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AMS-LaTeX

From HandWiki - Reading time: 2 min

AMS-LaTeX is a collection of LaTeX document classes and packages developed for the American Mathematical Society (AMS). Its additions to LaTeX include the typesetting of multi-line and other mathematical statements, document classes, and fonts containing numerous mathematical symbols.[1]

It has largely superseded the plain TeX macro package AMS-TeX. AMS-TeX was originally written by Michael Spivak, and was used by the AMS from 1983 to 1985.

MathJax supports AMS-LaTeX through extensions.[2]

The following code of the LaTeX2e produces the AMS-LaTeX logo:

%%% -- AMS-LaTeX_logo.tex -------
 \documentclass{article}
 \usepackage{amsmath}
 
 \begin{document}
 \AmS-\LaTeX
 \end{document}

The package has a suite of facilities to format multi-line equations. For example, the following code,

\begin{align}
    y &= (x+1)^2 \\
      &= x^2+2x+1
  \end{align}

causes the equals signs in the two lines to be aligned with one another, like this:

[math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} y &= (x+1)^2 \\ &= x^2+2x+1 \end{align} }[/math]

AMS-LaTeX also includes many flexible commands for formatting and numbering theorems, lemmas, etc. For example, one may use the environment theorem

\begin{theorem}[Pythagoras] Suppose $a\leq b\leq c$ are the side-lengths of a right triangle.\\  Then $a^2+b^2=c^2$.\end{theorem}
  \begin{proof}. . . \end{proof}

to generate

Theorem (Pythagoras) Suppose [math]\displaystyle{ a\leq b\leq c }[/math] are the side-lengths of a right triangle.
Then [math]\displaystyle{ a^2+b^2=c^2 }[/math].
Proof. . . □

See also

References

External links





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