
LaTeX symbol for "does not divide" - LaTeX Stack Exchange
The ∤ symbol is available in Unicode as U+2224 Does Not Divide, and as \nmid from many packages, including: unicode-math, amssymb, stix, stix2, newtxmath and the less commonly …
How to make a variable-sized \nmid symbol for "does not divide"?
Nov 23, 2020 · The command \nmid is commonly used but does not scale with arguments. There are many related questions on TeX.SE (e.g., 1, 2, 3, 4, 5), however the variable scaling has …
What's a good way to write "x does not divide y"?
Mar 9, 2013 · An alternative to \nmid is to use the \centernot command from the centernot package. The resulting \centernot\mid symbol aligns perfectly with \mid and has a more …
Undefined control sequence \\nmid - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
Zdravím, Dušane, přesně jak říká @egreg, tohle je v amssymb, ne v amsmath.
Looking for \nmid but with a larger, more pronounced slash
Feb 13, 2024 · Like the title says, I'm looking for a version of \\nmid that gives a longer, more pronounced slash. The reason is that I'm projecting the results onto a screen using OneNote, …
How to get a longer \nmid - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
Sep 21, 2020 · But I don’t know how to make a longer \nmid. \not\mid or \not | obviously doesn’t produce \nmid, so the what I did for longer \mid doesn’t work. Could you give me some ideas?
LaTeX arev package and nonfunctioning nmid macro
Apr 8, 2017 · Thanks for the quick reply. But the thing is, all of this worked on an older latex installation. arev declares nmid as \DeclareMathSymbol {\nmid} {\mathrel} {mathdesignA} {"2D}
math mode - fourier font and \nmid - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
The fourier package does not provide a \\nmid command. Using the \\nmid from amssymb looks very different from the fourier's \\mid. Is there a way to produce a "compatible" symbol in …
Symbol for exact division - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
Nov 4, 2015 · Among many symbols which can be used for the expression "a divides b'', the preferred one is \\mid (and its brother \\nmid) which has some spacing advantage over \\vert. …
symbols - Why is \mid so called? - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
The LaTeX commands \\mid and \\vert may be used to make a vertical bar. I can appreciate that \\vert is short for vertical, but why \\mid? Is it short for middle? and if so, middle of what?