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1:54 PM
fucking finally
blue dot for what's active
 
 
8 hours later…
9:43 PM
I'm looking to do something weird, and of course @AnderBiguri already did that 8 years ago...
51
Q: Big forward slash in math

Ander BiguriI have an equation in from of a=VERYBIGSTUFF / VERYBIGSTUFF And I would like to have a "verybig" forward slash in the middle of them. I don't like \frac mode, as I would like to have them left-to-right, not one above the other. I tried also changing the size of the "/" like \text{\LARGE ...

 
hehe
you can also use the automatic scaling wtih \left \middle \right
oh that's already there
@CrisLuengo you're gonna divide some really big numbers, I take it?
 
Yeah, the \middle/ is the solution I'm trying out now. Just because it looks nice in code. :)
@flawr I have a denominator with an overline, which happens to be exactly as wide as the fraction bar, and it looks really weird and awkward. So I'm trying a different way to display that.
 
ah I see
 
Agh! With the large slash it looks like a root symbol. The overline and the slash almost touch.
Any ideas?
 
I'd just add some \hphantom{} left and irght of the denominator maybe
 
9:49 PM
\left( p^2 \middle/ \overline{ \left( x-y \right) ^2 } \right)
@flawr What does that do? Never seen it.
 
@CrisLuengo adds horizontal space with the size matching its argument
 
hphantom just adds a horizontal space that is the width of its argument
 
Ah, horizontal spacing. Good idea!
Maybe just \; does the trick?
 
you can do that too, but it is more boring
\hphantom is nice if you want to hide some naughty messages
 
Fantastic, that does the trick!
 
9:51 PM
also you missed the opportunity to use an uppercase \Xi :)
 
@flawr Ah! Sounds like my cup of tea!
 
You always struck me as a person who'd like to do that:P
(adding spaces I mean of course)
 
It still looks strange, but at least it's readable. I'm open to better ideas...
 
does it have to fit within a line?
 
It's a display equation, it can be tall.
I'm using the overline to express the mean. Is there another notation for that? I don't want to write it out...
 
9:56 PM
are x and y random variables or vectors?
for the former I'd just use E[...] or mu(...)
 
Arrays or arbitrary dimensionality, actually...
 
the best kind of arrays
 
E[...] strikes me as a priori expectation, not the mean of a set of numbers.
 
we also use <thing> for averages
 
yeah just for random variables I mean!
 
9:58 PM
but that might be more of a physicist thing
 
Against all math conventions I also don't mind using multi-letter function names, so mean(...) wouldnt' be the end of the world either
 
and in some contexts \overline means time-average and <> means ensemble average
 
And <th|ing> is quantum mechanics.
 
yeah, but bra-ket notation is the shit
I also use |n><m| for projectors in any linear algebra context
 
Maybe I should just write "MSE". This equation is just a big old waste of time.
 
10:00 PM
even better!
 
I haven't used bra-ket notation since 2nd year college, back in 1993 or something like that.
Glad it's not something I need to concern myself with any more. :)
 
I really like how expressive it is, but then again I'm a physicist
perhaps you could express the mean with Einstein convention...
 
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні what are projectors?
 
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Nah, I want people to be able to read my documentation. :D
\frac{ p^2 }{ \text{MSE} } it is. Done. I learned some LaTeX, but otherwise just wasted a bunch of time I could have been productive in.
Thank you both though. I appreciate it!
 
We're always happy to help anyone wasting their time!
 
10:05 PM
@flawr dyadic products. Matrices formed by two vectors in a way that when you apply that to a vector it projects to the input (if |n> = |m>)
because (|n><n|)|v> = |n><n|v> = <n|v> |n> which is exactly how you take a projection onto a direction
 
the symbols hurt my eyes but I do understand what you mean nwo:)
I'd just call it an outer product.
 
Yes, that's what normal people call it
outer/inner/direct/tensor/Cartesian etc. product naming hurts my brain
 
In doubt just put a circle around whatever product symbol you're using:)
 

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