I don't like the look of the standard integral typesetting. Does anyone know where to find an integral symbol like the one in the following image?
Asked
Active
Viewed 258 times
0
-
1Welcome to TeX.SE! See here: https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/222243/how-to-obtain-a-bold-upright-integral-sign – CarLaTeX Oct 03 '19 at 04:40
-
1There is no such thing as „standard integral typesetting“ — it‘s determined entirely by the math font that’s been loaded. It looks like you’re looking for a Times Roman clone — which one? (There are quite a few Tins Roman clone math fonts out there: not all of their integral symbols look alike.) – Mico Oct 03 '19 at 05:12
-
Thanks @Mico ! Where would I find a list of those fonts and the integral signs they produce? – Caelan Ravel Oct 03 '19 at 05:48
-
1@CaelanRavel - Please check out Suggest a “nice” font family for my basic LaTeX template (text and math), Which LuaLaTeX math fonts have complete symbol set?, and how to select math font in document. Since you appear to be interested in Times Roman-type fonts, just focus on the parts of the answers that touch on Times Roman clones. – Mico Oct 03 '19 at 05:57
