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Table 196: mathcomp Math Symbols<br />

℃ \tccentigrade Ω \tcohm ‰ \tcperthousand<br />

µ \tcmu ‱ \tcpertenthousand<br />

Table 197: marvosym Digits<br />

0 \MVZero 2 \MVTwo 4 \MVFour 6 \MVSix 8 \MVEight<br />

1 \MVOne 3 \MVThree 5 \MVFive 7 \MVSeven 9 \MVNine<br />

Table 198: fge Digits<br />

0 \fgestruckzero 1 \fgestruckone<br />

Table 199: dozenal Base-12 Digits<br />

\x \e<br />

Table 200: mathabx Mayan Digits<br />

\maya{0} \maya{2} \maya{4}<br />

\maya{1} \maya{3} \maya{5}<br />

Table 201: Miscellaneous L ATEX 2ε Math Symbols<br />

ℵ \aleph \Diamond ∗ ∞ \infty ′ \prime<br />

\angle ♦ \diamondsuit \mho ∗ ♯ \sharp<br />

\ \backslash ∅ \emptyset ‡ ∇ \nabla ♠ \spadesuit<br />

\Box ∗,† ♭ \flat ♮ \natural \surd<br />

♣ \clubsuit ♥ \heartsuit ¬ \neg △ \triangle<br />

∗ Not predefined in L ATEX 2ε. Use one of the packages latexsym, amsfonts, amssymb,<br />

txfonts, pxfonts, or wasysym. Note, however, that amsfonts and amssymb define<br />

\Diamond to produce the same glyph as \lozenge (“♦”); the other packages produce<br />

a squarer \Diamond as depicted above.<br />

† To use \Box—or any other symbol—as an end-of-proof (Q.E.D.) marker, consider<br />

using the ntheorem package, which properly juxtaposes a symbol with the end of<br />

the proof text.<br />

‡ Many people prefer the look of AMS’s \varnothing (“∅”, Table 202) to that of<br />

L ATEX’s \emptyset.<br />

65

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