                        faGears
                                                                        faJsfiddle
                                                                        faLinux

                                                                        end{document}


                                                                        However, if you want access to the latest-and-greatest web-related icons from the font and are running XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX, you can download the font directly. Here you can also search the list of available icons to identify a symbol.



                                                                        enter image description here



                                                                        documentclass{article}

                                                                        usepackage{fontspec}

                                                                        newfontfamily{fa}{FontAwesome_0.otf}% http://fontawesome.io/

                                                                        setlength{parindent}{0pt}% Just for this example

                                                                        begin{document}

                                                                        These are some symbols from the font texttt{FontAwesome}:

                                                                        fa
                                                                        symbol{"F2B9} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/address-book/
                                                                        symbol{"F2DC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/snowflake-o/
                                                                        symbol{"F2C5} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/free-code-camp/
                                                                        symbol{"F2CC} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/shower/
                                                                        symbol{"F2DD} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/superpowers/
                                                                        symbol{"F2D6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/grav/
                                                                        symbol{"F2C6} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/telegram/
                                                                        symbol{"F2CE} % http://fontawesome.io/icon/podcast/

                                                                        end{document}






                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                                        answered Dec 26 '16 at 7:00









                                                                        Werner

                                                                        437k649581647




                                                                        437k649581647























                                                                            2














                                                                            If you use Mac, there is an app named "Texpad 2" from which you can pick most symbols:



                                                                            enter image description here






                                                                            share|improve this answer




























                                                                              2














                                                                              If you use Mac, there is an app named "Texpad 2" from which you can pick most symbols:



                                                                              enter image description here






                                                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                                                2












                                                                                2








                                                                                2






                                                                                If you use Mac, there is an app named "Texpad 2" from which you can pick most symbols:



                                                                                enter image description here






                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                If you use Mac, there is an app named "Texpad 2" from which you can pick most symbols:



                                                                                enter image description here







                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                                edited Apr 17 at 4:33









                                                                                Frenzy Li

                                                                                229211




                                                                                229211










                                                                                answered Apr 17 at 1:54









                                                                                Yangxin Zhang

                                                                                34229




                                                                                34229























                                                                                    1














                                                                                    My book "Schnell and Ziel mit LaTeX2e" (only available in German) has a symbol index with a lookup method inspired by Chinese dictionaries: The mathematical symbols are ordered by the number and type of strokes needed to draw them. The index includes the symbols from plain TeX, AMS symbols, and LaTeX symbols.



                                                                                    As far as I know, this index has not been copied by other authors.






                                                                                    share|improve this answer


























                                                                                      1














                                                                                      My book "Schnell and Ziel mit LaTeX2e" (only available in German) has a symbol index with a lookup method inspired by Chinese dictionaries: The mathematical symbols are ordered by the number and type of strokes needed to draw them. The index includes the symbols from plain TeX, AMS symbols, and LaTeX symbols.



                                                                                      As far as I know, this index has not been copied by other authors.






                                                                                      share|improve this answer
























                                                                                        1












                                                                                        1








                                                                                        1






                                                                                        My book "Schnell and Ziel mit LaTeX2e" (only available in German) has a symbol index with a lookup method inspired by Chinese dictionaries: The mathematical symbols are ordered by the number and type of strokes needed to draw them. The index includes the symbols from plain TeX, AMS symbols, and LaTeX symbols.



                                                                                        As far as I know, this index has not been copied by other authors.






                                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                                        My book "Schnell and Ziel mit LaTeX2e" (only available in German) has a symbol index with a lookup method inspired by Chinese dictionaries: The mathematical symbols are ordered by the number and type of strokes needed to draw them. The index includes the symbols from plain TeX, AMS symbols, and LaTeX symbols.



                                                                                        As far as I know, this index has not been copied by other authors.







                                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                                                        answered Aug 3 '16 at 13:34









                                                                                        jknappen

                                                                                        2,823730




                                                                                        2,823730

















                                                                                            protected by Claudio Fiandrino Jun 21 '13 at 12:04



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