48

I have been looking for an answer for some time now, hope you could give me a quick tip.

I have an equation with many divisions inside. i.e:

$\frac{\frac{a_1}{a_2}} {\frac{b_1}{b_2}}$

To make it more readable, I decided to change the large fraction into "/" sign. i.e.

$\frac{a_1}{a_2} / \frac{b_1}{b_2}$

The problem is that the "/" sign remains small, and it is quite ugly.

How do I change the "/" sign to have a big font? How do I make it more readable?

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  • 8
    Can this get moved to tex.stackexchange.com ? It'd be on topic there. Dec 29, 2014 at 18:15

3 Answers 3

45

I found the answer I was looking for. The thing to use here is the construct of

\left \middle \right

For example, in this case, two possible solutions are:

$\left( {\frac{a_1}{a_2}} \middle/ {\frac{b_1}{b_2}} \right) $

Or, in case the brackets are not necessary:

$\left. {\frac{a_1}{a_2}} \middle/ {\frac{b_1}{b_2}} \right. $
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  • 1
    Looks like this will only work in an extended version eTeX or eLaTeX. Mar 24, 2010 at 13:52
  • @Alexey, I think that I have a basic version of latex, with nothing special, and it works for me. Actually, I'm not sure how I can check which version I have.
    – Anna
    Mar 24, 2010 at 13:57
  • No need to check the version. Works for you? fine! I have read TeXbook written by Donald Knuth, and was surprised to see the new macro. I started to look for more details on the Internet. I found that there is expansion of TeX. +1 Mar 24, 2010 at 14:51
27

Another option is to use \dfrac instead of \frac, which makes the whole fraction larger and hence more readable.

And no, I don't know if there is an option to get something in between \frac and \dfrac, sorry.

1
  • Is there a way to make the equation somewhere between \frac and \dfrac ? - When I use \dfrac the equation is 4 lines long, which is a bit too much.
    – Anna
    Mar 24, 2010 at 11:20
22

A possible soluttion that requires tweaking, but is very flexible is to use one of \big, \Big, \bigg,\Bigg in front of your division sign - these will make it progressively larger. For your formula, I think

  $\frac{a_1}{a_2} \Big/ \frac{b_1}{b_2}$

looks nicer than \middle\ which is automatically sized and IMHO is a bit too large.

2
  • Thanks, because \middle/ did not work for me (LaTeXIt, version 2015) Aug 15, 2018 at 13:33
  • 1
    Is there anything larger than / but smaller than \big/? Both sizes appear in this sample. Using Jupyter built-in MathML, not sure it follows all standards.
    – mins
    Apr 9, 2021 at 17:54

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