X-VM-v5-Data: ([nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil] ["1245" "Wed" "23" "April" "1997" "16:05:17" "+0200" "Hans Aberg" "haberg@MATEMATIK.SU.SE" nil "29" "Re: Capital greek letters and the math font encoding" "^Date:" nil nil "4" nil nil nil nil nil] nil) Received: from listserv.gmd.de (listserv.gmd.de [192.88.97.1]) by mail.Uni-Mainz.DE (8.8.5/8.8.4) with ESMTP id QAA23066; Wed, 23 Apr 1997 16:07:09 +0200 (MET DST) Received: from listserv.gmd.de by listserv.gmd.de (LSMTP for OpenVMS v1.1a) with SMTP id <7.A465A10B@listserv.gmd.de>; Wed, 23 Apr 1997 16:05:35 +0200 Received: from RELAY.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE by RELAY.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE (LISTSERV-TCP/IP release 1.8b) with spool id 129203 for LATEX-L@RELAY.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE; Wed, 23 Apr 1997 16:05:11 +0200 Received: from mail.nada.kth.se (root@mail.nada.kth.se [130.237.222.92]) by relay.urz.uni-heidelberg.de (8.7.6/8.7.4) with ESMTP id QAA02437 for ; Wed, 23 Apr 1997 16:05:09 +0200 (MET DST) Received: from [130.237.37.49] (sl29.modempool.kth.se [130.237.37.49]) by mail.nada.kth.se (8.8.4/8.8.4) with SMTP id QAA26126; Wed, 23 Apr 1997 16:04:54 +0200 (MET DST) X-Sender: su95-hab@mail.nada.kth.se Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Message-ID: Reply-To: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project Date: Wed, 23 Apr 1997 16:05:17 +0200 From: Hans Aberg Sender: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project To: Multiple recipients of list LATEX-L Subject: Re: Capital greek letters and the math font encoding Status: R X-Status: X-Keywords: X-UID: 2002 At 09:48 97-04-22, J%org Knappen, Mainz wrote: >... The following conventions are often >employed by physicists: > >Variables: math italics >Vectors: bold math italics >Operators: upright >Vector Operators: bold upright >Tensors: sans serif This is certainly goes in another direction than the math typesetting principles we discussed. In math, these should all then have been "leaning", if not constants. Otherwise, I think one in math just tries to "upper" the graphics with "larger" math objects, depending on the context (often overridden by tradition, then), or so, I think of it. The reason that vectors are often typeset in bold, and not bold italics could be that formerly one practise was to indicate, in a hand written manuscript, two levels of emphasis by single or double underlining, which then was interpreted by the typesetter as italic and bold (so the author did not have much control over it). But if you decide to typeset tensors upright sans serif, then the Christoffel symbol, which normally is an upper case $\Gamma$, should be typeset like that too. (But using a $\Gamma$ for the Christoffel symbol is so standard, it should perhaps be typeset upright anyhow.) Hans Aberg