How do I reproduce a calligraphic Z (that looks like an L) from a text by Abramowitz and Stegun?












14














I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.



enter image description here



This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.



So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?



Other Info.



I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.



The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L} but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.



Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.



Response to duplicate issues.



How to look up a symbol or ...



I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...



How to do the 'curvy L' ...



My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".



Scanned Symbol



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
    – jknappen
    yesterday






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Henri Menke
    yesterday










  • Could someone comment, giving the names of any fonts or any set of symbols, used in the reference, Abramowitz and Stegun?
    – user151522
    6 hours ago










  • How about the symbol £ (pound sterling symbol), which is certainly a curly L with a bar. Then there are the Polish Ł and the Saanich Ƚ which might be available in cursive styles
    – Henry
    3 hours ago
















14














I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.



enter image description here



This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.



So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?



Other Info.



I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.



The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L} but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.



Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.



Response to duplicate issues.



How to look up a symbol or ...



I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...



How to do the 'curvy L' ...



My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".



Scanned Symbol



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
    – jknappen
    yesterday






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Henri Menke
    yesterday










  • Could someone comment, giving the names of any fonts or any set of symbols, used in the reference, Abramowitz and Stegun?
    – user151522
    6 hours ago










  • How about the symbol £ (pound sterling symbol), which is certainly a curly L with a bar. Then there are the Polish Ł and the Saanich Ƚ which might be available in cursive styles
    – Henry
    3 hours ago














14












14








14


2





I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.



enter image description here



This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.



So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?



Other Info.



I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.



The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L} but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.



Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.



Response to duplicate issues.



How to look up a symbol or ...



I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...



How to do the 'curvy L' ...



My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".



Scanned Symbol



enter image description here










share|improve this question















I am trying to produce a type of "Calligraphic L" using LaTeX. Please see the image below. The wobbles are down to me, possibly too much sugar over the Christmas holiday period.



enter image description here



This type of "L" is used in Abramowitz and Stegun , see the reference , in particular in result 9.6.26 which gives recurrence relations for modified Bessel functions.



So, how might I produce this type of "L" using LaTeX?



Other Info.



I have searched using Google, with the search string "latex fancy L" and also used "Detexify" on a mobile phone but did not find anything useful. I also considered other "Math Alphabets" the packages "eufrac" and "rsfso" do not appear to give the type of "L" I am looking for. I have also searched on StackExchange using a mobile phone.



The "L" I want is like that in the package "calrsfs", like the symbol given by the command mathcal{L} but with an extra loop at the top left of the symbol and a little crossing line part way up the main stem of the symbol.



Reference
Handbook Of Mathematical Functions, ninth Dover printing, Ed M. Abramowitz and I.A. Stegun, Dover Publications, Inc., New York.



Response to duplicate issues.



How to look up a symbol or ...



I recomend the post in question. I think that is where I found out about Detexify from. Apparently the advice in this post should have led to an answer to my question. It's over to the powers that be now ...



How to do the 'curvy L' ...



My question is about a particular symbol, one that appears in an equation in Abramowitz and Stegun. This symbol is not a symbol normally used to represent the Lagrangian or a Laplace transform. In fact it is not even an "L".



Scanned Symbol



enter image description here







symbols






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 11 hours ago

























asked yesterday









user151522

1607




1607








  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
    – jknappen
    yesterday






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Henri Menke
    yesterday










  • Could someone comment, giving the names of any fonts or any set of symbols, used in the reference, Abramowitz and Stegun?
    – user151522
    6 hours ago










  • How about the symbol £ (pound sterling symbol), which is certainly a curly L with a bar. Then there are the Polish Ł and the Saanich Ƚ which might be available in cursive styles
    – Henry
    3 hours ago














  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
    – jknappen
    yesterday






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
    – Henri Menke
    yesterday










  • Could someone comment, giving the names of any fonts or any set of symbols, used in the reference, Abramowitz and Stegun?
    – user151522
    6 hours ago










  • How about the symbol £ (pound sterling symbol), which is certainly a curly L with a bar. Then there are the Polish Ł and the Saanich Ƚ which might be available in cursive styles
    – Henry
    3 hours ago








1




1




Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
yesterday




Possible duplicate of How to do the 'curvy L' for Lagrangian or Laplace Transforms?
– jknappen
yesterday




1




1




Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
yesterday




Possible duplicate of How to look up a symbol or identify a math symbol or character?
– Henri Menke
yesterday












Could someone comment, giving the names of any fonts or any set of symbols, used in the reference, Abramowitz and Stegun?
– user151522
6 hours ago




Could someone comment, giving the names of any fonts or any set of symbols, used in the reference, Abramowitz and Stegun?
– user151522
6 hours ago












How about the symbol £ (pound sterling symbol), which is certainly a curly L with a bar. Then there are the Polish Ł and the Saanich Ƚ which might be available in cursive styles
– Henry
3 hours ago




How about the symbol £ (pound sterling symbol), which is certainly a curly L with a bar. Then there are the Polish Ł and the Saanich Ƚ which might be available in cursive styles
– Henry
3 hours ago










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















31














This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using



usepackage{mathrsfs}
mathscr{Z}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
    – user151522
    13 hours ago










  • @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
    – albert
    12 hours ago










  • Scanned symbol has been added to question.
    – user151522
    11 hours ago










  • @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
    – Henry
    2 hours ago





















16














I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.



frcursive



documentclass{article}
usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
usepackage{frcursive}
begin{document}
begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}

textcursive{L Z}

begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
end{document}





share|improve this answer





























    7














    The following also works



    usepackage{calrsfs}
    mathcal{Z}





    share|improve this answer































      4














      I recommend you use unicode-math when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal and mathscr to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.



      For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal available, you would do something like:



      documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
      usepackage{unicode-math}
      defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}

      setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
      setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}

      begin{document}
      ( mathscr{Z} )
      end{document}


      Script Z



      You can instead load any system font as your mathscr and mathcal fonts.



      If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso or boondoxo for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs.



      documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
      usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
      usepackage{textcomp}
      usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
      usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}

      begin{document}
      ( mathscr{Z} )
      end{document}


      Boondoxo sample






      share|improve this answer































        0














        You can use mathcal



        usepackage{unicode-math}

        mathcal{Z}





        share|improve this answer










        New contributor




        Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.


















          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "85"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f468409%2fhow-do-i-reproduce-a-calligraphic-z-that-looks-like-an-l-from-a-text-by-abramo%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes








          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          31














          This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using



          usepackage{mathrsfs}
          mathscr{Z}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer























          • The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
            – user151522
            13 hours ago










          • @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
            – albert
            12 hours ago










          • Scanned symbol has been added to question.
            – user151522
            11 hours ago










          • @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
            – Henry
            2 hours ago


















          31














          This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using



          usepackage{mathrsfs}
          mathscr{Z}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer























          • The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
            – user151522
            13 hours ago










          • @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
            – albert
            12 hours ago










          • Scanned symbol has been added to question.
            – user151522
            11 hours ago










          • @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
            – Henry
            2 hours ago
















          31












          31








          31






          This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using



          usepackage{mathrsfs}
          mathscr{Z}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer














          This letter is not an L but a Z. According to Detexify, you can typeset it using



          usepackage{mathrsfs}
          mathscr{Z}


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited yesterday









          Camille Goudeseune

          201110




          201110










          answered yesterday









          Karlo

          1,52721427




          1,52721427












          • The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
            – user151522
            13 hours ago










          • @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
            – albert
            12 hours ago










          • Scanned symbol has been added to question.
            – user151522
            11 hours ago










          • @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
            – Henry
            2 hours ago




















          • The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
            – user151522
            13 hours ago










          • @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
            – albert
            12 hours ago










          • Scanned symbol has been added to question.
            – user151522
            11 hours ago










          • @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
            – Henry
            2 hours ago


















          The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
          – user151522
          13 hours ago




          The top left of the symbol in Abramowitz and Stegun, appears to have a completely joined up loop.
          – user151522
          13 hours ago












          @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
          – albert
          12 hours ago




          @user151522 maybe a good idea to scan the relevant part of the equation and post it in your question or otherwise give more information about the 9.6.26 formula (i.e. the name of the chapter / paragraph and the text just on top of the formula. Not everybody will have the mentioned version of the book (but maybe another version), in my case the paragraph with the mentioned formula is "9.6(iii) Airy Functions as Confluent Hypergeometric Functions"
          – albert
          12 hours ago












          Scanned symbol has been added to question.
          – user151522
          11 hours ago




          Scanned symbol has been added to question.
          – user151522
          11 hours ago












          @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
          – Henry
          2 hours ago






          @albert: 9.2.6 is in the bottom left of archive.org/details/AandS-mono600/page/n389 - at least one of the examples is not joined up and the others may be scanning artifacts. Wikipedia uses Z for the same thing
          – Henry
          2 hours ago













          16














          I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.



          frcursive



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
          usepackage{frcursive}
          begin{document}
          begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}

          textcursive{L Z}

          begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
          end{document}





          share|improve this answer


























            16














            I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.



            frcursive



            documentclass{article}
            usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
            usepackage{frcursive}
            begin{document}
            begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}

            textcursive{L Z}

            begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
            end{document}





            share|improve this answer
























              16












              16








              16






              I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.



              frcursive



              documentclass{article}
              usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
              usepackage{frcursive}
              begin{document}
              begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}

              textcursive{L Z}

              begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
              end{document}





              share|improve this answer












              I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters.



              frcursive



              documentclass{article}
              usepackage[margin=1cm]{geometry}
              usepackage{frcursive}
              begin{document}
              begin{cursive}I can't resist showing you a French calligraphic school writing font and its pretty capital letters: end{cursive}

              textcursive{L Z}

              begin{cursive}A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zend{cursive}
              end{document}






              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered yesterday









              AndréC

              8,02511443




              8,02511443























                  7














                  The following also works



                  usepackage{calrsfs}
                  mathcal{Z}





                  share|improve this answer




























                    7














                    The following also works



                    usepackage{calrsfs}
                    mathcal{Z}





                    share|improve this answer


























                      7












                      7








                      7






                      The following also works



                      usepackage{calrsfs}
                      mathcal{Z}





                      share|improve this answer














                      The following also works



                      usepackage{calrsfs}
                      mathcal{Z}






                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited yesterday

























                      answered yesterday









                      user151522

                      1607




                      1607























                          4














                          I recommend you use unicode-math when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal and mathscr to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.



                          For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal available, you would do something like:



                          documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                          usepackage{unicode-math}
                          defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}

                          setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
                          setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}

                          begin{document}
                          ( mathscr{Z} )
                          end{document}


                          Script Z



                          You can instead load any system font as your mathscr and mathcal fonts.



                          If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso or boondoxo for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs.



                          documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                          usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                          usepackage{textcomp}
                          usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
                          usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}

                          begin{document}
                          ( mathscr{Z} )
                          end{document}


                          Boondoxo sample






                          share|improve this answer




























                            4














                            I recommend you use unicode-math when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal and mathscr to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.



                            For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal available, you would do something like:



                            documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                            usepackage{unicode-math}
                            defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}

                            setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
                            setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}

                            begin{document}
                            ( mathscr{Z} )
                            end{document}


                            Script Z



                            You can instead load any system font as your mathscr and mathcal fonts.



                            If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso or boondoxo for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs.



                            documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                            usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                            usepackage{textcomp}
                            usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
                            usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}

                            begin{document}
                            ( mathscr{Z} )
                            end{document}


                            Boondoxo sample






                            share|improve this answer


























                              4












                              4








                              4






                              I recommend you use unicode-math when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal and mathscr to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.



                              For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal available, you would do something like:



                              documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                              usepackage{unicode-math}
                              defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}

                              setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
                              setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}

                              begin{document}
                              ( mathscr{Z} )
                              end{document}


                              Script Z



                              You can instead load any system font as your mathscr and mathcal fonts.



                              If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso or boondoxo for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs.



                              documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                              usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                              usepackage{textcomp}
                              usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
                              usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}

                              begin{document}
                              ( mathscr{Z} )
                              end{document}


                              Boondoxo sample






                              share|improve this answer














                              I recommend you use unicode-math when you can, and legacy NFSS fonts when you have to. One wrinkle here is that, by default, it sets mathcal and mathscr to the same alphabet. Another is that many fonts, including XITS, STIX Two and Asana, do contain a separate calligraphic or script alphabet, but as a stylistic set.



                              For example, to get this symbol from STIX Two, while also leaving mathcal available, you would do something like:



                              documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                              usepackage{unicode-math}
                              defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchUppercase}

                              setmathfont{STIX Two Math}
                              setmathfont[range = {scr, bfscr}, StylisticSet = 1]{STIX Two Math}

                              begin{document}
                              ( mathscr{Z} )
                              end{document}


                              Script Z



                              You can instead load any system font as your mathscr and mathcal fonts.



                              If you want to stay compatible with PDFLaTeX, I recommend you load your script, calligraphic, Fraktur and blackboard alphabets through mathalfa. The documentation has font samples of every available alphabet, gives them a consistent interface, and allows you to scale them. You might try either rsfso or boondoxo for a less-slanted version than mathrsfs.



                              documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
                              usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                              usepackage{textcomp}
                              usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % The default since 2018
                              usepackage[scr=boondoxo]{mathalfa}

                              begin{document}
                              ( mathscr{Z} )
                              end{document}


                              Boondoxo sample







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited 12 hours ago

























                              answered yesterday









                              Davislor

                              4,8221024




                              4,8221024























                                  0














                                  You can use mathcal



                                  usepackage{unicode-math}

                                  mathcal{Z}





                                  share|improve this answer










                                  New contributor




                                  Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                  Check out our Code of Conduct.























                                    0














                                    You can use mathcal



                                    usepackage{unicode-math}

                                    mathcal{Z}





                                    share|improve this answer










                                    New contributor




                                    Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                                      0












                                      0








                                      0






                                      You can use mathcal



                                      usepackage{unicode-math}

                                      mathcal{Z}





                                      share|improve this answer










                                      New contributor




                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                      You can use mathcal



                                      usepackage{unicode-math}

                                      mathcal{Z}






                                      share|improve this answer










                                      New contributor




                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer








                                      edited 11 hours ago









                                      CarLaTeX

                                      29.9k447127




                                      29.9k447127






                                      New contributor




                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                      answered 11 hours ago









                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ

                                      93




                                      93




                                      New contributor




                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                      New contributor





                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                      Ahmet Furkan YILMAZ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






























                                          draft saved

                                          draft discarded




















































                                          Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


                                          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                          But avoid



                                          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.





                                          Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.


                                          Please pay close attention to the following guidance:


                                          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                          But avoid



                                          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                          draft saved


                                          draft discarded














                                          StackExchange.ready(
                                          function () {
                                          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f468409%2fhow-do-i-reproduce-a-calligraphic-z-that-looks-like-an-l-from-a-text-by-abramo%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                          }
                                          );

                                          Post as a guest















                                          Required, but never shown





















































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown

































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Popular posts from this blog

                                          An IMO inspired problem

                                          Management

                                          Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?