Where can I find how to tex symbols for different fonts? Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraLoading fonts in LuaTeX (plain TeX)How to install or replace fonts in old TeX files?Math symbols in plain TeXHow can I use times fonts in Plain TeX?Can I have a list of all fonts available in plain TeX?Using urw-garamond fonts in plain TeXHow is obeylines different from obeyspaces?Where can I find the plain TeX source file on my PC?LaTeX for plain TeX users?Where can I read about the TeX commands not LaTeX commands // Math commands

What do you call an IPA symbol that lacks a name (e.g. ɲ)?

Why does Java have support for time zone offsets with seconds precision?

What is a good proxy for government quality?

How can I wire a 9-position switch so that each position turns on one more LED than the one before?

Suing a Police Officer Instead of the Police Department

What is the ongoing value of the Kanban board to the developers as opposed to management

Could a cockatrice have parasitic embryos?

What is the purpose of the side handle on a hand ("eggbeater") drill?

RIP Packet Format

Bright yellow or light yellow?

France's Public Holidays' Puzzle

Did war bonds have better investment alternatives during WWII?

What's parked in Mil Moscow helicopter plant?

Raising a bilingual kid. When should we introduce the majority language?

How was Lagrange appointed professor of mathematics so early?

Was there ever a LEGO store in Miami International Airport?

Why did Israel vote against lifting the American embargo on Cuba?

Co-worker works way more than he should

What *exactly* is electrical current, voltage, and resistance?

Is it accepted to use working hours to read general interest books?

Does using the Inspiration rules for character defects encourage My Guy Syndrome?

What happened to Viserion in Season 7?

1 column , 2 columns-left , 2 columns-right , 3 column

When does Bran Stark remember Jamie pushing him?



Where can I find how to tex symbols for different fonts?



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraLoading fonts in LuaTeX (plain TeX)How to install or replace fonts in old TeX files?Math symbols in plain TeXHow can I use times fonts in Plain TeX?Can I have a list of all fonts available in plain TeX?Using urw-garamond fonts in plain TeXHow is obeylines different from obeyspaces?Where can I find the plain TeX source file on my PC?LaTeX for plain TeX users?Where can I read about the TeX commands not LaTeX commands // Math commands










2















I'm aware of fonts such as cmr10, cmex10 and cmsy10. Right now I would like to know how to use TeX to produce symbols in the character tables such as http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



Is there a dictionary somewhere on the internet containing how to TeX every symbol in character tables given the font? (i.e. Given 'x41' and the font cmr10 I want to obtain 'A', given 'x00' and cmr10 I want to obtain 'textGamma').



P.S. This question is motivated by my attempts to extract text from .tex files. I end up deciding to first convert .tex files to DVI files and then use dviasm to extract the text because it bypasses the need to essentially build another TeX engine.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Have you considered just using the PDF directly, e.g. with pdf2htmlEX ? There's a comparison of other options here.

    – ShreevatsaR
    2 hours ago











  • @ShreevatsaR No, that does not work for me because despite the fact that the HTML is almost perfect I can't extract any characters at all.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I am able to copy characters from e.g. this demo. Of course it only works when they are present in the original PDF.

    – ShreevatsaR
    58 mins ago











  • @ShreevatsaR Well, I need to automate the process. Moreover by "copying characters" I include copying non-Latin characters and things such as mathcalA as well.

    – Ying Zhou
    18 mins ago















2















I'm aware of fonts such as cmr10, cmex10 and cmsy10. Right now I would like to know how to use TeX to produce symbols in the character tables such as http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



Is there a dictionary somewhere on the internet containing how to TeX every symbol in character tables given the font? (i.e. Given 'x41' and the font cmr10 I want to obtain 'A', given 'x00' and cmr10 I want to obtain 'textGamma').



P.S. This question is motivated by my attempts to extract text from .tex files. I end up deciding to first convert .tex files to DVI files and then use dviasm to extract the text because it bypasses the need to essentially build another TeX engine.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Have you considered just using the PDF directly, e.g. with pdf2htmlEX ? There's a comparison of other options here.

    – ShreevatsaR
    2 hours ago











  • @ShreevatsaR No, that does not work for me because despite the fact that the HTML is almost perfect I can't extract any characters at all.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I am able to copy characters from e.g. this demo. Of course it only works when they are present in the original PDF.

    – ShreevatsaR
    58 mins ago











  • @ShreevatsaR Well, I need to automate the process. Moreover by "copying characters" I include copying non-Latin characters and things such as mathcalA as well.

    – Ying Zhou
    18 mins ago













2












2








2








I'm aware of fonts such as cmr10, cmex10 and cmsy10. Right now I would like to know how to use TeX to produce symbols in the character tables such as http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



Is there a dictionary somewhere on the internet containing how to TeX every symbol in character tables given the font? (i.e. Given 'x41' and the font cmr10 I want to obtain 'A', given 'x00' and cmr10 I want to obtain 'textGamma').



P.S. This question is motivated by my attempts to extract text from .tex files. I end up deciding to first convert .tex files to DVI files and then use dviasm to extract the text because it bypasses the need to essentially build another TeX engine.










share|improve this question
















I'm aware of fonts such as cmr10, cmex10 and cmsy10. Right now I would like to know how to use TeX to produce symbols in the character tables such as http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



Is there a dictionary somewhere on the internet containing how to TeX every symbol in character tables given the font? (i.e. Given 'x41' and the font cmr10 I want to obtain 'A', given 'x00' and cmr10 I want to obtain 'textGamma').



P.S. This question is motivated by my attempts to extract text from .tex files. I end up deciding to first convert .tex files to DVI files and then use dviasm to extract the text because it bypasses the need to essentially build another TeX engine.







plain-tex






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 5 hours ago







Ying Zhou

















asked 6 hours ago









Ying ZhouYing Zhou

888




888







  • 1





    Have you considered just using the PDF directly, e.g. with pdf2htmlEX ? There's a comparison of other options here.

    – ShreevatsaR
    2 hours ago











  • @ShreevatsaR No, that does not work for me because despite the fact that the HTML is almost perfect I can't extract any characters at all.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I am able to copy characters from e.g. this demo. Of course it only works when they are present in the original PDF.

    – ShreevatsaR
    58 mins ago











  • @ShreevatsaR Well, I need to automate the process. Moreover by "copying characters" I include copying non-Latin characters and things such as mathcalA as well.

    – Ying Zhou
    18 mins ago












  • 1





    Have you considered just using the PDF directly, e.g. with pdf2htmlEX ? There's a comparison of other options here.

    – ShreevatsaR
    2 hours ago











  • @ShreevatsaR No, that does not work for me because despite the fact that the HTML is almost perfect I can't extract any characters at all.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I am able to copy characters from e.g. this demo. Of course it only works when they are present in the original PDF.

    – ShreevatsaR
    58 mins ago











  • @ShreevatsaR Well, I need to automate the process. Moreover by "copying characters" I include copying non-Latin characters and things such as mathcalA as well.

    – Ying Zhou
    18 mins ago







1




1





Have you considered just using the PDF directly, e.g. with pdf2htmlEX ? There's a comparison of other options here.

– ShreevatsaR
2 hours ago





Have you considered just using the PDF directly, e.g. with pdf2htmlEX ? There's a comparison of other options here.

– ShreevatsaR
2 hours ago













@ShreevatsaR No, that does not work for me because despite the fact that the HTML is almost perfect I can't extract any characters at all.

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago





@ShreevatsaR No, that does not work for me because despite the fact that the HTML is almost perfect I can't extract any characters at all.

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago




1




1





I am able to copy characters from e.g. this demo. Of course it only works when they are present in the original PDF.

– ShreevatsaR
58 mins ago





I am able to copy characters from e.g. this demo. Of course it only works when they are present in the original PDF.

– ShreevatsaR
58 mins ago













@ShreevatsaR Well, I need to automate the process. Moreover by "copying characters" I include copying non-Latin characters and things such as mathcalA as well.

– Ying Zhou
18 mins ago





@ShreevatsaR Well, I need to automate the process. Moreover by "copying characters" I include copying non-Latin characters and things such as mathcalA as well.

– Ying Zhou
18 mins ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3














An adjunct to the "Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list" is the "rawtables" pdf file that contains font tables for all the fonts covered by that list, arranged in alphabetical order. The font table arrangement shows the location in the font presented to TeX; it does not identify the glyphs by Unicode ID.



The collection is on CTAN: http://mirrors.ctan.org/info/symbols/comprehensive
and the pdf listing comes in either lettersize or a4.



Despite the "LaTeX" in the title, these fonts can be used also with plain TeX.






share|improve this answer























  • Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago


















2














LaTeX Font Encodings contains font tables for every legacy LaTeX encoding in common use. The modern toolchain with fontspec simply uses the Unicode encoding (under the alias TU).



If you want to be able to copy-and-paste, or otherwise automatically convert, text from a PDF document compiled from LaTeX source, your best bet is to use unicode-math. Then, all your glyphs are already encoded in Unicode.



A font using a non-standard encoding (such as U) should come with documentation. For example, the masfonts manual comes with tables of all its fonts in an appendix.






share|improve this answer























  • Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago



















2














While the user specifies TeX (for Plain TeX, see SUPPLEMENT), these tables are most easily obtainable via LaTeX, in the format described by the OP at http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmex10
enddocument


enter image description here



The same font table may be alternately obtained via xfonttableOMXcmexmn.



To answer the OP's specific question about the letter A in cmr10,



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmr10
enddocument


enter image description here



Just remember though, that for a given encoding scheme, one knows where to find various glyphs, even without printing the font table, especially for standard glyphs such as those available in ASCII.




SUPPLEMENT



For the Plain TeX alternative (fontchart.tex, found at https://ctan.org/pkg/fontchart?lang=en), here is the result for cmr10:



enter image description here



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

























  • Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "85"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f486288%2fwhere-can-i-find-how-to-tex-symbols-for-different-fonts%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














An adjunct to the "Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list" is the "rawtables" pdf file that contains font tables for all the fonts covered by that list, arranged in alphabetical order. The font table arrangement shows the location in the font presented to TeX; it does not identify the glyphs by Unicode ID.



The collection is on CTAN: http://mirrors.ctan.org/info/symbols/comprehensive
and the pdf listing comes in either lettersize or a4.



Despite the "LaTeX" in the title, these fonts can be used also with plain TeX.






share|improve this answer























  • Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago















3














An adjunct to the "Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list" is the "rawtables" pdf file that contains font tables for all the fonts covered by that list, arranged in alphabetical order. The font table arrangement shows the location in the font presented to TeX; it does not identify the glyphs by Unicode ID.



The collection is on CTAN: http://mirrors.ctan.org/info/symbols/comprehensive
and the pdf listing comes in either lettersize or a4.



Despite the "LaTeX" in the title, these fonts can be used also with plain TeX.






share|improve this answer























  • Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago













3












3








3







An adjunct to the "Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list" is the "rawtables" pdf file that contains font tables for all the fonts covered by that list, arranged in alphabetical order. The font table arrangement shows the location in the font presented to TeX; it does not identify the glyphs by Unicode ID.



The collection is on CTAN: http://mirrors.ctan.org/info/symbols/comprehensive
and the pdf listing comes in either lettersize or a4.



Despite the "LaTeX" in the title, these fonts can be used also with plain TeX.






share|improve this answer













An adjunct to the "Comprehensive LaTeX symbols list" is the "rawtables" pdf file that contains font tables for all the fonts covered by that list, arranged in alphabetical order. The font table arrangement shows the location in the font presented to TeX; it does not identify the glyphs by Unicode ID.



The collection is on CTAN: http://mirrors.ctan.org/info/symbols/comprehensive
and the pdf listing comes in either lettersize or a4.



Despite the "LaTeX" in the title, these fonts can be used also with plain TeX.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 5 hours ago









barbara beetonbarbara beeton

70.4k9159382




70.4k9159382












  • Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago

















  • Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago
















Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago





Really thanks! I have read it! I still need to find an actual list of TeX code that can generate the respective glyphs. It seems that I need to manually do that. I will do that for at least the most popular fonts.

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago











2














LaTeX Font Encodings contains font tables for every legacy LaTeX encoding in common use. The modern toolchain with fontspec simply uses the Unicode encoding (under the alias TU).



If you want to be able to copy-and-paste, or otherwise automatically convert, text from a PDF document compiled from LaTeX source, your best bet is to use unicode-math. Then, all your glyphs are already encoded in Unicode.



A font using a non-standard encoding (such as U) should come with documentation. For example, the masfonts manual comes with tables of all its fonts in an appendix.






share|improve this answer























  • Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago
















2














LaTeX Font Encodings contains font tables for every legacy LaTeX encoding in common use. The modern toolchain with fontspec simply uses the Unicode encoding (under the alias TU).



If you want to be able to copy-and-paste, or otherwise automatically convert, text from a PDF document compiled from LaTeX source, your best bet is to use unicode-math. Then, all your glyphs are already encoded in Unicode.



A font using a non-standard encoding (such as U) should come with documentation. For example, the masfonts manual comes with tables of all its fonts in an appendix.






share|improve this answer























  • Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago














2












2








2







LaTeX Font Encodings contains font tables for every legacy LaTeX encoding in common use. The modern toolchain with fontspec simply uses the Unicode encoding (under the alias TU).



If you want to be able to copy-and-paste, or otherwise automatically convert, text from a PDF document compiled from LaTeX source, your best bet is to use unicode-math. Then, all your glyphs are already encoded in Unicode.



A font using a non-standard encoding (such as U) should come with documentation. For example, the masfonts manual comes with tables of all its fonts in an appendix.






share|improve this answer













LaTeX Font Encodings contains font tables for every legacy LaTeX encoding in common use. The modern toolchain with fontspec simply uses the Unicode encoding (under the alias TU).



If you want to be able to copy-and-paste, or otherwise automatically convert, text from a PDF document compiled from LaTeX source, your best bet is to use unicode-math. Then, all your glyphs are already encoded in Unicode.



A font using a non-standard encoding (such as U) should come with documentation. For example, the masfonts manual comes with tables of all its fonts in an appendix.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 5 hours ago









DavislorDavislor

7,5341433




7,5341433












  • Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago


















  • Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago

















Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago






Really thanks for the book! I got its TeX code and am trying to figure out how to let them print the code (e.g. 'rightarrow') in addition to the glyphs (e.g. a right arrow).

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago












2














While the user specifies TeX (for Plain TeX, see SUPPLEMENT), these tables are most easily obtainable via LaTeX, in the format described by the OP at http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmex10
enddocument


enter image description here



The same font table may be alternately obtained via xfonttableOMXcmexmn.



To answer the OP's specific question about the letter A in cmr10,



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmr10
enddocument


enter image description here



Just remember though, that for a given encoding scheme, one knows where to find various glyphs, even without printing the font table, especially for standard glyphs such as those available in ASCII.




SUPPLEMENT



For the Plain TeX alternative (fontchart.tex, found at https://ctan.org/pkg/fontchart?lang=en), here is the result for cmr10:



enter image description here



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

























  • Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago















2














While the user specifies TeX (for Plain TeX, see SUPPLEMENT), these tables are most easily obtainable via LaTeX, in the format described by the OP at http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmex10
enddocument


enter image description here



The same font table may be alternately obtained via xfonttableOMXcmexmn.



To answer the OP's specific question about the letter A in cmr10,



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmr10
enddocument


enter image description here



Just remember though, that for a given encoding scheme, one knows where to find various glyphs, even without printing the font table, especially for standard glyphs such as those available in ASCII.




SUPPLEMENT



For the Plain TeX alternative (fontchart.tex, found at https://ctan.org/pkg/fontchart?lang=en), here is the result for cmr10:



enter image description here



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

























  • Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago













2












2








2







While the user specifies TeX (for Plain TeX, see SUPPLEMENT), these tables are most easily obtainable via LaTeX, in the format described by the OP at http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmex10
enddocument


enter image description here



The same font table may be alternately obtained via xfonttableOMXcmexmn.



To answer the OP's specific question about the letter A in cmr10,



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmr10
enddocument


enter image description here



Just remember though, that for a given encoding scheme, one knows where to find various glyphs, even without printing the font table, especially for standard glyphs such as those available in ASCII.




SUPPLEMENT



For the Plain TeX alternative (fontchart.tex, found at https://ctan.org/pkg/fontchart?lang=en), here is the result for cmr10:



enter image description here



enter image description here






share|improve this answer















While the user specifies TeX (for Plain TeX, see SUPPLEMENT), these tables are most easily obtainable via LaTeX, in the format described by the OP at http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsmath/symbols/cmex10.html



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmex10
enddocument


enter image description here



The same font table may be alternately obtained via xfonttableOMXcmexmn.



To answer the OP's specific question about the letter A in cmr10,



documentclassarticle
usepackagefonttable
begindocument
fonttablecmr10
enddocument


enter image description here



Just remember though, that for a given encoding scheme, one knows where to find various glyphs, even without printing the font table, especially for standard glyphs such as those available in ASCII.




SUPPLEMENT



For the Plain TeX alternative (fontchart.tex, found at https://ctan.org/pkg/fontchart?lang=en), here is the result for cmr10:



enter image description here



enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago

























answered 5 hours ago









Steven B. SegletesSteven B. Segletes

163k9207419




163k9207419












  • Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago

















  • Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

    – Ying Zhou
    1 hour ago
















Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago





Really thanks for your detailed answer! However I need to identify more than just the glyphs even though they are also something I can only identify manually now. The TeX code that can generate them also need to be identified automatically if possible.

– Ying Zhou
1 hour ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f486288%2fwhere-can-i-find-how-to-tex-symbols-for-different-fonts%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

How to create a command for the “strange m” symbol in latex? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?Writing bold small caps with mathpazo packageplus-minus symbol with parenthesis around the minus signGreek character in Beamer document titleHow to create dashed right arrow over symbol?Currency symbol: Turkish LiraDouble prec as a single symbol?Plus Sign Too Big; How to Call adfbullet?Is there a TeX macro for three-legged pi?How do I get my integral-like symbol to align like the integral?How to selectively substitute a letter with another symbol representing the same letterHow do I generate a less than symbol and vertical bar that are the same height?

Българска екзархия Съдържание История | Български екзарси | Вижте също | Външни препратки | Литература | Бележки | НавигацияУстав за управлението на българската екзархия. Цариград, 1870Слово на Ловешкия митрополит Иларион при откриването на Българския народен събор в Цариград на 23. II. 1870 г.Българската правда и гръцката кривда. От С. М. (= Софийски Мелетий). Цариград, 1872Предстоятели на Българската екзархияПодмененият ВеликденИнформационна агенция „Фокус“Димитър Ризов. Българите в техните исторически, етнографически и политически граници (Атлас съдържащ 40 карти). Berlin, Königliche Hoflithographie, Hof-Buch- und -Steindruckerei Wilhelm Greve, 1917Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars

Category:Tremithousa Media in category "Tremithousa"Navigation menuUpload media34° 49′ 02.7″ N, 32° 26′ 37.32″ EOpenStreetMapGoogle EarthProximityramaReasonatorScholiaStatisticsWikiShootMe