# Latex: how to put line break in a math

I'd like to express the following sentence (source_location is also italic, it's not correctly rendered):

Each entry has a list of tuple: < *source_location*, R/W, trip_counter, occurrence, killed (explained in the later) >

My current workaround for this is:

$\left\langle \textit{source\_location}, \textit{R/W}, \textit{trip\_counter}, \textit{occurrence}, \textit{killed} \text{(explained in the later)} \right\rangle$


I'm using 2-column paper. This < .. > is too long, but no line break because it is a math. How do I automatically (or manually) put line break in such case? It seems that \left\langle and \right\rangle should be in a single math. So, hard to break into multiple maths.

$<$ and $>$ would be an alternative, but I don't like it.

Thanks!

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 I mistakenly did rollback, sorry. – minjang Nov 12 '09 at 2:52

Why not define a new command:

\newcommand{\tuple}[5]{$\langle$\textit{#1}, \textit{#2}, \textit{#3}, \textit{#4},
\textit{#5} (explained in the latter)$\rangle$}


Then use \tuple{sourcelocation}{R/W}{tripcounter}{occurrence}{killed}

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 Thanks Rob, I'll try it also. – minjang Nov 10 '09 at 3:41

LaTeX does allow inline maths to break over lines by default, but there are a number of restrictions. Specifically, in your case, using \left...\right puts everything inside a non-breakable math group, so the first step is to replace them with either just plain \langle...\rangle or perhaps \bigl\langle...\bigr\rangle.

However, this still isn't enough to permit linebreaking; usually that's still only allowed after relations or operators, not punctuation such as the comma. (I think this is what's going on anyway; I haven't stopped to look this up.) So you want indicate where allowable line breaks may occur by writing \linebreak[1] after each comma.

Depending how often you have to do this, it may be preferable to write a command to wrap your "tuples" into a nice command. In order to write this in your source:

$\mytuple{ source\_location, R/W, trip\_counter, occurrence, killed\upshape (explained in the later) }$


here's a definition of \mytuple that takes all of the above into account:

\makeatletter
\newcommand\mytuple[1]{%
\@tempcnta=0
\bigl\langle
\@for\@ii:=#1\do{%
\@insertbreakingcomma
\textit{\@ii}
}%
\bigr\rangle
}
\def\@insertbreakingcomma{%
\ifnum \@tempcnta = 0 \else\,,\ \linebreak[1] \fi
}
\makeatother

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Thanks a lot! I'll try it! – minjang Nov 10 '09 at 3:40
I appreciate your help. It was very useful to me, though I had to select Rob's answer. – minjang Nov 10 '09 at 9:58
No worries, there's no politics here! Well, he didn't exactly help you put a line break in math mode but his solution works just as well, unless you want more than four items in your tuple :) – Will Robertson Nov 10 '09 at 10:11
Thank you, this helped me too. – gphilip May 9 '11 at 12:39

There seems to be a package that addresses that problem, called breqn. You can try this and let us know (I haven't used that).

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 breqn is (great) for breaking display equations; the question is about inline maths inside a paragraph. – Will Robertson Nov 10 '09 at 2:57 You're right. Thanks. – Grzegorz Oledzki Nov 10 '09 at 8:27

I'd use the align* environment from AMSmath. Furthermore you could just add "\" to break the lines? Should work in math environments, too. Alternatively you could separate the equations.

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 Thanks, but \ and \\ just doesn't work. Separating equations would be an option, but \left\langle and \right\rangle don't allow a separate equation. – minjang Nov 9 '09 at 21:24

Use \linebreak inside the math expression wherever you want a new line even between 2 brackets. This will enforce the line to be broken.

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