Math equation in non italic font












1















I am trying to write the following $T_E$ but it appears in italic font. I tried also $text{T_E}$ but LaTeX gives me error.










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  • Welcome to TeX.SE! Can you explain what you want to do? Can you show a short compilable code you have so far?

    – Kurt
    4 hours ago








  • 1





    Do you want all math in upright font or only this specific expression?

    – samcarter
    3 hours ago
















1















I am trying to write the following $T_E$ but it appears in italic font. I tried also $text{T_E}$ but LaTeX gives me error.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Welcome to TeX.SE! Can you explain what you want to do? Can you show a short compilable code you have so far?

    – Kurt
    4 hours ago








  • 1





    Do you want all math in upright font or only this specific expression?

    – samcarter
    3 hours ago














1












1








1








I am trying to write the following $T_E$ but it appears in italic font. I tried also $text{T_E}$ but LaTeX gives me error.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am trying to write the following $T_E$ but it appears in italic font. I tried also $text{T_E}$ but LaTeX gives me error.







math-mode italic






share|improve this question









New contributor




Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago









Kurt

39.4k850164




39.4k850164






New contributor




Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 4 hours ago









GinaGina

61




61




New contributor




Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Gina is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Welcome to TeX.SE! Can you explain what you want to do? Can you show a short compilable code you have so far?

    – Kurt
    4 hours ago








  • 1





    Do you want all math in upright font or only this specific expression?

    – samcarter
    3 hours ago



















  • Welcome to TeX.SE! Can you explain what you want to do? Can you show a short compilable code you have so far?

    – Kurt
    4 hours ago








  • 1





    Do you want all math in upright font or only this specific expression?

    – samcarter
    3 hours ago

















Welcome to TeX.SE! Can you explain what you want to do? Can you show a short compilable code you have so far?

– Kurt
4 hours ago







Welcome to TeX.SE! Can you explain what you want to do? Can you show a short compilable code you have so far?

– Kurt
4 hours ago






1




1





Do you want all math in upright font or only this specific expression?

– samcarter
3 hours ago





Do you want all math in upright font or only this specific expression?

– samcarter
3 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3














The following examples illustrates several possible solutions.



documentclass{scrartcl}
usepackage{amsmath}

newcommand{testline}{Text $mathrm{T}_mathrm{E}$ or $text{T}_text{E}$ or $textup{T}_textup{E}$ or Ttextsubscript E}

begin{document}

testline

itshapetestline

sffamilyupshapetestline

itshapetestline

rmfamilyupshapebfseries%as before but bold

testline

itshapetestline

sffamilyupshapetestline

itshapetestline

end{document}


enter image description here



Observe that some of them adopt the style and font of the text.






share|improve this answer


























  • I'd rather use mathrm

    – Bernard
    4 hours ago








  • 1





    It works!! Thanks a lot :)

    – Gina
    4 hours ago











  • @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

    – Bernard
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

    – CampanIgnis
    4 hours ago



















2














Depending of if you are actually writing math or text:



 documentclass{article}

begin{document}
$mathrm{T}_{mathrm{E}}$ or Ttextsubscript{E}

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer































    1














    With the Modern Toolchain



    With the unicode-math package (which I personally recommend, although not everyone agrees), mathrm is still supported for backwards compatibility, but so is the synonym mathup, and the closely-related symup.



    If you use symup, you can specify a different upright font from the regular text font, and from operator names like log, sin and lim. My go-to example is setting Euler’s identity in ISO style, that is, with symbolic constants set in an upright font, with the constants e, π and i in Euler and everything else in Palatino. It’s a good example of why you might want a different upright font for math variables.



    documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

    usepackage{mathtools}
    usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}

    setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
    defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchLowercase}

    setmathfont{Asana Math}
    setmathfont[range={up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek},
    bfup/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}},
    script-features={}, sscript-features={}
    ]{Neo Euler}

    newcommandupe{symup{e}}
    newcommandupi{symup{i}}

    begin{document}
    begin{align*}
    upe^{upi x} &= cos{x} + upi sin{x} \
    upe^{upi uppi} + 1 &= 0
    end{align*}
    end{document}


    Neo Euler sample



    (If you want to do something like this with the default font, you can try either Latin Modern Roman Unslanted or CMU Serif Upright Italic. Here’s a sample of the latter:



    documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

    usepackage{amsmath}
    usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}
    setmathfont{Latin Modern Math}
    setmathfont[range=up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}]{CMU Serif Upright Italic}

    begin{document}
    begin{align*}
    symup{e}^{symup{i} x} &= cos{x} + symup{i} sin{x} \
    symup{e}^{symup{i pi}} + 1 &= 0
    end{align*}
    end{document}


    CMU Serif Upright Italic Sample



    The symup command is intended to be used this way. The mathrm and mathup commands are more for words in equations, like naming variables TIME and ENERGY. Another good alternative for whole words is to use operatorname from amsmath. This formats the text like log or sin, that is, inserts spacing like 2 log x rather than 2logx.



    There are similarly mathtt and mathsfup for monospaced and sans-serif letters.



    You could also, for example, do newcommandTIME{mathop{mbox{scshape time}}} to get TIME in small caps, with the spacing of an operator.



    You can make upright math variables the default by loading the package with usepackage[math-style=upright]{unicode-math}.



    With the Legacy Toolchain



    The eulerpx package implements the popular combination of Euler math variables and Palatino text, along with symbols from newpxmath. If you want upright letters in PDFLaTeX, this in my opinion is the most attractive package for them.



    The cfr-lm package makes upright italics easily available; with this package, you could write DeclareRobusTCommandmathui[1]{mbox{uishape #1}} to get upright italics. The example I gave earlier with scshape for small-caps would work as well.



    To format a variable name in the default font, operatorname from amsmath is a good option.



    For a more complicated use case, there are DeclareMathAlphabet and DeclareMathSymbol.






    share|improve this answer

























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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      3














      The following examples illustrates several possible solutions.



      documentclass{scrartcl}
      usepackage{amsmath}

      newcommand{testline}{Text $mathrm{T}_mathrm{E}$ or $text{T}_text{E}$ or $textup{T}_textup{E}$ or Ttextsubscript E}

      begin{document}

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      rmfamilyupshapebfseries%as before but bold

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      end{document}


      enter image description here



      Observe that some of them adopt the style and font of the text.






      share|improve this answer


























      • I'd rather use mathrm

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago








      • 1





        It works!! Thanks a lot :)

        – Gina
        4 hours ago











      • @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

        – CampanIgnis
        4 hours ago
















      3














      The following examples illustrates several possible solutions.



      documentclass{scrartcl}
      usepackage{amsmath}

      newcommand{testline}{Text $mathrm{T}_mathrm{E}$ or $text{T}_text{E}$ or $textup{T}_textup{E}$ or Ttextsubscript E}

      begin{document}

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      rmfamilyupshapebfseries%as before but bold

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      end{document}


      enter image description here



      Observe that some of them adopt the style and font of the text.






      share|improve this answer


























      • I'd rather use mathrm

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago








      • 1





        It works!! Thanks a lot :)

        – Gina
        4 hours ago











      • @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

        – CampanIgnis
        4 hours ago














      3












      3








      3







      The following examples illustrates several possible solutions.



      documentclass{scrartcl}
      usepackage{amsmath}

      newcommand{testline}{Text $mathrm{T}_mathrm{E}$ or $text{T}_text{E}$ or $textup{T}_textup{E}$ or Ttextsubscript E}

      begin{document}

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      rmfamilyupshapebfseries%as before but bold

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      end{document}


      enter image description here



      Observe that some of them adopt the style and font of the text.






      share|improve this answer















      The following examples illustrates several possible solutions.



      documentclass{scrartcl}
      usepackage{amsmath}

      newcommand{testline}{Text $mathrm{T}_mathrm{E}$ or $text{T}_text{E}$ or $textup{T}_textup{E}$ or Ttextsubscript E}

      begin{document}

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      rmfamilyupshapebfseries%as before but bold

      testline

      itshapetestline

      sffamilyupshapetestline

      itshapetestline

      end{document}


      enter image description here



      Observe that some of them adopt the style and font of the text.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 2 hours ago

























      answered 4 hours ago









      CampanIgnisCampanIgnis

      2,7542932




      2,7542932













      • I'd rather use mathrm

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago








      • 1





        It works!! Thanks a lot :)

        – Gina
        4 hours ago











      • @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

        – CampanIgnis
        4 hours ago



















      • I'd rather use mathrm

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago








      • 1





        It works!! Thanks a lot :)

        – Gina
        4 hours ago











      • @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

        – Bernard
        4 hours ago






      • 1





        @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

        – CampanIgnis
        4 hours ago

















      I'd rather use mathrm

      – Bernard
      4 hours ago







      I'd rather use mathrm

      – Bernard
      4 hours ago






      1




      1





      It works!! Thanks a lot :)

      – Gina
      4 hours ago





      It works!! Thanks a lot :)

      – Gina
      4 hours ago













      @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

      – Bernard
      4 hours ago





      @Gina: Just out of curiosity: must all your capital letters in formulæ be in uprightshape?

      – Bernard
      4 hours ago




      1




      1





      @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

      – CampanIgnis
      4 hours ago





      @Gina You are welcome. Please consider to upvote one or both answers and accept one of the two.

      – CampanIgnis
      4 hours ago











      2














      Depending of if you are actually writing math or text:



       documentclass{article}

      begin{document}
      $mathrm{T}_{mathrm{E}}$ or Ttextsubscript{E}

      end{document}


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer




























        2














        Depending of if you are actually writing math or text:



         documentclass{article}

        begin{document}
        $mathrm{T}_{mathrm{E}}$ or Ttextsubscript{E}

        end{document}


        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer


























          2












          2








          2







          Depending of if you are actually writing math or text:



           documentclass{article}

          begin{document}
          $mathrm{T}_{mathrm{E}}$ or Ttextsubscript{E}

          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer













          Depending of if you are actually writing math or text:



           documentclass{article}

          begin{document}
          $mathrm{T}_{mathrm{E}}$ or Ttextsubscript{E}

          end{document}


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 4 hours ago









          Ulrike FischerUlrike Fischer

          195k8302689




          195k8302689























              1














              With the Modern Toolchain



              With the unicode-math package (which I personally recommend, although not everyone agrees), mathrm is still supported for backwards compatibility, but so is the synonym mathup, and the closely-related symup.



              If you use symup, you can specify a different upright font from the regular text font, and from operator names like log, sin and lim. My go-to example is setting Euler’s identity in ISO style, that is, with symbolic constants set in an upright font, with the constants e, π and i in Euler and everything else in Palatino. It’s a good example of why you might want a different upright font for math variables.



              documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

              usepackage{mathtools}
              usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}

              setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
              defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchLowercase}

              setmathfont{Asana Math}
              setmathfont[range={up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek},
              bfup/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}},
              script-features={}, sscript-features={}
              ]{Neo Euler}

              newcommandupe{symup{e}}
              newcommandupi{symup{i}}

              begin{document}
              begin{align*}
              upe^{upi x} &= cos{x} + upi sin{x} \
              upe^{upi uppi} + 1 &= 0
              end{align*}
              end{document}


              Neo Euler sample



              (If you want to do something like this with the default font, you can try either Latin Modern Roman Unslanted or CMU Serif Upright Italic. Here’s a sample of the latter:



              documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

              usepackage{amsmath}
              usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}
              setmathfont{Latin Modern Math}
              setmathfont[range=up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}]{CMU Serif Upright Italic}

              begin{document}
              begin{align*}
              symup{e}^{symup{i} x} &= cos{x} + symup{i} sin{x} \
              symup{e}^{symup{i pi}} + 1 &= 0
              end{align*}
              end{document}


              CMU Serif Upright Italic Sample



              The symup command is intended to be used this way. The mathrm and mathup commands are more for words in equations, like naming variables TIME and ENERGY. Another good alternative for whole words is to use operatorname from amsmath. This formats the text like log or sin, that is, inserts spacing like 2 log x rather than 2logx.



              There are similarly mathtt and mathsfup for monospaced and sans-serif letters.



              You could also, for example, do newcommandTIME{mathop{mbox{scshape time}}} to get TIME in small caps, with the spacing of an operator.



              You can make upright math variables the default by loading the package with usepackage[math-style=upright]{unicode-math}.



              With the Legacy Toolchain



              The eulerpx package implements the popular combination of Euler math variables and Palatino text, along with symbols from newpxmath. If you want upright letters in PDFLaTeX, this in my opinion is the most attractive package for them.



              The cfr-lm package makes upright italics easily available; with this package, you could write DeclareRobusTCommandmathui[1]{mbox{uishape #1}} to get upright italics. The example I gave earlier with scshape for small-caps would work as well.



              To format a variable name in the default font, operatorname from amsmath is a good option.



              For a more complicated use case, there are DeclareMathAlphabet and DeclareMathSymbol.






              share|improve this answer






























                1














                With the Modern Toolchain



                With the unicode-math package (which I personally recommend, although not everyone agrees), mathrm is still supported for backwards compatibility, but so is the synonym mathup, and the closely-related symup.



                If you use symup, you can specify a different upright font from the regular text font, and from operator names like log, sin and lim. My go-to example is setting Euler’s identity in ISO style, that is, with symbolic constants set in an upright font, with the constants e, π and i in Euler and everything else in Palatino. It’s a good example of why you might want a different upright font for math variables.



                documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

                usepackage{mathtools}
                usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}

                setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
                defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchLowercase}

                setmathfont{Asana Math}
                setmathfont[range={up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek},
                bfup/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}},
                script-features={}, sscript-features={}
                ]{Neo Euler}

                newcommandupe{symup{e}}
                newcommandupi{symup{i}}

                begin{document}
                begin{align*}
                upe^{upi x} &= cos{x} + upi sin{x} \
                upe^{upi uppi} + 1 &= 0
                end{align*}
                end{document}


                Neo Euler sample



                (If you want to do something like this with the default font, you can try either Latin Modern Roman Unslanted or CMU Serif Upright Italic. Here’s a sample of the latter:



                documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

                usepackage{amsmath}
                usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}
                setmathfont{Latin Modern Math}
                setmathfont[range=up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}]{CMU Serif Upright Italic}

                begin{document}
                begin{align*}
                symup{e}^{symup{i} x} &= cos{x} + symup{i} sin{x} \
                symup{e}^{symup{i pi}} + 1 &= 0
                end{align*}
                end{document}


                CMU Serif Upright Italic Sample



                The symup command is intended to be used this way. The mathrm and mathup commands are more for words in equations, like naming variables TIME and ENERGY. Another good alternative for whole words is to use operatorname from amsmath. This formats the text like log or sin, that is, inserts spacing like 2 log x rather than 2logx.



                There are similarly mathtt and mathsfup for monospaced and sans-serif letters.



                You could also, for example, do newcommandTIME{mathop{mbox{scshape time}}} to get TIME in small caps, with the spacing of an operator.



                You can make upright math variables the default by loading the package with usepackage[math-style=upright]{unicode-math}.



                With the Legacy Toolchain



                The eulerpx package implements the popular combination of Euler math variables and Palatino text, along with symbols from newpxmath. If you want upright letters in PDFLaTeX, this in my opinion is the most attractive package for them.



                The cfr-lm package makes upright italics easily available; with this package, you could write DeclareRobusTCommandmathui[1]{mbox{uishape #1}} to get upright italics. The example I gave earlier with scshape for small-caps would work as well.



                To format a variable name in the default font, operatorname from amsmath is a good option.



                For a more complicated use case, there are DeclareMathAlphabet and DeclareMathSymbol.






                share|improve this answer




























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  With the Modern Toolchain



                  With the unicode-math package (which I personally recommend, although not everyone agrees), mathrm is still supported for backwards compatibility, but so is the synonym mathup, and the closely-related symup.



                  If you use symup, you can specify a different upright font from the regular text font, and from operator names like log, sin and lim. My go-to example is setting Euler’s identity in ISO style, that is, with symbolic constants set in an upright font, with the constants e, π and i in Euler and everything else in Palatino. It’s a good example of why you might want a different upright font for math variables.



                  documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

                  usepackage{mathtools}
                  usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}

                  setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
                  defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchLowercase}

                  setmathfont{Asana Math}
                  setmathfont[range={up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek},
                  bfup/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}},
                  script-features={}, sscript-features={}
                  ]{Neo Euler}

                  newcommandupe{symup{e}}
                  newcommandupi{symup{i}}

                  begin{document}
                  begin{align*}
                  upe^{upi x} &= cos{x} + upi sin{x} \
                  upe^{upi uppi} + 1 &= 0
                  end{align*}
                  end{document}


                  Neo Euler sample



                  (If you want to do something like this with the default font, you can try either Latin Modern Roman Unslanted or CMU Serif Upright Italic. Here’s a sample of the latter:



                  documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

                  usepackage{amsmath}
                  usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}
                  setmathfont{Latin Modern Math}
                  setmathfont[range=up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}]{CMU Serif Upright Italic}

                  begin{document}
                  begin{align*}
                  symup{e}^{symup{i} x} &= cos{x} + symup{i} sin{x} \
                  symup{e}^{symup{i pi}} + 1 &= 0
                  end{align*}
                  end{document}


                  CMU Serif Upright Italic Sample



                  The symup command is intended to be used this way. The mathrm and mathup commands are more for words in equations, like naming variables TIME and ENERGY. Another good alternative for whole words is to use operatorname from amsmath. This formats the text like log or sin, that is, inserts spacing like 2 log x rather than 2logx.



                  There are similarly mathtt and mathsfup for monospaced and sans-serif letters.



                  You could also, for example, do newcommandTIME{mathop{mbox{scshape time}}} to get TIME in small caps, with the spacing of an operator.



                  You can make upright math variables the default by loading the package with usepackage[math-style=upright]{unicode-math}.



                  With the Legacy Toolchain



                  The eulerpx package implements the popular combination of Euler math variables and Palatino text, along with symbols from newpxmath. If you want upright letters in PDFLaTeX, this in my opinion is the most attractive package for them.



                  The cfr-lm package makes upright italics easily available; with this package, you could write DeclareRobusTCommandmathui[1]{mbox{uishape #1}} to get upright italics. The example I gave earlier with scshape for small-caps would work as well.



                  To format a variable name in the default font, operatorname from amsmath is a good option.



                  For a more complicated use case, there are DeclareMathAlphabet and DeclareMathSymbol.






                  share|improve this answer















                  With the Modern Toolchain



                  With the unicode-math package (which I personally recommend, although not everyone agrees), mathrm is still supported for backwards compatibility, but so is the synonym mathup, and the closely-related symup.



                  If you use symup, you can specify a different upright font from the regular text font, and from operator names like log, sin and lim. My go-to example is setting Euler’s identity in ISO style, that is, with symbolic constants set in an upright font, with the constants e, π and i in Euler and everything else in Palatino. It’s a good example of why you might want a different upright font for math variables.



                  documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

                  usepackage{mathtools}
                  usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}

                  setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
                  defaultfontfeatures{Scale=MatchLowercase}

                  setmathfont{Asana Math}
                  setmathfont[range={up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek},
                  bfup/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}},
                  script-features={}, sscript-features={}
                  ]{Neo Euler}

                  newcommandupe{symup{e}}
                  newcommandupi{symup{i}}

                  begin{document}
                  begin{align*}
                  upe^{upi x} &= cos{x} + upi sin{x} \
                  upe^{upi uppi} + 1 &= 0
                  end{align*}
                  end{document}


                  Neo Euler sample



                  (If you want to do something like this with the default font, you can try either Latin Modern Roman Unslanted or CMU Serif Upright Italic. Here’s a sample of the latter:



                  documentclass[varwidth, preview]{standalone}

                  usepackage{amsmath}
                  usepackage[math-style=ISO]{unicode-math}
                  setmathfont{Latin Modern Math}
                  setmathfont[range=up/{Latin,latin,Greek,greek}]{CMU Serif Upright Italic}

                  begin{document}
                  begin{align*}
                  symup{e}^{symup{i} x} &= cos{x} + symup{i} sin{x} \
                  symup{e}^{symup{i pi}} + 1 &= 0
                  end{align*}
                  end{document}


                  CMU Serif Upright Italic Sample



                  The symup command is intended to be used this way. The mathrm and mathup commands are more for words in equations, like naming variables TIME and ENERGY. Another good alternative for whole words is to use operatorname from amsmath. This formats the text like log or sin, that is, inserts spacing like 2 log x rather than 2logx.



                  There are similarly mathtt and mathsfup for monospaced and sans-serif letters.



                  You could also, for example, do newcommandTIME{mathop{mbox{scshape time}}} to get TIME in small caps, with the spacing of an operator.



                  You can make upright math variables the default by loading the package with usepackage[math-style=upright]{unicode-math}.



                  With the Legacy Toolchain



                  The eulerpx package implements the popular combination of Euler math variables and Palatino text, along with symbols from newpxmath. If you want upright letters in PDFLaTeX, this in my opinion is the most attractive package for them.



                  The cfr-lm package makes upright italics easily available; with this package, you could write DeclareRobusTCommandmathui[1]{mbox{uishape #1}} to get upright italics. The example I gave earlier with scshape for small-caps would work as well.



                  To format a variable name in the default font, operatorname from amsmath is a good option.



                  For a more complicated use case, there are DeclareMathAlphabet and DeclareMathSymbol.







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                  edited 3 hours ago

























                  answered 3 hours ago









                  DavislorDavislor

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