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Looking for a curly script capital A



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1















A math book I'm studying uses a symbol and I'd like to be able to reproduce it. I used detexify to search for it, but was unsuccessful. Most likely it is the letter 'a' in some font I'm not familiar with.



Here's a zoomed in image of the symbol:



enter image description here



Here it is in context:



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    This looks like an 'old-fashioned' German letter a, as it was used in older text books about linear algebra in Germany here

    – user31729
    Jan 18 at 21:14











  • This sounds plausible. The book is Hoffman and Kunze's Linear Algebra, which was originally published in 1971.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 21:45






  • 1





    You find it in the MathTime Pro 2 Curly script, commercial. This picture (click) is taken from the documentation of mathalfa.

    – egreg
    Jan 18 at 22:25








  • 1





    Yes, mathtime pro 2 curly looks like it's exactly it. Thanks.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 23:25








  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Does anyone know how to write this symbol?

    – JouleV
    Feb 23 at 5:12
















1















A math book I'm studying uses a symbol and I'd like to be able to reproduce it. I used detexify to search for it, but was unsuccessful. Most likely it is the letter 'a' in some font I'm not familiar with.



Here's a zoomed in image of the symbol:



enter image description here



Here it is in context:



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    This looks like an 'old-fashioned' German letter a, as it was used in older text books about linear algebra in Germany here

    – user31729
    Jan 18 at 21:14











  • This sounds plausible. The book is Hoffman and Kunze's Linear Algebra, which was originally published in 1971.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 21:45






  • 1





    You find it in the MathTime Pro 2 Curly script, commercial. This picture (click) is taken from the documentation of mathalfa.

    – egreg
    Jan 18 at 22:25








  • 1





    Yes, mathtime pro 2 curly looks like it's exactly it. Thanks.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 23:25








  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Does anyone know how to write this symbol?

    – JouleV
    Feb 23 at 5:12














1












1








1








A math book I'm studying uses a symbol and I'd like to be able to reproduce it. I used detexify to search for it, but was unsuccessful. Most likely it is the letter 'a' in some font I'm not familiar with.



Here's a zoomed in image of the symbol:



enter image description here



Here it is in context:



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















A math book I'm studying uses a symbol and I'd like to be able to reproduce it. I used detexify to search for it, but was unsuccessful. Most likely it is the letter 'a' in some font I'm not familiar with.



Here's a zoomed in image of the symbol:



enter image description here



Here it is in context:



enter image description here







fonts symbols






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 20 at 1:32









Davislor

6,9841431




6,9841431










asked Jan 18 at 20:50









user3747260user3747260

82




82








  • 1





    This looks like an 'old-fashioned' German letter a, as it was used in older text books about linear algebra in Germany here

    – user31729
    Jan 18 at 21:14











  • This sounds plausible. The book is Hoffman and Kunze's Linear Algebra, which was originally published in 1971.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 21:45






  • 1





    You find it in the MathTime Pro 2 Curly script, commercial. This picture (click) is taken from the documentation of mathalfa.

    – egreg
    Jan 18 at 22:25








  • 1





    Yes, mathtime pro 2 curly looks like it's exactly it. Thanks.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 23:25








  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Does anyone know how to write this symbol?

    – JouleV
    Feb 23 at 5:12














  • 1





    This looks like an 'old-fashioned' German letter a, as it was used in older text books about linear algebra in Germany here

    – user31729
    Jan 18 at 21:14











  • This sounds plausible. The book is Hoffman and Kunze's Linear Algebra, which was originally published in 1971.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 21:45






  • 1





    You find it in the MathTime Pro 2 Curly script, commercial. This picture (click) is taken from the documentation of mathalfa.

    – egreg
    Jan 18 at 22:25








  • 1





    Yes, mathtime pro 2 curly looks like it's exactly it. Thanks.

    – user3747260
    Jan 18 at 23:25








  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Does anyone know how to write this symbol?

    – JouleV
    Feb 23 at 5:12








1




1





This looks like an 'old-fashioned' German letter a, as it was used in older text books about linear algebra in Germany here

– user31729
Jan 18 at 21:14





This looks like an 'old-fashioned' German letter a, as it was used in older text books about linear algebra in Germany here

– user31729
Jan 18 at 21:14













This sounds plausible. The book is Hoffman and Kunze's Linear Algebra, which was originally published in 1971.

– user3747260
Jan 18 at 21:45





This sounds plausible. The book is Hoffman and Kunze's Linear Algebra, which was originally published in 1971.

– user3747260
Jan 18 at 21:45




1




1





You find it in the MathTime Pro 2 Curly script, commercial. This picture (click) is taken from the documentation of mathalfa.

– egreg
Jan 18 at 22:25







You find it in the MathTime Pro 2 Curly script, commercial. This picture (click) is taken from the documentation of mathalfa.

– egreg
Jan 18 at 22:25






1




1





Yes, mathtime pro 2 curly looks like it's exactly it. Thanks.

– user3747260
Jan 18 at 23:25







Yes, mathtime pro 2 curly looks like it's exactly it. Thanks.

– user3747260
Jan 18 at 23:25






3




3





Possible duplicate of Does anyone know how to write this symbol?

– JouleV
Feb 23 at 5:12





Possible duplicate of Does anyone know how to write this symbol?

– JouleV
Feb 23 at 5:12










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














Since you appear to be using a bitmapped font from last century that costs money, here’s a modern equivalent. You can use whatever other TrueType or OpenType font looks better to you, but this version will automatically scale the font you select to the same height. You might want to choose it as mathscr instead, or use mscript for compatibility with the MathTime Pro package.



documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}
usepackage{unicode-math}

defaultfontfeatures{ Scale = MatchUppercase }
setmathfontfacemathcscr{DobkinPlain.ttf}

begin{document}
vector space (mathcscr{A}) over (mathcal{F})
end{document}


Vector Space A over F



The font I used is available here.



If you want to use the original symbol, I recommend loading usepackage[scr = mtc]{mathalfa} with an appropriate scrscaled = factor to make the font the right size.






share|improve this answer

































    0














    The option of mtpccal for full mtpro2 package (not free) has the font Math Curly alphabets:



    documentclass[12pt]{book} 
    usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
    begin{document}
    [mathcal{A}]
    end{document}


    The output it taken from the site at the link https://www.pctex.com/mtpro2.html:



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      2














      Since you appear to be using a bitmapped font from last century that costs money, here’s a modern equivalent. You can use whatever other TrueType or OpenType font looks better to you, but this version will automatically scale the font you select to the same height. You might want to choose it as mathscr instead, or use mscript for compatibility with the MathTime Pro package.



      documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}
      usepackage{unicode-math}

      defaultfontfeatures{ Scale = MatchUppercase }
      setmathfontfacemathcscr{DobkinPlain.ttf}

      begin{document}
      vector space (mathcscr{A}) over (mathcal{F})
      end{document}


      Vector Space A over F



      The font I used is available here.



      If you want to use the original symbol, I recommend loading usepackage[scr = mtc]{mathalfa} with an appropriate scrscaled = factor to make the font the right size.






      share|improve this answer






























        2














        Since you appear to be using a bitmapped font from last century that costs money, here’s a modern equivalent. You can use whatever other TrueType or OpenType font looks better to you, but this version will automatically scale the font you select to the same height. You might want to choose it as mathscr instead, or use mscript for compatibility with the MathTime Pro package.



        documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}
        usepackage{unicode-math}

        defaultfontfeatures{ Scale = MatchUppercase }
        setmathfontfacemathcscr{DobkinPlain.ttf}

        begin{document}
        vector space (mathcscr{A}) over (mathcal{F})
        end{document}


        Vector Space A over F



        The font I used is available here.



        If you want to use the original symbol, I recommend loading usepackage[scr = mtc]{mathalfa} with an appropriate scrscaled = factor to make the font the right size.






        share|improve this answer




























          2












          2








          2







          Since you appear to be using a bitmapped font from last century that costs money, here’s a modern equivalent. You can use whatever other TrueType or OpenType font looks better to you, but this version will automatically scale the font you select to the same height. You might want to choose it as mathscr instead, or use mscript for compatibility with the MathTime Pro package.



          documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}
          usepackage{unicode-math}

          defaultfontfeatures{ Scale = MatchUppercase }
          setmathfontfacemathcscr{DobkinPlain.ttf}

          begin{document}
          vector space (mathcscr{A}) over (mathcal{F})
          end{document}


          Vector Space A over F



          The font I used is available here.



          If you want to use the original symbol, I recommend loading usepackage[scr = mtc]{mathalfa} with an appropriate scrscaled = factor to make the font the right size.






          share|improve this answer















          Since you appear to be using a bitmapped font from last century that costs money, here’s a modern equivalent. You can use whatever other TrueType or OpenType font looks better to you, but this version will automatically scale the font you select to the same height. You might want to choose it as mathscr instead, or use mscript for compatibility with the MathTime Pro package.



          documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}
          usepackage{unicode-math}

          defaultfontfeatures{ Scale = MatchUppercase }
          setmathfontfacemathcscr{DobkinPlain.ttf}

          begin{document}
          vector space (mathcscr{A}) over (mathcal{F})
          end{document}


          Vector Space A over F



          The font I used is available here.



          If you want to use the original symbol, I recommend loading usepackage[scr = mtc]{mathalfa} with an appropriate scrscaled = factor to make the font the right size.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 30 at 14:52

























          answered Jan 19 at 4:39









          DavislorDavislor

          6,9841431




          6,9841431























              0














              The option of mtpccal for full mtpro2 package (not free) has the font Math Curly alphabets:



              documentclass[12pt]{book} 
              usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
              begin{document}
              [mathcal{A}]
              end{document}


              The output it taken from the site at the link https://www.pctex.com/mtpro2.html:



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                The option of mtpccal for full mtpro2 package (not free) has the font Math Curly alphabets:



                documentclass[12pt]{book} 
                usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
                begin{document}
                [mathcal{A}]
                end{document}


                The output it taken from the site at the link https://www.pctex.com/mtpro2.html:



                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  The option of mtpccal for full mtpro2 package (not free) has the font Math Curly alphabets:



                  documentclass[12pt]{book} 
                  usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
                  begin{document}
                  [mathcal{A}]
                  end{document}


                  The output it taken from the site at the link https://www.pctex.com/mtpro2.html:



                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer













                  The option of mtpccal for full mtpro2 package (not free) has the font Math Curly alphabets:



                  documentclass[12pt]{book} 
                  usepackage[mtpccal]{mtpro2}
                  begin{document}
                  [mathcal{A}]
                  end{document}


                  The output it taken from the site at the link https://www.pctex.com/mtpro2.html:



                  enter image description here







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 18 mins ago









                  SebastianoSebastiano

                  11.3k42164




                  11.3k42164






























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