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Re: looking for a symbol


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  • From: Julien Frontisi <address@hidden>
  • To: texmacs-users <address@hidden>
  • Subject: Re: looking for a symbol
  • Date: Sat, 11 Jun 2022 12:40:36 +0200

Hi, 
from wikipedia, the « double tack up » symbol is unicode U+2AEB.
A previous discussion explained how to insert unicode symbols in TeXmacs.
I quote Joris :


Well, it is available in all look-and-feels,
but the precise shortcut might be A-q (Alt-q) or M-q (Meta-q) instead

With macOS, it works with Esc Esc q #2AEB return
but it is not recognized as (therefore lacks the usual spacing around) a binary operator.
With a macro including the spaces, it should look OK, though. (There is probably a better solution for semantics...)
Julien

Le 11 juin 2022 à 12:20, vincent douce <address@hidden> a écrit :

i would have liked to help but didn't find it
i find only your character turned 90°…
and it does not work in TeXmacs
Vincent

Le 11 juin 2022 à 09:30, Pierre-Henri Jondot <address@hidden> a écrit :

Hi,

Starting next year, our mathematics course introduces a new symbol for independant variables. The independance of X and Y is symbolized with :
<Capture d’écran 2022-06-11 à 09.24.01.png>
I couldn't find this symbol witList of LaTeX symbols | LaTeX Wiki | Fandomhin texmacs. What is the best way to obtain it ? Using the <move|content> and two perpendicular (\perp) symbols I could obtain somewhat what I need, but hardcoding the horizontal deplacement (-2mm for a 10pt document looks ok) depends on the size of the font, so it is really not ideal...

Any pointer to the right direction is welcome !

Regards,

Pierre-Henri




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