Floating point square root symbol

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For my numerical analysis class, we use a certain symbol to represent the floating point square root operation (similar to using ominus for floating point subtraction, oplus for floating point addition, etc.). In order to render this in a LaTeX document, I'd need to somehow draw a similarly-sized circle over the "v" part of the square root symbol, but I'm not too familiar with tikz and don't really know how to start working on this.



The most important aspect is making sure the circle has the same size as the one for the oxxxx symbols. How would I go about making this? (And potentially, is there a better, more standard way to denote this operation?)



Picture



This is the best drawing I could make of what I'm looking for



Edit



Added a picture to make what I'm asking for a tiny bit clearer.










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  • First, look at the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (ctan.org/pkg/comprehensive?lang=en). Could you scan and post an image as part of your question?
    – John Kormylo
    Nov 21 at 21:16











  • The symbol is not in the Symbol List sadly, I already checked before posting, hence the softer part of my question asking about the more standard notation for this.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:21










  • do you need it to work like sqrt growing in size and with an extending bar while still having the circle, or simpler case of just needing a fixed
    – David Carlisle
    Nov 21 at 21:23










  • @DavidCarlisle Ideally, it would work like sqrt, while having the circle grow in a way similar to how the circle gets bigger when going from oplus to bigoplus. The last part, about the circle growing, is purely aesthetic (but would still be greatly appreciated), the bar growing is a requirement.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:26






  • 1




    If you really want a “custom” root sign that behaves exactly as the original, that is, that grows automatically with the size of the subformula it covers, I think that, all things considered, the simplest solution is to use a virtual font. I haven’t got time to write an answer now, but I can suggest this example of a similar problem which I solved by means of this technique; that answer contain further links that you might find useful.
    – GuM
    Nov 21 at 22:25















up vote
7
down vote

favorite
1












For my numerical analysis class, we use a certain symbol to represent the floating point square root operation (similar to using ominus for floating point subtraction, oplus for floating point addition, etc.). In order to render this in a LaTeX document, I'd need to somehow draw a similarly-sized circle over the "v" part of the square root symbol, but I'm not too familiar with tikz and don't really know how to start working on this.



The most important aspect is making sure the circle has the same size as the one for the oxxxx symbols. How would I go about making this? (And potentially, is there a better, more standard way to denote this operation?)



Picture



This is the best drawing I could make of what I'm looking for



Edit



Added a picture to make what I'm asking for a tiny bit clearer.










share|improve this question























  • First, look at the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (ctan.org/pkg/comprehensive?lang=en). Could you scan and post an image as part of your question?
    – John Kormylo
    Nov 21 at 21:16











  • The symbol is not in the Symbol List sadly, I already checked before posting, hence the softer part of my question asking about the more standard notation for this.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:21










  • do you need it to work like sqrt growing in size and with an extending bar while still having the circle, or simpler case of just needing a fixed
    – David Carlisle
    Nov 21 at 21:23










  • @DavidCarlisle Ideally, it would work like sqrt, while having the circle grow in a way similar to how the circle gets bigger when going from oplus to bigoplus. The last part, about the circle growing, is purely aesthetic (but would still be greatly appreciated), the bar growing is a requirement.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:26






  • 1




    If you really want a “custom” root sign that behaves exactly as the original, that is, that grows automatically with the size of the subformula it covers, I think that, all things considered, the simplest solution is to use a virtual font. I haven’t got time to write an answer now, but I can suggest this example of a similar problem which I solved by means of this technique; that answer contain further links that you might find useful.
    – GuM
    Nov 21 at 22:25













up vote
7
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
7
down vote

favorite
1






1





For my numerical analysis class, we use a certain symbol to represent the floating point square root operation (similar to using ominus for floating point subtraction, oplus for floating point addition, etc.). In order to render this in a LaTeX document, I'd need to somehow draw a similarly-sized circle over the "v" part of the square root symbol, but I'm not too familiar with tikz and don't really know how to start working on this.



The most important aspect is making sure the circle has the same size as the one for the oxxxx symbols. How would I go about making this? (And potentially, is there a better, more standard way to denote this operation?)



Picture



This is the best drawing I could make of what I'm looking for



Edit



Added a picture to make what I'm asking for a tiny bit clearer.










share|improve this question















For my numerical analysis class, we use a certain symbol to represent the floating point square root operation (similar to using ominus for floating point subtraction, oplus for floating point addition, etc.). In order to render this in a LaTeX document, I'd need to somehow draw a similarly-sized circle over the "v" part of the square root symbol, but I'm not too familiar with tikz and don't really know how to start working on this.



The most important aspect is making sure the circle has the same size as the one for the oxxxx symbols. How would I go about making this? (And potentially, is there a better, more standard way to denote this operation?)



Picture



This is the best drawing I could make of what I'm looking for



Edit



Added a picture to make what I'm asking for a tiny bit clearer.







tikz-pgf math-mode macros






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 21 at 21:24

























asked Nov 21 at 20:34









Peiffap

365




365











  • First, look at the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (ctan.org/pkg/comprehensive?lang=en). Could you scan and post an image as part of your question?
    – John Kormylo
    Nov 21 at 21:16











  • The symbol is not in the Symbol List sadly, I already checked before posting, hence the softer part of my question asking about the more standard notation for this.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:21










  • do you need it to work like sqrt growing in size and with an extending bar while still having the circle, or simpler case of just needing a fixed
    – David Carlisle
    Nov 21 at 21:23










  • @DavidCarlisle Ideally, it would work like sqrt, while having the circle grow in a way similar to how the circle gets bigger when going from oplus to bigoplus. The last part, about the circle growing, is purely aesthetic (but would still be greatly appreciated), the bar growing is a requirement.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:26






  • 1




    If you really want a “custom” root sign that behaves exactly as the original, that is, that grows automatically with the size of the subformula it covers, I think that, all things considered, the simplest solution is to use a virtual font. I haven’t got time to write an answer now, but I can suggest this example of a similar problem which I solved by means of this technique; that answer contain further links that you might find useful.
    – GuM
    Nov 21 at 22:25

















  • First, look at the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (ctan.org/pkg/comprehensive?lang=en). Could you scan and post an image as part of your question?
    – John Kormylo
    Nov 21 at 21:16











  • The symbol is not in the Symbol List sadly, I already checked before posting, hence the softer part of my question asking about the more standard notation for this.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:21










  • do you need it to work like sqrt growing in size and with an extending bar while still having the circle, or simpler case of just needing a fixed
    – David Carlisle
    Nov 21 at 21:23










  • @DavidCarlisle Ideally, it would work like sqrt, while having the circle grow in a way similar to how the circle gets bigger when going from oplus to bigoplus. The last part, about the circle growing, is purely aesthetic (but would still be greatly appreciated), the bar growing is a requirement.
    – Peiffap
    Nov 21 at 21:26






  • 1




    If you really want a “custom” root sign that behaves exactly as the original, that is, that grows automatically with the size of the subformula it covers, I think that, all things considered, the simplest solution is to use a virtual font. I haven’t got time to write an answer now, but I can suggest this example of a similar problem which I solved by means of this technique; that answer contain further links that you might find useful.
    – GuM
    Nov 21 at 22:25
















First, look at the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (ctan.org/pkg/comprehensive?lang=en). Could you scan and post an image as part of your question?
– John Kormylo
Nov 21 at 21:16





First, look at the Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List (ctan.org/pkg/comprehensive?lang=en). Could you scan and post an image as part of your question?
– John Kormylo
Nov 21 at 21:16













The symbol is not in the Symbol List sadly, I already checked before posting, hence the softer part of my question asking about the more standard notation for this.
– Peiffap
Nov 21 at 21:21




The symbol is not in the Symbol List sadly, I already checked before posting, hence the softer part of my question asking about the more standard notation for this.
– Peiffap
Nov 21 at 21:21












do you need it to work like sqrt growing in size and with an extending bar while still having the circle, or simpler case of just needing a fixed
– David Carlisle
Nov 21 at 21:23




do you need it to work like sqrt growing in size and with an extending bar while still having the circle, or simpler case of just needing a fixed
– David Carlisle
Nov 21 at 21:23












@DavidCarlisle Ideally, it would work like sqrt, while having the circle grow in a way similar to how the circle gets bigger when going from oplus to bigoplus. The last part, about the circle growing, is purely aesthetic (but would still be greatly appreciated), the bar growing is a requirement.
– Peiffap
Nov 21 at 21:26




@DavidCarlisle Ideally, it would work like sqrt, while having the circle grow in a way similar to how the circle gets bigger when going from oplus to bigoplus. The last part, about the circle growing, is purely aesthetic (but would still be greatly appreciated), the bar growing is a requirement.
– Peiffap
Nov 21 at 21:26




1




1




If you really want a “custom” root sign that behaves exactly as the original, that is, that grows automatically with the size of the subformula it covers, I think that, all things considered, the simplest solution is to use a virtual font. I haven’t got time to write an answer now, but I can suggest this example of a similar problem which I solved by means of this technique; that answer contain further links that you might find useful.
– GuM
Nov 21 at 22:25





If you really want a “custom” root sign that behaves exactly as the original, that is, that grows automatically with the size of the subformula it covers, I think that, all things considered, the simplest solution is to use a virtual font. I haven’t got time to write an answer now, but I can suggest this example of a similar problem which I solved by means of this technique; that answer contain further links that you might find useful.
– GuM
Nov 21 at 22:25











2 Answers
2






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up vote
8
down vote













I can offer this one, but don't try it with big arguments to the square root such as fractions.



documentclassarticle
usepackageamsmath
usepackagegraphicx

newcommandfpsqrt[1]%
sqrt[leftroot-5uproot-7scalebox0.7$bigcirc$]mathstrut#1%


begindocument

[
fpsqrt120
]

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    4
    down vote













    This is really just for fun (and because this is tagged TikZ). An attempt to adapt the shape of the circle to the dimensions of the square root. The idea is to use a path picture to find out what the dimensions of the square root are. Luckily tikzmark has the cool feature of detecting the mode we are in, so we do not have to worry about this here.



    documentclassarticle
    usepackagetikz
    usetikzlibrarytikzmark,calc
    newcounterstuff
    tikzsetoroot/.style=path picture=draw
    let p1=($(path picture bounding box.north)-(path picture bounding box.south)$) in (path picture bounding box.west)
    arc(180:-180:0.25em+y1/10 and y1/3);
    begindocument
    abc $tikzmarknode[oroot]1sqrta+b$
    [tikzmarknode[oroot]2sqrtfracfrac112fracab]
    enddocument


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer




















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

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      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      8
      down vote













      I can offer this one, but don't try it with big arguments to the square root such as fractions.



      documentclassarticle
      usepackageamsmath
      usepackagegraphicx

      newcommandfpsqrt[1]%
      sqrt[leftroot-5uproot-7scalebox0.7$bigcirc$]mathstrut#1%


      begindocument

      [
      fpsqrt120
      ]

      enddocument


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


























        up vote
        8
        down vote













        I can offer this one, but don't try it with big arguments to the square root such as fractions.



        documentclassarticle
        usepackageamsmath
        usepackagegraphicx

        newcommandfpsqrt[1]%
        sqrt[leftroot-5uproot-7scalebox0.7$bigcirc$]mathstrut#1%


        begindocument

        [
        fpsqrt120
        ]

        enddocument


        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          8
          down vote










          up vote
          8
          down vote









          I can offer this one, but don't try it with big arguments to the square root such as fractions.



          documentclassarticle
          usepackageamsmath
          usepackagegraphicx

          newcommandfpsqrt[1]%
          sqrt[leftroot-5uproot-7scalebox0.7$bigcirc$]mathstrut#1%


          begindocument

          [
          fpsqrt120
          ]

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer














          I can offer this one, but don't try it with big arguments to the square root such as fractions.



          documentclassarticle
          usepackageamsmath
          usepackagegraphicx

          newcommandfpsqrt[1]%
          sqrt[leftroot-5uproot-7scalebox0.7$bigcirc$]mathstrut#1%


          begindocument

          [
          fpsqrt120
          ]

          enddocument


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 21 at 21:43

























          answered Nov 21 at 21:35









          egreg

          700k8518633139




          700k8518633139




















              up vote
              4
              down vote













              This is really just for fun (and because this is tagged TikZ). An attempt to adapt the shape of the circle to the dimensions of the square root. The idea is to use a path picture to find out what the dimensions of the square root are. Luckily tikzmark has the cool feature of detecting the mode we are in, so we do not have to worry about this here.



              documentclassarticle
              usepackagetikz
              usetikzlibrarytikzmark,calc
              newcounterstuff
              tikzsetoroot/.style=path picture=draw
              let p1=($(path picture bounding box.north)-(path picture bounding box.south)$) in (path picture bounding box.west)
              arc(180:-180:0.25em+y1/10 and y1/3);
              begindocument
              abc $tikzmarknode[oroot]1sqrta+b$
              [tikzmarknode[oroot]2sqrtfracfrac112fracab]
              enddocument


              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                4
                down vote













                This is really just for fun (and because this is tagged TikZ). An attempt to adapt the shape of the circle to the dimensions of the square root. The idea is to use a path picture to find out what the dimensions of the square root are. Luckily tikzmark has the cool feature of detecting the mode we are in, so we do not have to worry about this here.



                documentclassarticle
                usepackagetikz
                usetikzlibrarytikzmark,calc
                newcounterstuff
                tikzsetoroot/.style=path picture=draw
                let p1=($(path picture bounding box.north)-(path picture bounding box.south)$) in (path picture bounding box.west)
                arc(180:-180:0.25em+y1/10 and y1/3);
                begindocument
                abc $tikzmarknode[oroot]1sqrta+b$
                [tikzmarknode[oroot]2sqrtfracfrac112fracab]
                enddocument


                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  4
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  4
                  down vote









                  This is really just for fun (and because this is tagged TikZ). An attempt to adapt the shape of the circle to the dimensions of the square root. The idea is to use a path picture to find out what the dimensions of the square root are. Luckily tikzmark has the cool feature of detecting the mode we are in, so we do not have to worry about this here.



                  documentclassarticle
                  usepackagetikz
                  usetikzlibrarytikzmark,calc
                  newcounterstuff
                  tikzsetoroot/.style=path picture=draw
                  let p1=($(path picture bounding box.north)-(path picture bounding box.south)$) in (path picture bounding box.west)
                  arc(180:-180:0.25em+y1/10 and y1/3);
                  begindocument
                  abc $tikzmarknode[oroot]1sqrta+b$
                  [tikzmarknode[oroot]2sqrtfracfrac112fracab]
                  enddocument


                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer












                  This is really just for fun (and because this is tagged TikZ). An attempt to adapt the shape of the circle to the dimensions of the square root. The idea is to use a path picture to find out what the dimensions of the square root are. Luckily tikzmark has the cool feature of detecting the mode we are in, so we do not have to worry about this here.



                  documentclassarticle
                  usepackagetikz
                  usetikzlibrarytikzmark,calc
                  newcounterstuff
                  tikzsetoroot/.style=path picture=draw
                  let p1=($(path picture bounding box.north)-(path picture bounding box.south)$) in (path picture bounding box.west)
                  arc(180:-180:0.25em+y1/10 and y1/3);
                  begindocument
                  abc $tikzmarknode[oroot]1sqrta+b$
                  [tikzmarknode[oroot]2sqrtfracfrac112fracab]
                  enddocument


                  enter image description here







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 21 at 22:10









                  marmot

                  78.8k487166




                  78.8k487166



























                       

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