Intro | First attempt | Text | References | Figures | Maths | Source Code | Theorems
Mathematical Formulæ is one of LaTeX's great strengths. A formula can appear either inlined in the paragraph, or separately (so-called display maths). You can try to insert the following code in a LaTeX document and compile it to see how it works:
Mathematical formulæ are essential in most scientific texts,
for instance $E = mc^2$. It is important that they look good.
Longer formulæ require a line of their own, like this:
\[ P(x) = \sum_{i=1}^n c_i x^i. \]
Greek letters are easily achieved:
$\alpha=2$, and $\beta = 2\alpha + 1$.
As you know, different symbols for multiplication.
You would probably say that an image is $256\times256$,
while a product is usually $ab$. If you need symbol for
the a product, it may be like this:
\[ S = \alpha \cdot \frac{a + 1}{n-1}, \text{ where } a < 2. \]
Note that typesetting rules for maths are different from those for text; for instance, whitespace is ignored. The curly braces work as in C and Java, i.e. they group single tokens into a block which is treated as one token.
Almost any conceivable mathematical symbol can be typeset easily in LaTeX. If you need more than I have shown and what you can guess, you should look up in the book.
To get numbered equation, you can try this:
\usepackage{amsmath}
A reference to \eqref{eq:B} may be used before it is declared.
\begin{align}
\label{eq:A}
A & = \alpha + \frac{\beta}{n-1},\\
\label{eq:A}
B & = \beta + Bx^2.
\end{align}
It is now possible to refer to Equation \eqref{eq:A} whenever you need it.
The ampersand (&) is used for alignment, so that the equal signs (=) come directly under eachother.