How to write this expression?

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How can I write the vertical line in this expression?
It is as tall as the before relation.



This







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    Are answers to this question what you're after?
    – Dai Bowen
    Aug 8 at 13:57














up vote
2
down vote

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How can I write the vertical line in this expression?
It is as tall as the before relation.



This







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  • 1




    Are answers to this question what you're after?
    – Dai Bowen
    Aug 8 at 13:57












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











How can I write the vertical line in this expression?
It is as tall as the before relation.



This







share|improve this question












How can I write the vertical line in this expression?
It is as tall as the before relation.



This









share|improve this question











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asked Aug 8 at 13:51









Perfect Fluid

516




516







  • 1




    Are answers to this question what you're after?
    – Dai Bowen
    Aug 8 at 13:57












  • 1




    Are answers to this question what you're after?
    – Dai Bowen
    Aug 8 at 13:57







1




1




Are answers to this question what you're after?
– Dai Bowen
Aug 8 at 13:57




Are answers to this question what you're after?
– Dai Bowen
Aug 8 at 13:57










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










You can do



documentclassarticle
begindocument
beginequation
4piepsilon^2fracdtildeGdRbiggr|_R=epsilon.
endequation
enddocument


Some more details on the use of bigl ... can be found in this post.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    7
    down vote













    You can use the esdiff package, for a simpler typing of derivatives (partial or not) of any order in Leibniz notation. For derivatives evaluated at some point, you have a diff*command with 3 arguments, the function, the variable and the evaluation point, but it uses a pair of parentheses. If you want a single vertical line, you have to do it by hand. Here is an example of both:



    documentclassarticle
    usepackagemathtools
    usepackageesdiff

    begindocument

    [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diff*widetildeGRR = varepsilon ]%

    [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diffwidetildeGRbiggmvert_R = varepsilon ]%

    enddocument


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer





























      up vote
      5
      down vote













      If you prefer to have the same image you inserted with the same symbols, you can also use my code (with slanted operator "d" or vertical mode for "d")



      enter image description here



      documentclass[a4paper,12pt]article
      usepackageamsmath,amssymb
      usepackagetimes
      usepackagenewtxtext,newtxmath
      usepackagefancybox
      usepackagexcolor
      begindocument
      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

      enddocument





      share|improve this answer


















      • 1




        @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
        – Jürgen G
        Aug 8 at 21:20










      • Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
        – Sebastiano
        Aug 8 at 21:25







      • 1




        @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
        – Jürgen G
        Aug 8 at 21:32






      • 1




        I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
        – Jürgen G
        Aug 8 at 21:34











      • @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
        – Sebastiano
        Aug 8 at 21:35










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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted










      You can do



      documentclassarticle
      begindocument
      beginequation
      4piepsilon^2fracdtildeGdRbiggr|_R=epsilon.
      endequation
      enddocument


      Some more details on the use of bigl ... can be found in this post.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        6
        down vote



        accepted










        You can do



        documentclassarticle
        begindocument
        beginequation
        4piepsilon^2fracdtildeGdRbiggr|_R=epsilon.
        endequation
        enddocument


        Some more details on the use of bigl ... can be found in this post.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted






          You can do



          documentclassarticle
          begindocument
          beginequation
          4piepsilon^2fracdtildeGdRbiggr|_R=epsilon.
          endequation
          enddocument


          Some more details on the use of bigl ... can be found in this post.






          share|improve this answer












          You can do



          documentclassarticle
          begindocument
          beginequation
          4piepsilon^2fracdtildeGdRbiggr|_R=epsilon.
          endequation
          enddocument


          Some more details on the use of bigl ... can be found in this post.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Aug 8 at 14:00









          BambOo

          2,475323




          2,475323




















              up vote
              7
              down vote













              You can use the esdiff package, for a simpler typing of derivatives (partial or not) of any order in Leibniz notation. For derivatives evaluated at some point, you have a diff*command with 3 arguments, the function, the variable and the evaluation point, but it uses a pair of parentheses. If you want a single vertical line, you have to do it by hand. Here is an example of both:



              documentclassarticle
              usepackagemathtools
              usepackageesdiff

              begindocument

              [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diff*widetildeGRR = varepsilon ]%

              [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diffwidetildeGRbiggmvert_R = varepsilon ]%

              enddocument


              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer


























                up vote
                7
                down vote













                You can use the esdiff package, for a simpler typing of derivatives (partial or not) of any order in Leibniz notation. For derivatives evaluated at some point, you have a diff*command with 3 arguments, the function, the variable and the evaluation point, but it uses a pair of parentheses. If you want a single vertical line, you have to do it by hand. Here is an example of both:



                documentclassarticle
                usepackagemathtools
                usepackageesdiff

                begindocument

                [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diff*widetildeGRR = varepsilon ]%

                [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diffwidetildeGRbiggmvert_R = varepsilon ]%

                enddocument


                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  7
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  7
                  down vote









                  You can use the esdiff package, for a simpler typing of derivatives (partial or not) of any order in Leibniz notation. For derivatives evaluated at some point, you have a diff*command with 3 arguments, the function, the variable and the evaluation point, but it uses a pair of parentheses. If you want a single vertical line, you have to do it by hand. Here is an example of both:



                  documentclassarticle
                  usepackagemathtools
                  usepackageesdiff

                  begindocument

                  [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diff*widetildeGRR = varepsilon ]%

                  [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diffwidetildeGRbiggmvert_R = varepsilon ]%

                  enddocument


                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer














                  You can use the esdiff package, for a simpler typing of derivatives (partial or not) of any order in Leibniz notation. For derivatives evaluated at some point, you have a diff*command with 3 arguments, the function, the variable and the evaluation point, but it uses a pair of parentheses. If you want a single vertical line, you have to do it by hand. Here is an example of both:



                  documentclassarticle
                  usepackagemathtools
                  usepackageesdiff

                  begindocument

                  [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diff*widetildeGRR = varepsilon ]%

                  [ 4pivarepsilon ^2diffwidetildeGRbiggmvert_R = varepsilon ]%

                  enddocument


                  enter image description here







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Aug 8 at 14:35

























                  answered Aug 8 at 14:19









                  Bernard

                  156k763189




                  156k763189




















                      up vote
                      5
                      down vote













                      If you prefer to have the same image you inserted with the same symbols, you can also use my code (with slanted operator "d" or vertical mode for "d")



                      enter image description here



                      documentclass[a4paper,12pt]article
                      usepackageamsmath,amssymb
                      usepackagetimes
                      usepackagenewtxtext,newtxmath
                      usepackagefancybox
                      usepackagexcolor
                      begindocument
                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      enddocument





                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:20










                      • Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:25







                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:32






                      • 1




                        I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:34











                      • @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:35














                      up vote
                      5
                      down vote













                      If you prefer to have the same image you inserted with the same symbols, you can also use my code (with slanted operator "d" or vertical mode for "d")



                      enter image description here



                      documentclass[a4paper,12pt]article
                      usepackageamsmath,amssymb
                      usepackagetimes
                      usepackagenewtxtext,newtxmath
                      usepackagefancybox
                      usepackagexcolor
                      begindocument
                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      enddocument





                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:20










                      • Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:25







                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:32






                      • 1




                        I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:34











                      • @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:35












                      up vote
                      5
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      5
                      down vote









                      If you prefer to have the same image you inserted with the same symbols, you can also use my code (with slanted operator "d" or vertical mode for "d")



                      enter image description here



                      documentclass[a4paper,12pt]article
                      usepackageamsmath,amssymb
                      usepackagetimes
                      usepackagenewtxtext,newtxmath
                      usepackagefancybox
                      usepackagexcolor
                      begindocument
                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      enddocument





                      share|improve this answer














                      If you prefer to have the same image you inserted with the same symbols, you can also use my code (with slanted operator "d" or vertical mode for "d")



                      enter image description here



                      documentclass[a4paper,12pt]article
                      usepackageamsmath,amssymb
                      usepackagetimes
                      usepackagenewtxtext,newtxmath
                      usepackagefancybox
                      usepackagexcolor
                      begindocument
                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      [colorboxgray!20_R=varepsilon.$]

                      enddocument






                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Aug 8 at 21:28

























                      answered Aug 8 at 21:02









                      Sebastiano

                      7,68531553




                      7,68531553







                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:20










                      • Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:25







                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:32






                      • 1




                        I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:34











                      • @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:35












                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:20










                      • Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:25







                      • 1




                        @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:32






                      • 1




                        I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
                        – Jürgen G
                        Aug 8 at 21:34











                      • @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
                        – Sebastiano
                        Aug 8 at 21:35







                      1




                      1




                      @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
                      – Jürgen G
                      Aug 8 at 21:20




                      @Sebatiano: Nicely done within a colored box. However don't forget that "derivation" is an operation and so the symbol "d" in that case needs to be an operator - meaning being upright.
                      – Jürgen G
                      Aug 8 at 21:20












                      Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
                      – Sebastiano
                      Aug 8 at 21:25





                      Thank you very much for your compliments. I have not positioned the "d" in an upright position because in Italy (you could see many pantries on the net) the "d" is positioned in an inclined position. Thank you very much. Now I have added the "d" as a vertical position.
                      – Sebastiano
                      Aug 8 at 21:25





                      1




                      1




                      @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
                      – Jürgen G
                      Aug 8 at 21:32




                      @Sebatiano: ... you say they do operators in "italics"? ... What a word game though :-) As far as I was taught, operators should be upright, independent from which country they come along ... Maybe I was taught wrong or it is just a matter of "personal style"
                      – Jürgen G
                      Aug 8 at 21:32




                      1




                      1




                      I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
                      – Jürgen G
                      Aug 8 at 21:34





                      I could see you now provide the "operator" version. +1 though!!!
                      – Jürgen G
                      Aug 8 at 21:34













                      @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
                      – Sebastiano
                      Aug 8 at 21:35




                      @JürgenG Look here to pag. 5: dm.unibo.it/~barozzi/MI2/PDF/MI2-Cap.8.pdf. It is only an example.
                      – Sebastiano
                      Aug 8 at 21:35

















                       

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