LaTeX/Special Characters

In this chapter we will tackle matters related to input encoding, typesetting diacritics and special characters.

In the following document, we will refer to special characters for all symbols other than the lowercase letters a–z, uppercase letters A-Z, figures 0–9, and English punctuation marks.

Some languages usually need a dedicated input system to ease document writing. This is the case for Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean and others. This specific matter will be tackled in Internationalization.

The rules for producing characters with diacritical marks, such as accents, differ somewhat depending whether you are in text mode, math mode, or the tabbing environment.

Input encoding
TeX uses ASCII by default. But 128 characters is not enough to support non-English languages. TeX has its own way of doing that with commands for every diacritical marking (see Escaped codes). But if we want accents and other special characters to appear directly in the source file, we have to tell TeX that we want to use a different encoding.

There are several encodings available to LaTeX: In the following we will assume that you want to use UTF-8.
 * ASCII: the default. Only bare English characters are supported in the source file.
 * ISO-8859-1 (a.k.a., Latin 1): 8-bits encoding. It supports most characters for Latin languages, but that's it.
 * UTF-8: a Unicode multi-byte encoding. Supports the complete Unicode specification.
 * Others...

There are some important steps to specify encoding.
 * Make sure your text editor decodes the file in UTF-8.
 * Make sure it saves your file in UTF-8. Most text editors do not make the distinction, but some do, such as Notepad++.
 * If you are working in a terminal, make sure it is set to support UTF-8 input and output. Some old Unix terminals may not support UTF-8. PuTTY is not set to use UTF-8 by default, you have to configure it.
 * Tell LaTeX that the source file is UTF-8 encoded.

package tells LaTeX what the text encoding format of your .tex files is.

The inputenc package allows the user to change the encoding within the document as well — by means of the command.

Extending the support
The LaTeX support of UTF-8 is fairly specific: it includes only a limited range of Unicode input characters. It only defines those symbols that are known to be available with the current font encoding. You might encounter a situation where using UTF-8 might result in error:

! Package inputenc Error: Unicode char \u8:ũ not set up for use with LaTeX.

This is due to the utf8 definition not necessarily having a mapping of all the character glyphs you are able to enter on your keyboard. Such characters include, for example:

ŷ Ŷ ũ Ũ ẽ Ẽ ĩ Ĩ

In such case, you may try to use the option to define more character combinations. is not officially supported, but can be viable in some cases. However, it might break up compatibility with some packages like.

Another possiblity is to stick with and to define the characters yourself. This is easy:

where is the unicode codepoint of the desired character. is what to print when the character matching the codepoint is met. You may find codepoints on this site. Codepoints are easy to find on the web. Example:

Now inputting ŷ will effectively print ŷ.

Escaped codes
In addition to direct UTF-8 input, LaTeX supports the composition of special characters as well. This is convenient if your keyboard lacks some desired accents and other diacritics.

The following accents may be placed on letters. Although "o" letter is used in most of the examples, the accents may be placed on any letter. Accents may even be placed above a "missing" letter; for example, produces a tilde over a blank space.

The following commands may be used only in paragraph (default) or LR (left-right) mode.

Older versions of LaTeX would not remove the dot on top of the i and j letters when adding a diacritic. To correct this, one had to use the dotless version of these letters, by typing and. For example:
 * should be used for i-circumflex î;
 * should be used for i-umlaut ï.

However, current versions of LaTeX do not need this anymore (and may, in fact, crash with an error).

If a document is to be written completely in a language that requires particular diacritics several times, then using the right configuration allows those characters to be written directly in the document. For example, to achieve easier coding of umlauts, the babel package can be configured as. This provides the short hand for. This is very useful if one needs to use some text accents in a label, since no backslash will be accepted otherwise.

More information regarding language configuration can be found in the Internationalization section.

Less than
The two symbols '<' and '>' are actually ASCII characters, but you may have noticed that they will print '¡' and '¿' respectively. This is a font encoding issue. If you want them to print their real symbol, you will have to use another font encoding such as T1, loaded with the package. See Fonts for more details on font encoding.

Alternatively, they can be printed with dedicated commands:

Euro € currency symbol
When writing about money these days, you need the euro sign. The package features a  command which gives you the euro symbol as supplied by your current text font. Depending on your chosen font this may be quite far from the official symbol.

An official version of the euro symbol is provided by. Load it in the preamble (optionally with the option):

then you can insert it with the command. Finally, if you want a euro symbol that matches with the current font style (e.g., bold, italics, etc.) you can use a different option:

again you can insert the euro symbol with.

Alternatively, you can use the package which also provides the official euro symbol.

Now that you have succeeded in printing a euro sign, you may want the '€' on your keyboard to actually print the euro sign as above. There is a simple method to do that. You must make sure you are using UTF-8 encoding along with a working or command.

Complete example:

Degree symbol for temperature and math
The easiest way to print temperature and angle values is to use the command from the  package, which works both in text and math mode:

For more information, see the documentation of the package.

A common mistake is to use the command. It will not print the correct character (though will). Use the package instead, which provides a  command.

For temperature, you can use the same command or opt for the package and write

Some keyboard layouts feature the degree symbol, you can use it directly if you are using UTF-8 and. For better results in terms of font quality, we recommend the use of an appropriate font, like :

Other symbols
LaTeX has many symbols at its disposal. The majority of them are within the mathematical domain, and later chapters will cover how to get access to them. For the more common text symbols, use the following commands:

Not mentioned in above table, tilde (~) is used in LaTeX code to produce non-breakable space. To get printed tilde sign, either write or. And a visible space ␣ can be created with.

For some more interesting symbols, the Postscript ZapfDingbats font is available thanks to the package. Add the declaration to your preamble:. Next, the command, will print the specified symbol. Here is a table of the available symbols:

.

Math mode
Several of the above and some similar accents can also be produced in math mode. The following commands may be used only in math mode.

When applying accents to letters and, you can use  and  to keep the dots from interfering with the accents:

Tabbing environment
Some of the accent marks used in running text have other uses in the tabbing environment. In that case they can be created with the following command:


 * for an acute accent
 * for a grave accent
 * for a macron accent

Unicode keyboard input
Some operating systems provide a keyboard combination to input any Unicode code point, the so-called unicode compose key.

Many X applications (*BSD and GNU/Linux) support the Ctrl+Shift+u combination. A " u " symbol should appear. Type the code point and press enter or space to actually print the character. Example:  20AC will print the euro character.

Desktop environments like GNOME and KDE may feature a customizable compose key for more memorizable sequences.

Xorg features advanced keyboard layouts with variants that let you enter a lot of characters easily with combination using the appropriate modifier, like Alt Gr. It highly depends on the selected layout+variant, so we suggest you to play a bit with your keyboard, preceding every key and dead key with the Alt Gr modifier.

In Windows, you can hold Alt and type a <tt> </tt> to get a desired character. For example, <Alt> + 0252 will print the German letter ü.

Notes and References
LaTeX/Посебни знакови