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Several mode to write the symbol of a vector



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowUnderarrow with smaller depth, shorter minimum length, and smaller arrow head?Bold math: Automatic choice between mathbf and boldsymbol for Latin and Greek symbols?String/vector concatenation symbolWhat is the best symbol for vector/matrix transpose?Too long/short pipe (absolute value) in math mode with certain lettersHow can I lower an xrightarrowSymbol for the length of a line/vector?Back to use the original forall symbolHow to write the symbol >A solution for reducing spacing and for a particular superscript with *How to write symbol in math mode in LaTeX/MathJax?












3















When I use the command overrightarrow{...} I observe that the space between the two lines increases due to the presence of this command. I often use the command widebar{...}, bar{...} or overbar{...}. I don't like the symbol vec{...} because the arrow is inclined.



In a university textbook in English that I use are used the classic vector symbols both in bold and without bold. Obviously the space between the two lines seems to be the same and it does not increase.



Two images from my textbook:



enter image description here



enter image description here



There are two questions:



1) If I were to use for the vector symbols complete with mtpro2 could I have vectors both in bold and those without bold?



2) Is there a possibility of not increasing the space between lines when using the vectors like English textbook images?



Here there is my MWE:



documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}

begin{document}

noindent
lipsum[1]
noindent
$overrightarrow{d}$, $overrightarrow{a}$, lipsum[2]

end{document}


and the output:



enter image description here



You can also see in the red rectangle that the arrow overlaps the character.










share|improve this question























  • The halloweenmath package offers you the overscriptrightarrow command, which uses a smaller arrows that fits more comfortably between the lines.

    – GuM
    45 mins ago











  • Any correct answer is always welcome for me.

    – Sebastiano
    40 mins ago






  • 1





    I vaguely remembered having answered a similar question some time ago, and I didn’t want to post a duplicate answer: albeit it is not exactly the same question, have a look at this answer of mine.

    – GuM
    35 mins ago











  • I copied your MWE, added usepackage{halloweenmath}, replaced overrightarrow with overscriptrightarrow, and the extra space between the lines disappeared (confirmed with showlists).

    – GuM
    23 mins ago
















3















When I use the command overrightarrow{...} I observe that the space between the two lines increases due to the presence of this command. I often use the command widebar{...}, bar{...} or overbar{...}. I don't like the symbol vec{...} because the arrow is inclined.



In a university textbook in English that I use are used the classic vector symbols both in bold and without bold. Obviously the space between the two lines seems to be the same and it does not increase.



Two images from my textbook:



enter image description here



enter image description here



There are two questions:



1) If I were to use for the vector symbols complete with mtpro2 could I have vectors both in bold and those without bold?



2) Is there a possibility of not increasing the space between lines when using the vectors like English textbook images?



Here there is my MWE:



documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}

begin{document}

noindent
lipsum[1]
noindent
$overrightarrow{d}$, $overrightarrow{a}$, lipsum[2]

end{document}


and the output:



enter image description here



You can also see in the red rectangle that the arrow overlaps the character.










share|improve this question























  • The halloweenmath package offers you the overscriptrightarrow command, which uses a smaller arrows that fits more comfortably between the lines.

    – GuM
    45 mins ago











  • Any correct answer is always welcome for me.

    – Sebastiano
    40 mins ago






  • 1





    I vaguely remembered having answered a similar question some time ago, and I didn’t want to post a duplicate answer: albeit it is not exactly the same question, have a look at this answer of mine.

    – GuM
    35 mins ago











  • I copied your MWE, added usepackage{halloweenmath}, replaced overrightarrow with overscriptrightarrow, and the extra space between the lines disappeared (confirmed with showlists).

    – GuM
    23 mins ago














3












3








3








When I use the command overrightarrow{...} I observe that the space between the two lines increases due to the presence of this command. I often use the command widebar{...}, bar{...} or overbar{...}. I don't like the symbol vec{...} because the arrow is inclined.



In a university textbook in English that I use are used the classic vector symbols both in bold and without bold. Obviously the space between the two lines seems to be the same and it does not increase.



Two images from my textbook:



enter image description here



enter image description here



There are two questions:



1) If I were to use for the vector symbols complete with mtpro2 could I have vectors both in bold and those without bold?



2) Is there a possibility of not increasing the space between lines when using the vectors like English textbook images?



Here there is my MWE:



documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}

begin{document}

noindent
lipsum[1]
noindent
$overrightarrow{d}$, $overrightarrow{a}$, lipsum[2]

end{document}


and the output:



enter image description here



You can also see in the red rectangle that the arrow overlaps the character.










share|improve this question














When I use the command overrightarrow{...} I observe that the space between the two lines increases due to the presence of this command. I often use the command widebar{...}, bar{...} or overbar{...}. I don't like the symbol vec{...} because the arrow is inclined.



In a university textbook in English that I use are used the classic vector symbols both in bold and without bold. Obviously the space between the two lines seems to be the same and it does not increase.



Two images from my textbook:



enter image description here



enter image description here



There are two questions:



1) If I were to use for the vector symbols complete with mtpro2 could I have vectors both in bold and those without bold?



2) Is there a possibility of not increasing the space between lines when using the vectors like English textbook images?



Here there is my MWE:



documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}

begin{document}

noindent
lipsum[1]
noindent
$overrightarrow{d}$, $overrightarrow{a}$, lipsum[2]

end{document}


and the output:



enter image description here



You can also see in the red rectangle that the arrow overlaps the character.







math-mode symbols books mathtools mtpro






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 1 hour ago









SebastianoSebastiano

11.3k42164




11.3k42164













  • The halloweenmath package offers you the overscriptrightarrow command, which uses a smaller arrows that fits more comfortably between the lines.

    – GuM
    45 mins ago











  • Any correct answer is always welcome for me.

    – Sebastiano
    40 mins ago






  • 1





    I vaguely remembered having answered a similar question some time ago, and I didn’t want to post a duplicate answer: albeit it is not exactly the same question, have a look at this answer of mine.

    – GuM
    35 mins ago











  • I copied your MWE, added usepackage{halloweenmath}, replaced overrightarrow with overscriptrightarrow, and the extra space between the lines disappeared (confirmed with showlists).

    – GuM
    23 mins ago



















  • The halloweenmath package offers you the overscriptrightarrow command, which uses a smaller arrows that fits more comfortably between the lines.

    – GuM
    45 mins ago











  • Any correct answer is always welcome for me.

    – Sebastiano
    40 mins ago






  • 1





    I vaguely remembered having answered a similar question some time ago, and I didn’t want to post a duplicate answer: albeit it is not exactly the same question, have a look at this answer of mine.

    – GuM
    35 mins ago











  • I copied your MWE, added usepackage{halloweenmath}, replaced overrightarrow with overscriptrightarrow, and the extra space between the lines disappeared (confirmed with showlists).

    – GuM
    23 mins ago

















The halloweenmath package offers you the overscriptrightarrow command, which uses a smaller arrows that fits more comfortably between the lines.

– GuM
45 mins ago





The halloweenmath package offers you the overscriptrightarrow command, which uses a smaller arrows that fits more comfortably between the lines.

– GuM
45 mins ago













Any correct answer is always welcome for me.

– Sebastiano
40 mins ago





Any correct answer is always welcome for me.

– Sebastiano
40 mins ago




1




1





I vaguely remembered having answered a similar question some time ago, and I didn’t want to post a duplicate answer: albeit it is not exactly the same question, have a look at this answer of mine.

– GuM
35 mins ago





I vaguely remembered having answered a similar question some time ago, and I didn’t want to post a duplicate answer: albeit it is not exactly the same question, have a look at this answer of mine.

– GuM
35 mins ago













I copied your MWE, added usepackage{halloweenmath}, replaced overrightarrow with overscriptrightarrow, and the extra space between the lines disappeared (confirmed with showlists).

– GuM
23 mins ago





I copied your MWE, added usepackage{halloweenmath}, replaced overrightarrow with overscriptrightarrow, and the extra space between the lines disappeared (confirmed with showlists).

– GuM
23 mins ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2














You can use the esvect package, which defines 8 possible arrow tips that you choose through an option:



enter image description here



Here is the result with the default (option d):



    documentclass[a4paper, 12pt, fleqn]{book}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
usepackage{esvect}

begin{document}

noindent
lipsum[1]
noindent
$vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, lipsum[2]

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

    – Sebastiano
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

    – Bernard
    59 mins ago



















1














Here is a way:



documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{bm}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
newsaveboxmybox
newcommandmyVec[1]{saveboxmybox{hbox{ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}}}ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}{rule{0pt}{dimexprhtmybox+3pt}}}

begin{document}
lipsum[1]
noindent$myVec{f}bm{myVec{a}}$lipsum[1]
end{document}


enter image description here



But I can't really understand the "possibility of not increasing the line's spacing" and also don't let the arrows overlap the previous line... because for exapmle in your textbooks the technology could be so old that they was just added after the actual text and the author had created/changed his wording in order to not leave an arrow below a character that needs space below the "baseline".






share|improve this answer


























  • My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

    – Sebastiano
    59 mins ago











  • @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

    – koleygr
    55 mins ago













  • Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

    – Sebastiano
    53 mins ago






  • 1





    Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

    – koleygr
    47 mins ago



















0














Response to @Bernard's comment:



I prefer the usepackage[b]{esvect} option but I don't think it affects the mtpro2[lite] package; for the bold arrow it doesn't work. At the contrary, it only makes me the letter in bold.



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt]{book} 
usepackage{newtxtext}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
usepackage[b]{esvect}
letBbbkrelax
usepackage[lite]{mtpro2}

begin{document}
noindent
lipsum[1]
noindent
$vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, $vv{d}$, ${boldmathvv{a}}$,lipsum[2]
end{document}





share|improve this answer
























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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    You can use the esvect package, which defines 8 possible arrow tips that you choose through an option:



    enter image description here



    Here is the result with the default (option d):



        documentclass[a4paper, 12pt, fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    usepackage{esvect}

    begin{document}

    noindent
    lipsum[1]
    noindent
    $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, lipsum[2]

    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
























    • Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

      – Sebastiano
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

      – Bernard
      59 mins ago
















    2














    You can use the esvect package, which defines 8 possible arrow tips that you choose through an option:



    enter image description here



    Here is the result with the default (option d):



        documentclass[a4paper, 12pt, fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    usepackage{esvect}

    begin{document}

    noindent
    lipsum[1]
    noindent
    $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, lipsum[2]

    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
























    • Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

      – Sebastiano
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

      – Bernard
      59 mins ago














    2












    2








    2







    You can use the esvect package, which defines 8 possible arrow tips that you choose through an option:



    enter image description here



    Here is the result with the default (option d):



        documentclass[a4paper, 12pt, fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    usepackage{esvect}

    begin{document}

    noindent
    lipsum[1]
    noindent
    $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, lipsum[2]

    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer













    You can use the esvect package, which defines 8 possible arrow tips that you choose through an option:



    enter image description here



    Here is the result with the default (option d):



        documentclass[a4paper, 12pt, fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    usepackage{esvect}

    begin{document}

    noindent
    lipsum[1]
    noindent
    $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, lipsum[2]

    end{document}


    enter image description here







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 1 hour ago









    BernardBernard

    174k776207




    174k776207













    • Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

      – Sebastiano
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

      – Bernard
      59 mins ago



















    • Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

      – Sebastiano
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

      – Bernard
      59 mins ago

















    Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

    – Sebastiano
    1 hour ago





    Very nice :-):-) I didn't know about this package. But does using the mtpro2[lite] package change the style of the vectors provided by esvect and possibly improve them?

    – Sebastiano
    1 hour ago




    1




    1





    I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

    – Bernard
    59 mins ago





    I don't think so, since it uses its own font via an own command. However, as I don't have mtpro2 installed, I cannot test it.

    – Bernard
    59 mins ago











    1














    Here is a way:



    documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{bm}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    newsaveboxmybox
    newcommandmyVec[1]{saveboxmybox{hbox{ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}}}ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}{rule{0pt}{dimexprhtmybox+3pt}}}

    begin{document}
    lipsum[1]
    noindent$myVec{f}bm{myVec{a}}$lipsum[1]
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    But I can't really understand the "possibility of not increasing the line's spacing" and also don't let the arrows overlap the previous line... because for exapmle in your textbooks the technology could be so old that they was just added after the actual text and the author had created/changed his wording in order to not leave an arrow below a character that needs space below the "baseline".






    share|improve this answer


























    • My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

      – Sebastiano
      59 mins ago











    • @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

      – koleygr
      55 mins ago













    • Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

      – Sebastiano
      53 mins ago






    • 1





      Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

      – koleygr
      47 mins ago
















    1














    Here is a way:



    documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{bm}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    newsaveboxmybox
    newcommandmyVec[1]{saveboxmybox{hbox{ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}}}ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}{rule{0pt}{dimexprhtmybox+3pt}}}

    begin{document}
    lipsum[1]
    noindent$myVec{f}bm{myVec{a}}$lipsum[1]
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    But I can't really understand the "possibility of not increasing the line's spacing" and also don't let the arrows overlap the previous line... because for exapmle in your textbooks the technology could be so old that they was just added after the actual text and the author had created/changed his wording in order to not leave an arrow below a character that needs space below the "baseline".






    share|improve this answer


























    • My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

      – Sebastiano
      59 mins ago











    • @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

      – koleygr
      55 mins ago













    • Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

      – Sebastiano
      53 mins ago






    • 1





      Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

      – koleygr
      47 mins ago














    1












    1








    1







    Here is a way:



    documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{bm}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    newsaveboxmybox
    newcommandmyVec[1]{saveboxmybox{hbox{ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}}}ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}{rule{0pt}{dimexprhtmybox+3pt}}}

    begin{document}
    lipsum[1]
    noindent$myVec{f}bm{myVec{a}}$lipsum[1]
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    But I can't really understand the "possibility of not increasing the line's spacing" and also don't let the arrows overlap the previous line... because for exapmle in your textbooks the technology could be so old that they was just added after the actual text and the author had created/changed his wording in order to not leave an arrow below a character that needs space below the "baseline".






    share|improve this answer















    Here is a way:



    documentclass[a4paper,12pt,fleqn]{book}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{bm}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    newsaveboxmybox
    newcommandmyVec[1]{saveboxmybox{hbox{ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}}}ensuremath{overrightarrow{#1}}{rule{0pt}{dimexprhtmybox+3pt}}}

    begin{document}
    lipsum[1]
    noindent$myVec{f}bm{myVec{a}}$lipsum[1]
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    But I can't really understand the "possibility of not increasing the line's spacing" and also don't let the arrows overlap the previous line... because for exapmle in your textbooks the technology could be so old that they was just added after the actual text and the author had created/changed his wording in order to not leave an arrow below a character that needs space below the "baseline".







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 57 mins ago

























    answered 1 hour ago









    koleygrkoleygr

    13.3k11039




    13.3k11039













    • My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

      – Sebastiano
      59 mins ago











    • @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

      – koleygr
      55 mins ago













    • Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

      – Sebastiano
      53 mins ago






    • 1





      Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

      – koleygr
      47 mins ago



















    • My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

      – Sebastiano
      59 mins ago











    • @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

      – koleygr
      55 mins ago













    • Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

      – Sebastiano
      53 mins ago






    • 1





      Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

      – koleygr
      47 mins ago

















    My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

    – Sebastiano
    59 mins ago





    My theory about votes has been and will always be to vote positively for those who dedicate their time to others. +1. You can see in my profile the high number of votes.

    – Sebastiano
    59 mins ago













    @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

    – koleygr
    55 mins ago







    @Sebastiano ... I use this way too... Not always but in many cases... The bad thing with this kind of upvoting, is that you actually don't really help the next visitors to find the more appropriate/best answer and this is not really good. (But sometimes I can't not upvote too... even about the effort even about the usefulness of the answer even to give a new user the right to comment in posts instead of answering on it because has no the right to comment etc)

    – koleygr
    55 mins ago















    Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

    – Sebastiano
    53 mins ago





    Obviously the answer has to be good if it wasn't good I wouldn't have voted for it. I agree with you.

    – Sebastiano
    53 mins ago




    1




    1





    Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

    – koleygr
    47 mins ago





    Thanks... (Just said that because sometimes on answers in my posts, I prefer one, but almost always have voted for all of them... and it feels strange that could not add a second vote to the better to show to the people that it is actually better... But this happens mostly in my posts or in posts I have particiapated -that also upvoting often-). Goodnight from me!

    – koleygr
    47 mins ago











    0














    Response to @Bernard's comment:



    I prefer the usepackage[b]{esvect} option but I don't think it affects the mtpro2[lite] package; for the bold arrow it doesn't work. At the contrary, it only makes me the letter in bold.



    enter image description here



    documentclass[12pt]{book} 
    usepackage{newtxtext}
    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
    usepackage[b]{esvect}
    letBbbkrelax
    usepackage[lite]{mtpro2}

    begin{document}
    noindent
    lipsum[1]
    noindent
    $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, $vv{d}$, ${boldmathvv{a}}$,lipsum[2]
    end{document}





    share|improve this answer




























      0














      Response to @Bernard's comment:



      I prefer the usepackage[b]{esvect} option but I don't think it affects the mtpro2[lite] package; for the bold arrow it doesn't work. At the contrary, it only makes me the letter in bold.



      enter image description here



      documentclass[12pt]{book} 
      usepackage{newtxtext}
      usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
      usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
      usepackage[b]{esvect}
      letBbbkrelax
      usepackage[lite]{mtpro2}

      begin{document}
      noindent
      lipsum[1]
      noindent
      $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, $vv{d}$, ${boldmathvv{a}}$,lipsum[2]
      end{document}





      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        Response to @Bernard's comment:



        I prefer the usepackage[b]{esvect} option but I don't think it affects the mtpro2[lite] package; for the bold arrow it doesn't work. At the contrary, it only makes me the letter in bold.



        enter image description here



        documentclass[12pt]{book} 
        usepackage{newtxtext}
        usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
        usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
        usepackage[b]{esvect}
        letBbbkrelax
        usepackage[lite]{mtpro2}

        begin{document}
        noindent
        lipsum[1]
        noindent
        $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, $vv{d}$, ${boldmathvv{a}}$,lipsum[2]
        end{document}





        share|improve this answer













        Response to @Bernard's comment:



        I prefer the usepackage[b]{esvect} option but I don't think it affects the mtpro2[lite] package; for the bold arrow it doesn't work. At the contrary, it only makes me the letter in bold.



        enter image description here



        documentclass[12pt]{book} 
        usepackage{newtxtext}
        usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
        usepackage{mathtools,amssymb,lipsum}
        usepackage[b]{esvect}
        letBbbkrelax
        usepackage[lite]{mtpro2}

        begin{document}
        noindent
        lipsum[1]
        noindent
        $vv{d}$, $vv{a}$, $vv{d}$, ${boldmathvv{a}}$,lipsum[2]
        end{document}






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 41 mins ago









        SebastianoSebastiano

        11.3k42164




        11.3k42164






























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