Where can I find “aligned” environment documentation?Where can I find good ConTeXt documentationWhere can...
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Where can I find “aligned” environment documentation?
Where can I find good ConTeXt documentationWhere can I find out what various hyperref options do?Where can I find the old tutorial.tex from csquotes package?Finding package documentationequation labels inside a nested align and aligned environmentUnits, in brackets, right aligned in align environmentAligning equations in tabular with aligned environmentAligned equation environment with number at bottom that allows for page breakingHow can I insert text inside the aligned environment?Aligned within align: Why are they right-aligned?
Where can I find "aligned" environment documentation? I tried on the web and in this site but I've not been able to find it.
align tutorials
|
show 5 more comments
Where can I find "aligned" environment documentation? I tried on the web and in this site but I've not been able to find it.
align tutorials
2
In the documentation ofamsmath
, more precisely all these environments are documented inamsldoc.pdf
.
– Bernard
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
2
inamsmath
documentation. then en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Advanced_Mathematics
– Zarko
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
4
in most tex distributions you can just issue the commandtexdoc amsmath
– David Carlisle
Aug 25 '17 at 9:13
2
@GabrieleNicolardi how is Mico blaiming your question? We legitimately would like to know what people searched for when their search failed to find, so we can work on improving search results. A lot of people forget to start their google search with latex, when they search LaTeX related stuff online, then, yes, you often fail since Google does not know the context.
– daleif
Aug 25 '17 at 10:06
4
It is mentioned in the manual, on page 8: "Like thearray
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning."
– Torbjørn T.
Aug 25 '17 at 10:32
|
show 5 more comments
Where can I find "aligned" environment documentation? I tried on the web and in this site but I've not been able to find it.
align tutorials
Where can I find "aligned" environment documentation? I tried on the web and in this site but I've not been able to find it.
align tutorials
align tutorials
edited Oct 29 '18 at 21:17
Gabriele Nicolardi
asked Aug 25 '17 at 9:07
Gabriele NicolardiGabriele Nicolardi
57549
57549
2
In the documentation ofamsmath
, more precisely all these environments are documented inamsldoc.pdf
.
– Bernard
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
2
inamsmath
documentation. then en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Advanced_Mathematics
– Zarko
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
4
in most tex distributions you can just issue the commandtexdoc amsmath
– David Carlisle
Aug 25 '17 at 9:13
2
@GabrieleNicolardi how is Mico blaiming your question? We legitimately would like to know what people searched for when their search failed to find, so we can work on improving search results. A lot of people forget to start their google search with latex, when they search LaTeX related stuff online, then, yes, you often fail since Google does not know the context.
– daleif
Aug 25 '17 at 10:06
4
It is mentioned in the manual, on page 8: "Like thearray
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning."
– Torbjørn T.
Aug 25 '17 at 10:32
|
show 5 more comments
2
In the documentation ofamsmath
, more precisely all these environments are documented inamsldoc.pdf
.
– Bernard
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
2
inamsmath
documentation. then en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Advanced_Mathematics
– Zarko
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
4
in most tex distributions you can just issue the commandtexdoc amsmath
– David Carlisle
Aug 25 '17 at 9:13
2
@GabrieleNicolardi how is Mico blaiming your question? We legitimately would like to know what people searched for when their search failed to find, so we can work on improving search results. A lot of people forget to start their google search with latex, when they search LaTeX related stuff online, then, yes, you often fail since Google does not know the context.
– daleif
Aug 25 '17 at 10:06
4
It is mentioned in the manual, on page 8: "Like thearray
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning."
– Torbjørn T.
Aug 25 '17 at 10:32
2
2
In the documentation of
amsmath
, more precisely all these environments are documented in amsldoc.pdf
.– Bernard
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
In the documentation of
amsmath
, more precisely all these environments are documented in amsldoc.pdf
.– Bernard
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
2
2
in
amsmath
documentation. then en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Advanced_Mathematics– Zarko
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
in
amsmath
documentation. then en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Advanced_Mathematics– Zarko
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
4
4
in most tex distributions you can just issue the command
texdoc amsmath
– David Carlisle
Aug 25 '17 at 9:13
in most tex distributions you can just issue the command
texdoc amsmath
– David Carlisle
Aug 25 '17 at 9:13
2
2
@GabrieleNicolardi how is Mico blaiming your question? We legitimately would like to know what people searched for when their search failed to find, so we can work on improving search results. A lot of people forget to start their google search with latex, when they search LaTeX related stuff online, then, yes, you often fail since Google does not know the context.
– daleif
Aug 25 '17 at 10:06
@GabrieleNicolardi how is Mico blaiming your question? We legitimately would like to know what people searched for when their search failed to find, so we can work on improving search results. A lot of people forget to start their google search with latex, when they search LaTeX related stuff online, then, yes, you often fail since Google does not know the context.
– daleif
Aug 25 '17 at 10:06
4
4
It is mentioned in the manual, on page 8: "Like the
array
environment, these -ed
variants also take an optional [t]
or [b]
argument to specify vertical positioning."– Torbjørn T.
Aug 25 '17 at 10:32
It is mentioned in the manual, on page 8: "Like the
array
environment, these -ed
variants also take an optional [t]
or [b]
argument to specify vertical positioning."– Torbjørn T.
Aug 25 '17 at 10:32
|
show 5 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
The aligned
environment is from the amsmath
package, and as such the documentation of amsmath
is the first place to look. As David says, most users will have the documentation of the packages installed with their TeX distribution, so you can execute
texdoc amsmath
in a terminal/command prompt to open amsldoc.pdf
.
The description of aligned
(and gathered
, alignedat
) is found in section 3.7 Alignment building blocks, which start on the bottom of page 7. On the middle of page 8, the optional arguments to these environments are described:
Like the
array
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning.
A quick example demonstrating the difference:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
begin{document}
Text $begin{aligned} a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[b] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[t] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text.
end{document}
add a comment |
You can find some information here: Mathmode.pdf, more precisely at chapter 25 (page 46). But watch out, there is an obsolescence warning at CTAN:
The author considers this package now as being too old and afflicted with too many typographical bugs. That’s why it has been classified as “obsolete”, at least for the time being.
New contributor
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The aligned
environment is from the amsmath
package, and as such the documentation of amsmath
is the first place to look. As David says, most users will have the documentation of the packages installed with their TeX distribution, so you can execute
texdoc amsmath
in a terminal/command prompt to open amsldoc.pdf
.
The description of aligned
(and gathered
, alignedat
) is found in section 3.7 Alignment building blocks, which start on the bottom of page 7. On the middle of page 8, the optional arguments to these environments are described:
Like the
array
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning.
A quick example demonstrating the difference:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
begin{document}
Text $begin{aligned} a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[b] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[t] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text.
end{document}
add a comment |
The aligned
environment is from the amsmath
package, and as such the documentation of amsmath
is the first place to look. As David says, most users will have the documentation of the packages installed with their TeX distribution, so you can execute
texdoc amsmath
in a terminal/command prompt to open amsldoc.pdf
.
The description of aligned
(and gathered
, alignedat
) is found in section 3.7 Alignment building blocks, which start on the bottom of page 7. On the middle of page 8, the optional arguments to these environments are described:
Like the
array
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning.
A quick example demonstrating the difference:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
begin{document}
Text $begin{aligned} a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[b] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[t] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text.
end{document}
add a comment |
The aligned
environment is from the amsmath
package, and as such the documentation of amsmath
is the first place to look. As David says, most users will have the documentation of the packages installed with their TeX distribution, so you can execute
texdoc amsmath
in a terminal/command prompt to open amsldoc.pdf
.
The description of aligned
(and gathered
, alignedat
) is found in section 3.7 Alignment building blocks, which start on the bottom of page 7. On the middle of page 8, the optional arguments to these environments are described:
Like the
array
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning.
A quick example demonstrating the difference:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
begin{document}
Text $begin{aligned} a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[b] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[t] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text.
end{document}
The aligned
environment is from the amsmath
package, and as such the documentation of amsmath
is the first place to look. As David says, most users will have the documentation of the packages installed with their TeX distribution, so you can execute
texdoc amsmath
in a terminal/command prompt to open amsldoc.pdf
.
The description of aligned
(and gathered
, alignedat
) is found in section 3.7 Alignment building blocks, which start on the bottom of page 7. On the middle of page 8, the optional arguments to these environments are described:
Like the
array
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning.
A quick example demonstrating the difference:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
begin{document}
Text $begin{aligned} a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[b] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text
$begin{aligned}[t] a \ b \ c end{aligned}$ text.
end{document}
answered Aug 25 '17 at 15:25
Torbjørn T.Torbjørn T.
158k13256445
158k13256445
add a comment |
add a comment |
You can find some information here: Mathmode.pdf, more precisely at chapter 25 (page 46). But watch out, there is an obsolescence warning at CTAN:
The author considers this package now as being too old and afflicted with too many typographical bugs. That’s why it has been classified as “obsolete”, at least for the time being.
New contributor
add a comment |
You can find some information here: Mathmode.pdf, more precisely at chapter 25 (page 46). But watch out, there is an obsolescence warning at CTAN:
The author considers this package now as being too old and afflicted with too many typographical bugs. That’s why it has been classified as “obsolete”, at least for the time being.
New contributor
add a comment |
You can find some information here: Mathmode.pdf, more precisely at chapter 25 (page 46). But watch out, there is an obsolescence warning at CTAN:
The author considers this package now as being too old and afflicted with too many typographical bugs. That’s why it has been classified as “obsolete”, at least for the time being.
New contributor
You can find some information here: Mathmode.pdf, more precisely at chapter 25 (page 46). But watch out, there is an obsolescence warning at CTAN:
The author considers this package now as being too old and afflicted with too many typographical bugs. That’s why it has been classified as “obsolete”, at least for the time being.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 18 mins ago
LeoneLeone
112
112
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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2
In the documentation of
amsmath
, more precisely all these environments are documented inamsldoc.pdf
.– Bernard
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
2
in
amsmath
documentation. then en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Advanced_Mathematics– Zarko
Aug 25 '17 at 9:11
4
in most tex distributions you can just issue the command
texdoc amsmath
– David Carlisle
Aug 25 '17 at 9:13
2
@GabrieleNicolardi how is Mico blaiming your question? We legitimately would like to know what people searched for when their search failed to find, so we can work on improving search results. A lot of people forget to start their google search with latex, when they search LaTeX related stuff online, then, yes, you often fail since Google does not know the context.
– daleif
Aug 25 '17 at 10:06
4
It is mentioned in the manual, on page 8: "Like the
array
environment, these-ed
variants also take an optional[t]
or[b]
argument to specify vertical positioning."– Torbjørn T.
Aug 25 '17 at 10:32