Latex for-and in equation












4















I need to write equation as shown in the attached image in LaTex. So far, I have written it like shown below but I can't figure out how to separate (or write properly) the "for" and "and" part of the equation similar to that shown in the image.



begin{equation}    
P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) for delta_S>delta_{0S} and delta_L<delta_{0L}
end{equation}


enter image description here
I request for help to correct the code. Thank you










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    I tend to use qquadtext{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}, this way the math and condition has proper semantic markup

    – daleif
    Mar 25 at 17:15
















4















I need to write equation as shown in the attached image in LaTex. So far, I have written it like shown below but I can't figure out how to separate (or write properly) the "for" and "and" part of the equation similar to that shown in the image.



begin{equation}    
P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) for delta_S>delta_{0S} and delta_L<delta_{0L}
end{equation}


enter image description here
I request for help to correct the code. Thank you










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    I tend to use qquadtext{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}, this way the math and condition has proper semantic markup

    – daleif
    Mar 25 at 17:15














4












4








4








I need to write equation as shown in the attached image in LaTex. So far, I have written it like shown below but I can't figure out how to separate (or write properly) the "for" and "and" part of the equation similar to that shown in the image.



begin{equation}    
P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) for delta_S>delta_{0S} and delta_L<delta_{0L}
end{equation}


enter image description here
I request for help to correct the code. Thank you










share|improve this question
















I need to write equation as shown in the attached image in LaTex. So far, I have written it like shown below but I can't figure out how to separate (or write properly) the "for" and "and" part of the equation similar to that shown in the image.



begin{equation}    
P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) for delta_S>delta_{0S} and delta_L<delta_{0L}
end{equation}


enter image description here
I request for help to correct the code. Thank you







math-mode equations






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Mar 25 at 17:20









TeXnician

25.9k63390




25.9k63390










asked Mar 25 at 17:12









JackJack

5015




5015








  • 1





    I tend to use qquadtext{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}, this way the math and condition has proper semantic markup

    – daleif
    Mar 25 at 17:15














  • 1





    I tend to use qquadtext{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}, this way the math and condition has proper semantic markup

    – daleif
    Mar 25 at 17:15








1




1





I tend to use qquadtext{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}, this way the math and condition has proper semantic markup

– daleif
Mar 25 at 17:15





I tend to use qquadtext{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}, this way the math and condition has proper semantic markup

– daleif
Mar 25 at 17:15










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















6














You can use align*.



align



documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
begin{document}
begin{align*}
P_d(delta_L) &= P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
&phantom{{}={}}text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
end{align*}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

































    6














    Numbered...



    documentclass{article}
    usepackage{amsmath,amssymb}
    begin{document}
    begin{equation}
    begin{aligned}[b]
    P_d(delta_L)={}&P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
    & text{for } delta_S>delta_{0S} text{ and } delta_L<delta_{0L}
    end{aligned}
    end{equation}
    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer































      1














      Your picture hints you're using a two-column format. Here's my proposal with multlined:



      documentclass[twocolumn]{article}
      usepackage{amsmath,mathtools}
      usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath}

      usepackage{lipsum} % for context

      begin{document}

      lipsum*[3]
      begin{equation}
      begin{multlined}[b][0.66displaywidth]
      P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) \
      text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
      end{multlined}
      end{equation}
      lipsum[4]

      end{document}


      The lipsum package is just to provide context. The newtx... packages are to get Times-like fonts as in your picture.



      enter image description here






      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









        6














        You can use align*.



        align



        documentclass{article}
        usepackage{amsmath}
        begin{document}
        begin{align*}
        P_d(delta_L) &= P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
        &phantom{{}={}}text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
        end{align*}
        end{document}





        share|improve this answer






























          6














          You can use align*.



          align



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{amsmath}
          begin{document}
          begin{align*}
          P_d(delta_L) &= P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
          &phantom{{}={}}text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
          end{align*}
          end{document}





          share|improve this answer




























            6












            6








            6







            You can use align*.



            align



            documentclass{article}
            usepackage{amsmath}
            begin{document}
            begin{align*}
            P_d(delta_L) &= P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
            &phantom{{}={}}text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
            end{align*}
            end{document}





            share|improve this answer















            You can use align*.



            align



            documentclass{article}
            usepackage{amsmath}
            begin{document}
            begin{align*}
            P_d(delta_L) &= P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
            &phantom{{}={}}text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
            end{align*}
            end{document}






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Mar 25 at 17:18

























            answered Mar 25 at 17:15









            TeXnicianTeXnician

            25.9k63390




            25.9k63390























                6














                Numbered...



                documentclass{article}
                usepackage{amsmath,amssymb}
                begin{document}
                begin{equation}
                begin{aligned}[b]
                P_d(delta_L)={}&P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
                & text{for } delta_S>delta_{0S} text{ and } delta_L<delta_{0L}
                end{aligned}
                end{equation}
                end{document}


                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer




























                  6














                  Numbered...



                  documentclass{article}
                  usepackage{amsmath,amssymb}
                  begin{document}
                  begin{equation}
                  begin{aligned}[b]
                  P_d(delta_L)={}&P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
                  & text{for } delta_S>delta_{0S} text{ and } delta_L<delta_{0L}
                  end{aligned}
                  end{equation}
                  end{document}


                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer


























                    6












                    6








                    6







                    Numbered...



                    documentclass{article}
                    usepackage{amsmath,amssymb}
                    begin{document}
                    begin{equation}
                    begin{aligned}[b]
                    P_d(delta_L)={}&P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
                    & text{for } delta_S>delta_{0S} text{ and } delta_L<delta_{0L}
                    end{aligned}
                    end{equation}
                    end{document}


                    enter image description here






                    share|improve this answer













                    Numbered...



                    documentclass{article}
                    usepackage{amsmath,amssymb}
                    begin{document}
                    begin{equation}
                    begin{aligned}[b]
                    P_d(delta_L)={}&P_p(delta_S,L_S)\
                    & text{for } delta_S>delta_{0S} text{ and } delta_L<delta_{0L}
                    end{aligned}
                    end{equation}
                    end{document}


                    enter image description here







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Mar 25 at 17:16









                    Steven B. SegletesSteven B. Segletes

                    160k9204413




                    160k9204413























                        1














                        Your picture hints you're using a two-column format. Here's my proposal with multlined:



                        documentclass[twocolumn]{article}
                        usepackage{amsmath,mathtools}
                        usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath}

                        usepackage{lipsum} % for context

                        begin{document}

                        lipsum*[3]
                        begin{equation}
                        begin{multlined}[b][0.66displaywidth]
                        P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) \
                        text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
                        end{multlined}
                        end{equation}
                        lipsum[4]

                        end{document}


                        The lipsum package is just to provide context. The newtx... packages are to get Times-like fonts as in your picture.



                        enter image description here






                        share|improve this answer




























                          1














                          Your picture hints you're using a two-column format. Here's my proposal with multlined:



                          documentclass[twocolumn]{article}
                          usepackage{amsmath,mathtools}
                          usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath}

                          usepackage{lipsum} % for context

                          begin{document}

                          lipsum*[3]
                          begin{equation}
                          begin{multlined}[b][0.66displaywidth]
                          P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) \
                          text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
                          end{multlined}
                          end{equation}
                          lipsum[4]

                          end{document}


                          The lipsum package is just to provide context. The newtx... packages are to get Times-like fonts as in your picture.



                          enter image description here






                          share|improve this answer


























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            Your picture hints you're using a two-column format. Here's my proposal with multlined:



                            documentclass[twocolumn]{article}
                            usepackage{amsmath,mathtools}
                            usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath}

                            usepackage{lipsum} % for context

                            begin{document}

                            lipsum*[3]
                            begin{equation}
                            begin{multlined}[b][0.66displaywidth]
                            P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) \
                            text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
                            end{multlined}
                            end{equation}
                            lipsum[4]

                            end{document}


                            The lipsum package is just to provide context. The newtx... packages are to get Times-like fonts as in your picture.



                            enter image description here






                            share|improve this answer













                            Your picture hints you're using a two-column format. Here's my proposal with multlined:



                            documentclass[twocolumn]{article}
                            usepackage{amsmath,mathtools}
                            usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath}

                            usepackage{lipsum} % for context

                            begin{document}

                            lipsum*[3]
                            begin{equation}
                            begin{multlined}[b][0.66displaywidth]
                            P_d(delta_L)=P_p(delta_S,L_S) \
                            text{for $delta_S>delta_{0S}$ and $delta_L<delta_{0L}$}
                            end{multlined}
                            end{equation}
                            lipsum[4]

                            end{document}


                            The lipsum package is just to provide context. The newtx... packages are to get Times-like fonts as in your picture.



                            enter image description here







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Mar 25 at 18:23









                            egregegreg

                            730k8819283242




                            730k8819283242






























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