I know there are at least a few ways to enter mathmode in a .tex document, including $ ... $, $$ ... $$, \( ... \), \[ ... \], \ensuremath{}, and maybe more.
Are there other ways to enter mathmode, and what are the differences between all of the possible ways to enter mathmode?
I at least know that the difference between \( ... \) and \[ ... \] is a difference between inline mathmode and display mathmode, respectively.
What are the differences between all of the other methods, and what are the pros and cons of each method? Are some meant to be used in certain cases; for example, are some meant for writing macros and others for actually writing content of the document?
I know that this question provides an answer at least for the difference between \[ ... \] and $$ ... $$, but I am curious to know more about how they are all different and what the pros and cons of each of them in different cases are (e.g., for macros, for content, etc.).
\begin{...} ... \end{...}and the ability to break lines with\\. many such are defined byamsmath; check the user documentation:texdoc amsldocon a tex live system. – barbara beeton Jul 10 '13 at 13:38\ensuremath{}and$ ... $(can) interact with one another. I'm interested in an explicit comparison of the different ways of entering mathmode, what they do, how they differ, and best practices for using the different methods. – Adam Liter Jul 10 '13 at 13:43