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Physics 18 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

the differnt appearances of the moon are called

thomaster (thomaster):

\(\Huge\bf\color{#FF0000}W\color{#FF4900}e\color{#FF9200}l\color{#FFDB00}c\color{#FFff00}o\color{#B6ff00}m\color{#6Dff00}e~\color{#00ff00}t\color{#00ff49}o~\color{#00ffDB}O\color{#00ffff}p\color{#00DBff}e\color{#0092ff}n\color{#0049ff}S\color{#0000ff}t\color{#2400ff}u\color{#6D00ff}d\color{#B600ff}y\color{#FF00ff}!\) They're called phases.

OpenStudy (souvik):

how do you did it?@thomaster its awesome.....

thomaster (thomaster):

Do what?

OpenStudy (souvik):

"welcome to openstudy " note..

thomaster (thomaster):

ohh that's called \(\Large\LaTeX\) :P If you want to learn how to do it, come to the latex practicing section :) http://openstudy.com/study#/groups/LaTeX%20Practicing!%20%3A)

OpenStudy (souvik):

thanks..:)

OpenStudy (theeric):

I agree with thomaster! And, in case you want more specifics, I'm providing a link to a site where they have information. The page linked has a good picture, too! And \[\LaTeX\] is cool. I don't know how you got it on one line, though. @souvik, if you want to see how somebody did something, you can right-click, "show math as," "TeX commands." And there is http://www.stdout.org/~winston/latex/, but I don't think you can use every feature. I might be wrong. And the equation thing on OpenStudy can use it.

OpenStudy (theeric):

So you can see that thomaster used "\Huge\bf\color{#FF0000}W\color{#FF4900}e\color{#FF9200}l\color{#FFDB00}c\color{#FFff00}o\color{#B6ff00}m\color{#6Dff00}e~\color{#00ff00}t\color{#00ff49}o~\color{#00ffDB}O\color{#00ffff}p\color{#00DBff}e\color{#0092ff}n\color{#0049ff}S\color{#0000ff}t\color{#2400ff}u\color{#6D00ff}d\color{#B600ff}y\color{#FF00ff}!" and you can see it by putting it in between \ [ and \] (without a space between \ and [ )

OpenStudy (theeric):

\LaTeX gets you the symbol.

OpenStudy (souvik):

thanks...@theEric

OpenStudy (theeric):

You're welcome! Enjoy!

thomaster (thomaster):

You get it on 1 line by pushing it between `\( and \)` instead of `\[ and ]\ `

OpenStudy (theeric):

I see, \(thank you\)!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

\(thanks \ both \ of \ u \ !\) I had been having difficulty producing bold letters for indicating vectors in the same line i was writing. You have helped me now.

OpenStudy (theeric):

@Diwakar, I did a search for the \(\LaTeX\) code for the arrow, and tried it. You can use `\(\overrightarrow{vectorrrrrr}\)` to get \(\overrightarrow{vectorrrrrr}\). And you don't need {}'s for just one letter. Also, `\[\boldsymbol {boldsymbol\ } not\ bold\ symbol\ \text{Text!!}\]` (The `\ ` are to get spaces, but that's not necessary when using `\text{}\`) \[\boldsymbol {boldsymbol\ } not\ bold\ symbol\ \text{Text!!}\] kymber has a good guide here: http://openstudy.com/study#/updates/515f3e09e4b0115bc14d4e65 and maybe a great one for beginning algebra students is the `\(\cancel a \cancel{x^3}\)` \(\cancel a \cancel{x^3}\) to visualize cancelation (in case you do that).

thomaster (thomaster):

\[\bf\Huge\color{blue}{\boxed{\color{red}{\underline{\overline{\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{V}}\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{E}}\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{R}}\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{Y}}~\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{G}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{O}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{O}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{D}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{!}}}}}}}\]

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