ㅤㅤㅤ
Answers
Answer:
The requirements of this alignment are:
The equal signs should be aligned.
The beginning of "b" should be aligned with the beginning of "d".
There should be no introduction of white space in the middle of the lines. To satisfy the alignment requirements, the whole line should be shifted horizontially.
I do not know how to accomplished this. When using the alignat environment, even putting an alignment sign (&) between the "(" and the "b" (to try to align the beginning of "b" and "d") introduces white space between them, which is not allowed.
Can this be done?
(Note: the letters are just variables for any math expression. Make sure your solution does not depend on, say, the width of "a" and "f" being the same.) As my note says, the letters are just variables for any math expression to give a MWEvWhat is math mode?
For many people the most useful part of LaTeX is the ability to typeset complex mathematical formulas. for the sake of simplicity, LaTeX separates the tasks of typesetting mathematics and typesetting normal text. This is achieved by the use of two operating modes, paragraph and math mode. There is also a third mode called LR mode, however, this is rarely used by beginners and furthermore, is usually implicitly entered with other commands. It will not be covered here. Paragraph mode is the default mode for the document environment and does not need to be called explicitly.
There are a few ways to enter math mode, however the most common is $....$, where the text within the dollar signs is in the math mode environment. You have already been using math mode unknowingly by using the \begin{equation} and \end{equation} commands.
Answer:
hey what's up
Step-by-step explanation:
hey you give only 600 answer and you have more than 20000 thanks it's really cool
The Largest Star: UY Scuti. As it stands, the title of the largest star in the Universe (that we know of) comes down to two contenders. ... And up until a few years ago, the title of biggest star went to VY Canis Majoris; a red hypergiant star in the Canis Major constellation, located about 5,000 light-years from Earth