I want to declare $5\times 5$, so that the spacing comes out right.
When I type $2 \times (8+8+1)$, the spacing next the x is always bigger than that next to the +.
In order to fix this I want to define $\times$ as a binary operator, same as the +.
I try and do this, but that fails.
\DeclareMathSymbol{\xx}{\mathbin}{AMSb}{\times}
$2\xx(8+8+1)$
outputs
2 −1,0,1,−1.3,1.3,−1,0,1 [7] ∗ 2(8 + 8 + 1).

xis always bigger than that next to the+” is not true. Please try$2 \times (8+8+1)$\par$2 + (8+8+1)$and you will see that the spacing around\timesis exactly the same as the+. I think you are “tricked” by the symbol itself. The\timeslooks smaller than the+, so you feel that there is more surrounding space. – Ruixi Zhang Jan 19 '19 at 16:37a x bis very common in the text and Latex loves to stretch these occurrences to fix its spacing issues. By limiting its room for maneuvera x bdoes not always look so stretched out all the time. – Johan Jan 19 '19 at 16:59