Curly Calligraphic capital A?












5















I'm writing my final work of the career, but I can't find how to write this symbol.



enter image description here



It's like a weird "a" before (θ, ϕ).



Thank you so much!










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Have a look at “How to look up a symbol?” for ideas how you can easily find a particular symbol.

    – dexteritas
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03






  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! It's not a weird symbol: it's an “A” in a calligraphic font. Use mathcal{A} and you'll be OK even if the shape is different.

    – egreg
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03








  • 4





    It would be much more helpful to your career if you skip such arcane notation in my humble opinion.

    – percusse
    Jul 6 '17 at 12:44






  • 2





    Looks also a little like mathcal{a} from mtpro2, but that's a commercial font. (i.e. not free)

    – Troy
    Jul 6 '17 at 13:28








  • 1





    i.imgur.com/JkJwK7x.gif

    – Henri Menke
    2 days ago


















5















I'm writing my final work of the career, but I can't find how to write this symbol.



enter image description here



It's like a weird "a" before (θ, ϕ).



Thank you so much!










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Have a look at “How to look up a symbol?” for ideas how you can easily find a particular symbol.

    – dexteritas
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03






  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! It's not a weird symbol: it's an “A” in a calligraphic font. Use mathcal{A} and you'll be OK even if the shape is different.

    – egreg
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03








  • 4





    It would be much more helpful to your career if you skip such arcane notation in my humble opinion.

    – percusse
    Jul 6 '17 at 12:44






  • 2





    Looks also a little like mathcal{a} from mtpro2, but that's a commercial font. (i.e. not free)

    – Troy
    Jul 6 '17 at 13:28








  • 1





    i.imgur.com/JkJwK7x.gif

    – Henri Menke
    2 days ago
















5












5








5








I'm writing my final work of the career, but I can't find how to write this symbol.



enter image description here



It's like a weird "a" before (θ, ϕ).



Thank you so much!










share|improve this question
















I'm writing my final work of the career, but I can't find how to write this symbol.



enter image description here



It's like a weird "a" before (θ, ϕ).



Thank you so much!







math-mode symbols mtpro






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 28 mins ago









Davislor

6,3911329




6,3911329










asked Jul 6 '17 at 11:01









Sara ReySara Rey

312




312








  • 2





    Have a look at “How to look up a symbol?” for ideas how you can easily find a particular symbol.

    – dexteritas
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03






  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! It's not a weird symbol: it's an “A” in a calligraphic font. Use mathcal{A} and you'll be OK even if the shape is different.

    – egreg
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03








  • 4





    It would be much more helpful to your career if you skip such arcane notation in my humble opinion.

    – percusse
    Jul 6 '17 at 12:44






  • 2





    Looks also a little like mathcal{a} from mtpro2, but that's a commercial font. (i.e. not free)

    – Troy
    Jul 6 '17 at 13:28








  • 1





    i.imgur.com/JkJwK7x.gif

    – Henri Menke
    2 days ago
















  • 2





    Have a look at “How to look up a symbol?” for ideas how you can easily find a particular symbol.

    – dexteritas
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03






  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! It's not a weird symbol: it's an “A” in a calligraphic font. Use mathcal{A} and you'll be OK even if the shape is different.

    – egreg
    Jul 6 '17 at 11:03








  • 4





    It would be much more helpful to your career if you skip such arcane notation in my humble opinion.

    – percusse
    Jul 6 '17 at 12:44






  • 2





    Looks also a little like mathcal{a} from mtpro2, but that's a commercial font. (i.e. not free)

    – Troy
    Jul 6 '17 at 13:28








  • 1





    i.imgur.com/JkJwK7x.gif

    – Henri Menke
    2 days ago










2




2





Have a look at “How to look up a symbol?” for ideas how you can easily find a particular symbol.

– dexteritas
Jul 6 '17 at 11:03





Have a look at “How to look up a symbol?” for ideas how you can easily find a particular symbol.

– dexteritas
Jul 6 '17 at 11:03




1




1





Welcome to TeX.SX! It's not a weird symbol: it's an “A” in a calligraphic font. Use mathcal{A} and you'll be OK even if the shape is different.

– egreg
Jul 6 '17 at 11:03







Welcome to TeX.SX! It's not a weird symbol: it's an “A” in a calligraphic font. Use mathcal{A} and you'll be OK even if the shape is different.

– egreg
Jul 6 '17 at 11:03






4




4





It would be much more helpful to your career if you skip such arcane notation in my humble opinion.

– percusse
Jul 6 '17 at 12:44





It would be much more helpful to your career if you skip such arcane notation in my humble opinion.

– percusse
Jul 6 '17 at 12:44




2




2





Looks also a little like mathcal{a} from mtpro2, but that's a commercial font. (i.e. not free)

– Troy
Jul 6 '17 at 13:28







Looks also a little like mathcal{a} from mtpro2, but that's a commercial font. (i.e. not free)

– Troy
Jul 6 '17 at 13:28






1




1





i.imgur.com/JkJwK7x.gif

– Henri Menke
2 days ago







i.imgur.com/JkJwK7x.gif

– Henri Menke
2 days ago












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















12














The closest I could find is TypoUprightBT:



    documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage{fontspec}
pagestyle{empty}
newfontfamily{uprightcal}{TypoUpright BT}

begin{document}%

[ text{uprightcal{A}}mkern1mu(theta, phi) ]

end{document}


Example of the font






share|improve this answer


























  • In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

    – Davislor
    4 hours ago



















3














The A of your image might seem the same of full mt2pro package:



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt]{book} 
usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
begin{document}
[mathcal{A}(theta,phi)]
end{document}


I think the letter has been retouched to get bold with an external program that uses TrueType fonts. In the image you can see that in the character map there is the bold font (MT2MCS):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • From where you got mtpro2?

    – Sigur
    2 days ago











  • @Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

    – Sebastiano
    2 days ago













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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









12














The closest I could find is TypoUprightBT:



    documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage{fontspec}
pagestyle{empty}
newfontfamily{uprightcal}{TypoUpright BT}

begin{document}%

[ text{uprightcal{A}}mkern1mu(theta, phi) ]

end{document}


Example of the font






share|improve this answer


























  • In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

    – Davislor
    4 hours ago
















12














The closest I could find is TypoUprightBT:



    documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage{fontspec}
pagestyle{empty}
newfontfamily{uprightcal}{TypoUpright BT}

begin{document}%

[ text{uprightcal{A}}mkern1mu(theta, phi) ]

end{document}


Example of the font






share|improve this answer


























  • In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

    – Davislor
    4 hours ago














12












12








12







The closest I could find is TypoUprightBT:



    documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage{fontspec}
pagestyle{empty}
newfontfamily{uprightcal}{TypoUpright BT}

begin{document}%

[ text{uprightcal{A}}mkern1mu(theta, phi) ]

end{document}


Example of the font






share|improve this answer















The closest I could find is TypoUprightBT:



    documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage{fontspec}
pagestyle{empty}
newfontfamily{uprightcal}{TypoUpright BT}

begin{document}%

[ text{uprightcal{A}}mkern1mu(theta, phi) ]

end{document}


Example of the font







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jul 6 '17 at 16:15









Community

1




1










answered Jul 6 '17 at 12:35









BernardBernard

171k775202




171k775202













  • In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

    – Davislor
    4 hours ago



















  • In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

    – Davislor
    4 hours ago

















In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

– Davislor
4 hours ago





In unicode-math, you can either setmathfont[range=cal]{TypoUpright BT} and use it as mathcal{A} or setmathfontfaceuprightcal{TypoUpright BT} and use uprightcal{A} (which no longer requires text).

– Davislor
4 hours ago











3














The A of your image might seem the same of full mt2pro package:



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt]{book} 
usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
begin{document}
[mathcal{A}(theta,phi)]
end{document}


I think the letter has been retouched to get bold with an external program that uses TrueType fonts. In the image you can see that in the character map there is the bold font (MT2MCS):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • From where you got mtpro2?

    – Sigur
    2 days ago











  • @Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

    – Sebastiano
    2 days ago


















3














The A of your image might seem the same of full mt2pro package:



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt]{book} 
usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
begin{document}
[mathcal{A}(theta,phi)]
end{document}


I think the letter has been retouched to get bold with an external program that uses TrueType fonts. In the image you can see that in the character map there is the bold font (MT2MCS):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • From where you got mtpro2?

    – Sigur
    2 days ago











  • @Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

    – Sebastiano
    2 days ago
















3












3








3







The A of your image might seem the same of full mt2pro package:



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt]{book} 
usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
begin{document}
[mathcal{A}(theta,phi)]
end{document}


I think the letter has been retouched to get bold with an external program that uses TrueType fonts. In the image you can see that in the character map there is the bold font (MT2MCS):



enter image description here






share|improve this answer















The A of your image might seem the same of full mt2pro package:



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt]{book} 
usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
begin{document}
[mathcal{A}(theta,phi)]
end{document}


I think the letter has been retouched to get bold with an external program that uses TrueType fonts. In the image you can see that in the character map there is the bold font (MT2MCS):



enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 7 hours ago

























answered 2 days ago









SebastianoSebastiano

10.2k41959




10.2k41959













  • From where you got mtpro2?

    – Sigur
    2 days ago











  • @Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

    – Sebastiano
    2 days ago





















  • From where you got mtpro2?

    – Sigur
    2 days ago











  • @Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

    – Sebastiano
    2 days ago



















From where you got mtpro2?

– Sigur
2 days ago





From where you got mtpro2?

– Sigur
2 days ago













@Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

– Sebastiano
2 days ago







@Sigur From the guide https://pctex.com/files/managed/1/1b/mtpro2Abbrev.pdf pag. 7.

– Sebastiano
2 days ago




















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