# Define every symbol as a command in LaTeX

I'm working on a large project involving multiple documents typeset in LaTeX. I want to be consistent in my use of symbols, so it might be a nice idea to define a command for every symbol that has a specific meaning throughout the project. Does anyone have any experience with this? Are there issues I should pay attention to?

A little more specific. Say that, throughout the document I would denote something called permability by a script P, would it be an idea to define

\providecommand{\permeability}{\mathscr{P}}


or would this be more like the case "defining a command for $n$"?

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I have been doing this for anything that has a specific meaning and is longer than a single symbol, mostly to save typing:

\newcommand{\objId}{\mbox{$\mathit{objId}$}\xspace}
\newcommand{\insOp}[1]{#1\mbox{$^+$}\xspace}
\newcommand{\delOp}[1]{#1\mbox{$^-$}\xspace}


However then I noticed that I stopped making inconsistency errors (objId vs ObjId vs ObjID), so I agree that it is a nice idea.

However I am not sure if it is a good idea in case symbols in the output are, well, single Latin symbols, as in:

\newcommand{\numOfObjs}{$n$}


It is too easy to type a single symbol and forget about it even though a command was defined for it.

EDIT: using your example IMHO it'd be a good idea to define \permeability because it is more than a single P that you have to type in without the command. But it's a close call.

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Thanks. I think I'll use command, especially because I tend to change my notation sometimes. –  Martijn Jun 25 '09 at 6:25

A few tips:

• Using \providecommand will define that command only if it's not been previously defined. So if you're not getting the results you expected, you may be trying to define a command that's been defined elsewhere.
• If you wrap the math in your commands with \ensuremath, it will do the right thing regardless of whether you're in math mode when you issue the command:

\providecommand{\permeability}{\ensuremath{\mathscr{P}}}
Now I can easily use \permeability in text or $\permeability$ in math mode.

• Using your own commands allows you to easily change the typographical representation of something later. For instance:

\newcommand{\vect}[1]{\ensuremath{\mathbf{#1}}}


would print \vect{x} as a boldfaced x. If you later decide you prefer arrows above your vectors, you could change the command to:

\newcommand{\vect}[1]{\ensuremath{\vec{#1}}}

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