Electromechanical Energy Conversion: Difference between revisions

From Class Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:
Does anyone know why my LaTEX stuff is changing sizes throughout my article? [[An Ideal Transformer Example]]
Does anyone know why my LaTEX stuff is changing sizes throughout my article? [[An Ideal Transformer Example]]


*(John Hawkins) As I understand it, the text is made full size (larger) if there is ever a function call, i.e. something starting with a backslash, excluding some things like greek letters. Even "\ " (the function call for a space) works for me. If you don't want to change anything about your equation but just want it displayed full size, type "\,\!" (small forward space and small backward space) somewhere in your equation.
*(John Hawkins) As I understand it, the text is made full size (larger) if there is ever a function call, i.e. something starting with a backslash, excluding some things like greek letters. I have just put "\ " (the function call for a space) at the beginning of an equation and had it work. If you don't want to change anything about your equation but just want it displayed full size, type "\,\!" (small forward space and small backward space) somewhere in your equation.


==Announcements==
==Announcements==

Revision as of 17:51, 17 January 2010

Rules

Class Roster

Points


Questions

What do we do when we are finished with the draft and ready to publish?

  • If it's been approved by the reviewers, move it to the articles section

Does anyone know why my LaTEX stuff is changing sizes throughout my article? An Ideal Transformer Example

  • (John Hawkins) As I understand it, the text is made full size (larger) if there is ever a function call, i.e. something starting with a backslash, excluding some things like greek letters. I have just put "\ " (the function call for a space) at the beginning of an equation and had it work. If you don't want to change anything about your equation but just want it displayed full size, type "\,\!" (small forward space and small backward space) somewhere in your equation.

Announcements

If anyone wants to write the derivation of Ampere's Law you can put it on my (Wesley Brown) Ampere's Law page and be a co-author.

Draft Articles

These articles are not ready for reading and error checking. They are listed so people will not simultaneously write about similar topics.

Reviewed Articles

These articles have been reviewed and submitted.