The integral that I want to write is the integral cross, I want to put an “x” on the integral...
3 Answers
If you use lualatex/xelatex, you can load some font that has the slot u+02A18, which can be accessed by \intx. The New Computer Modern font has it (I use the nice slightly bolder version below).
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{unicode-math}
\setmainfont{NewCM10-Book.otf}
\setmathfont{NewCMMath-Book.otf}
\begin{document}
[\intx_G f(x), d\mu(x)]
\end{document}
Result:
- 8,685
Shamelessly borrowing (stealing?) some code from the posting The Principal Value Integral symbol on the TeX-FAQ site, here's a suggestion for a directive called \intmult -- short for "multiplicative integral".
IMNSHO, I think that this version of the multiplicative integral symbol actually looks a lot better than the one in the paper by Dasgupta. (In the Dasgupta paper, the intersection of the \times symbol does not lie on top of the integral symbol.)
\documentclass{article}
% The following code is copied from https://texfaq.org/FAQ-prinvalint
\def\Xint#1{\mathchoice
{\XXint\displaystyle\textstyle{#1}}%
{\XXint\textstyle\scriptstyle{#1}}%
{\XXint\scriptstyle\scriptscriptstyle{#1}}%
{\XXint\scriptscriptstyle\scriptscriptstyle{#1}}%
!\int}
\def\XXint#1#2#3{{\setbox0=\hbox{$#1{#2#3}{\int}$}
\vcenter{\hbox{$#2#3$}}\kern-.5\wd0}}
\def\intmult{\Xint\times}
\begin{document}
$\displaystyle\intmult_0^1 \quad \textstyle\intmult_0^1$ \qquad vs.\qquad
$\displaystyle\int_0^1 \quad \textstyle\int_0^1$
\end{document}
- 506,678
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4I think this looks better than what they do in the linked paper. Their integrals on page 8 and page 11 differ. – mickep Feb 15 '22 at 09:20
There is also a possibility to use stix font. I remember that stix font change all the math-font of the whole tex document. Alternatively you can declare only the symbol of the integral, but I think that this is not a good approach.
\documentclass[a4paper,12pt]{article}
\usepackage{stix}
\usepackage{mathtools}
\begin{document}
\[\intx_C f(z)dz\]
$\intx_C f(z)dz$
\end{document}
Alternatively you can use a primitive simple syntax using \kern.
\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage{mathtools,amssymb}
\begin{document}
$\int_D\kern-1.2em\scriptstyle \times\kern.5em f(z)dz$
[\int_D\kern-1.1em\scriptstyle \times\kern.5em f(z)dz]
\end{document}
- 54,118
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1Thank you! I prefered to not use the “stick” package because it changes the style of all my paper, but I will take for the next works! – Federico Romagnani Feb 23 '22 at 08:59
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@FedericoRomagnani Hi Federico and thank you very much for your advice. Tanti saluti dalla Sicilia orientale. – Sebastiano Feb 23 '22 at 18:14





\times? Or bigger, or smaller? – Mico Feb 15 '22 at 08:39