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Tuesday, July 20, 2010
How to enter the "big epsilon" in LaTeX
There are two kinds of epsilons in LaTeX, \(\epsilon\) and \(\varepsilon\), which can be entered as "\epsilon" and "\varepsilon" respectively. So how about the "big epsilon" \(\mathcal{E}\) which occurs often as the symbol for "energy functional"? It turns out, it's not an epsilon, but a curved letter "E". To enter it in LaTeX, simply do "\mathcal{E}".
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18 comments:
Somehow it turns out I needed that and I found it here. Thanks!
Just Googled for "big epsilon latex" and found it here! Thank you:)
me too ;-)
Google takes me here. Thanks!
thanks for this :)
Thank u!
I just googled big epsilon latex as everyone else. Thanks !
Thanks, i am thinking big epsilon too !
That's a Roman E in script, not a 'big epsilon'. A capital epsilon is indistinguishable from an E, and presumably you'd want it to appear in the same font family as your other Greek letters.
Thank you so much! I don't care where it comes from, I'm no linguist! That's the character I need.
Many thanks for this. Irrespective of what it is typographically it is a better version of the symbol for electric field.
thanks alot! searched in every greek letter latex pdf i could find and found my answer here :)
Thanks a lot ....
Thank you!
THANKS!
thx!
^thanks
thnx bro, me too i found my answer here.
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