Someone please show me how to enter fractions in latex.
Just click the equation editor and type: {a \over b}
\frac{top}{bottom}
\[\Large {a \over b}\]
Can you type it directly?
{a \over b}
Go to the equation editor, then type the following.
\[{a \over b}\]
Thanks!!
you have to add \[ and \ ] (if you want to type it directly...)
Yes. And add \Large in the beginning to make it visible.
@lalaly use \text{ Something } \[\LARGE \text{Something testing... }\leftarrow \] it reads "spaces too"
\[\Large {pratu \over 043}\] :D
\[ {pratu \over 043}\]
thanks again!!
\[\Large \text{Here we have a test of text! =)}\]
yeah i know that @Kreshnik but iwas trying to do something else,,, Thankyou
@lalaly I'm sorry then... :(
\frac{\text{numerator}}{\text{denominator}} \[\downarrow\]\[\frac{\text{numerator}}{\text{denominator}} \]
@UnkleRhaukus what does \textbf do? i saw yoou do it before
bf ~ boldface \textbf{A} \[\downarrow\]\[\textbf{A} \]
for matrices. \textbf{A}_{nn}=\left( begin{array}{ccc}a_{11} & & \\ & \ddots & \\ & & a_{nn} \end{array}\right)ive have to leave a forward slash off the functional word 'begin' \[\downarrow\]\[\textbf{A}_{nn}=\left(\begin{array}{ccc}a_{11} & & \\ & \ddots & \\ & & a_{nn} \end{array}\right)\]
@Kreshnik dont be sorry:)
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