I'm preparing an essay which should contain the following letter:
I'm a newbie in the world of TEX, and I don't know how to get it. Can somebody help me?
I'm preparing an essay which should contain the following letter:
I'm a newbie in the world of TEX, and I don't know how to get it. Can somebody help me?
The glyph shown in your screenshot is a so-called "calligraphic" uppercase letter Q. Write \mathcal{Q} to typeset it, in math mode, in a LaTeX document.
Various math font packages provide a rather broad range of forms of (math-) calligraphic letters; see pp. 6 to 8 of the user guide of the mathalfa package for several dozen variants of calligraphic-Q; type texdoc mathalfa at a command prompt to load the user guide in a pdf viewer. The package's user guide distinguishes among four [4!] main subtypes of calligraphic letters: "Upright", "Restrained", "Embellished", and "Heavily Sloped". In case you're curious: If no font packages are loaded, i.e., if just the basic Computer Modern fonts are loaded, mathalfa classifies the style of the glyph that's produced by \mathcal{Q} as "Restrained". In contrast, mathalfa classifies the style of the letter shown in your screenshot as "Embellished".
In order to generate the specific glyph shown in the screenshot you posted, you will need to load the mtpro2 font package with the option mtpcal, i.e., run \usepackage[mtpcal]{mtpro2} in the preamble. Alternatively, you could run \usepackage[cal=mt]{mathalfa}, still in the preamble. With either setup, type \mathcal{Q} in the body of the document to generate the desired glyph.
Do be aware, though, that the mtpro2 (short for "MathTime Professional II") font package is not free of charge and is thus not likely to be installed as part of your TeX distribution.
\documentclass[border=1pt]{standalone}
%%\usepackage[mtpcal]{mtpro2}
\usepackage[cal=mt]{mathalfa}
\begin{document}
$\mathcal{Q}$
\end{document}
! Font U/mt2ms/m/it/10=mt2mst at 10.0pt not loadable: Metric (TFM) file not found.
What does it mean?
– Tuan A. Nguyen Jul 09 '19 at 04:48mtpro2 package is not installed on your system. As I wrote in my answer, this isn't exactly surprising, as the package isn't free of charge and must be obtained from an external site. If you want to obtain this font package, do check out the information at https://www.pctex.com/mtpro2.html.
– Mico
Jul 09 '19 at 05:17
\mathcal{Q}(in math mode)? – Mico Jul 09 '19 at 04:05