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Table 33: Chin A2e Currency Symbols<br />

\Euro \Pound<br />

Table 34: teubner Currency Symbols<br />

Ε \denarius Α \hemiobelion Β \tetartemorion<br />

Δ \dracma ῝ \stater<br />

Table 35: eurosym Euro Signs<br />

AC \geneuro BC \geneuronarrow C \geneurowide e \officialeuro<br />

\euro is automatically mapped to one of the above—by default, \officialeuro—<br />

based on a eurosym package option. See the eurosym documentation for more<br />

information. The \geneuro. . . characters are generated from the current body<br />

font’s “C” character and therefore may not appear exactly as shown.<br />

Table 36: fourier Euro Signs<br />

\eurologo € \texteuro<br />

Table 37: textcomp Legal Symbols<br />

℗ \textcircledP c○ © \textcopyright ℠ \textservicemark<br />

\textcopyleft r○ ® \textregistered TM \texttrademark<br />

Where two <strong>symbols</strong> are present, the left one is the “faked” symbol that L ATEX 2ε<br />

provides by default, and the right one is the “true” symbol that textcomp makes<br />

available.<br />

See http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=tradesyms for solutions<br />

to common problems that occur when using these <strong>symbols</strong> (e.g., getting a “ r○”<br />

when you expected to get a “®”).<br />

Table 38: cclicenses Creative Commons License Icons<br />

$\<br />

○ CC \cc ○ BY: \ccby ○ \ccnc∗ =○ \ccnd<br />

∗ These <strong>symbols</strong> utilize the rotating package and therefore display improperly in some<br />

DVI viewers.<br />

19<br />

C ○<br />

\ccsa∗

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