# In reStructuredText greek alpha needs “\\”, other greek letters only “\” when target is pdf

I recently discovered reST/Sphinx and tried to use it to document a python class I had written some time before.

After some experimentation I found out I needed to write :math:K_\\alpha to get the greek letter in the subscript while using the make latexpdf target. With a single \ there were errors. Strangely enough every other greek letter only needed a single \ to produce the desired output.

What is happening?

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To get a K followed by a subscripted α in inline text, use

:math:K_{\alpha}


Note curly braces and backticks. It works fine and is what you would expect based on these references:

In math markup used in Python docstrings, you need two backslashes (or use "raw" strings):

:math:K_{\\alpha}


Edit: I was wrong about the curly braces. It turns out that these two samples give the same result in the PDF output:

:math:K_{\alpha}


and

:math:K_\alpha

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Well, as I wrote, the single \ version works ok, just not with \alpha. E.g. \beta ist fine. It is irrelevant if there are {} around it or not. –  BandGap Feb 14 '13 at 10:37
I don't know what else to say. Both \alpha and \beta work fine for me using the syntax in my answer. I use Sphinx 1.1.3 and MikTex 2.9. –  mzjn Feb 14 '13 at 12:53
Ok. I use a linux system and, oddly enough, vim is showing me that \alpha will be interpreted as \a lpha, because it colors the a diffrently from the rest. With double slashes it's ok.. –  BandGap Feb 14 '13 at 16:43
So this is just a problem with text highlighting in vim? –  mzjn Feb 15 '13 at 18:16
Er no. It's just that vim seams to know that alpha needs a second \. It highlights it diffrently than all the other greek names, so there might be a an obscure specification, which vim knows about, but I don't. –  BandGap Feb 15 '13 at 21:48

Thank you so much for asking this. It finally helped me solve my related problem.

For me, \alpha and \beta both fail. They both fail even without the subscript part coming into play. But if I use the curly braces it works:

:math:\alpha


does not compile

:math:{\alpha}


gives me the symbol I want

:math:{\\alpha}


gives me the word 'alpha' written as adjacent math variables a, l, p, h, a.

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What is happening?

\a is interpreted as a control character ("bell", just like e.g. \n "end of line"). Notably, \b (backspace) could be a control character as well, but is for some reason not interpreted as such.

Note that another possible workaround is using raw strings (r"""some text"""), as noted also in the sphinx math documentation 2.

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