Hi,
Have you tries U+1024 or LETTER CAPITAL H WITH CIRCUMFLEX?
True not all Fonts might not have it and it is TEXT not Math.
Just a thought.
regards
Keith.
Am 31.07.2013 um 00:04 schrieb Michael Murphy murphy...@gmail.com:
Hello all,
I'm trying to typeset 'H' with a circumflex
On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 09:05:18AM +0200, Keith J. Schultz wrote:
Hi,
Have you tries U+1024 or LETTER CAPITAL H WITH CIRCUMFLEX?
True not all Fonts might not have it and it is TEXT not Math.
And you shouldn’t use it in math, even Unicode discourages such use.
Accents in text and math are
I did try that, but it doesn't seem to exist in my font. Besides, I'm inclined
to agree with Khaled on math accents. I think that what I'm trying to do
shouldn't be that hard, I just want the \mathhat accent to be placed a little
higher. Something like \skew in plain TeX, but in the vertical
On 7/31/2013 12:04 AM, Michael Murphy wrote:
Hello all,
I'm trying to typeset 'H' with a circumflex (or hat) in math mode, but
the result is rather ugly when not using latin-modern. I've tried to
redefine the \hat macro to move the accent up a bit using \topaccent: is
this the best approach?
Hi Hans,
Thanks for the response. This is sort of what I wanted, except the \widehat is,
well, quite wide. So I hacked it around a bit to put the \widehat from a
capital 'I' on top of a capital 'H'. In case it happens to be helpful, the
final macro was
Tangential to your issue, but nota bene: instead of $...$ for inline
math, ConTeXt lets you use \math{...} or \m{...}. Which is a bit more
explicit, and can be easier to debug. You might prefer it.
For display math, you really should use \startformula...\stopformula
if you aren’t using it
On 2013–07–31 Sietse Brouwer wrote:
Tangential to your issue, but nota bene: instead of $...$ for inline
math, ConTeXt lets you use \math{...} or \m{...}.
Indeed. And when you use \asciimode, you have no other choice (and
that's a good thing):
\asciimode
\starttext
My #1 is $5
Hello all,
I'm trying to typeset 'H' with a circumflex (or hat) in math mode, but the
result is rather ugly when not using latin-modern. I've tried to redefine the
\hat macro to move the accent up a bit using \topaccent: is this the best
approach? Having to nest '$' does not seem right at all.