# Latex: how break a line when summing over two things [closed]

Lets say I want to sum over i \in S and i \in T. Currently I use:

\displaystyle \sum_{i \in S, i \in T} i


But this will display the sum-overs one after the other and not one above the other like I want.

How can I do this?

thanks

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This question appears to be off-topic because it is about LaTeX –  Flexo Jan 11 at 11:50

## closed as off-topic by Flexo♦Jan 11 at 11:50

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I don't understand the formula you are trying to typeset, but maybe this is what you want?

\sum_{i \in S \atop i \in T} i

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\atop doesn't give the right spacing. You should use amsmath and use \substack:

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{amsmath}
\begin{document}

$$\sum_{i \in S \atop i \in T} i$$

$$\sum_{\substack{i \in S\\ i \in T}} i$$

\end{document}


The results, first with \atop on the left and \substack on the right:

And then one above the other, first \atop:

then \substack:

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I'm trying to use substack, and it works fine, apart from one thing: when one of the terms in the substack is long (much longer than $i \in S$), then there is a long white space between the sum symbol and the term that is being summed up ($i$ in the example above). This white space corresponds to the width of the substack... How can I solve it so that it takes less space? –  pms Mar 25 '13 at 0:11
@pms You should ask that as a new question, and probably best over at tex.stackexchange.com –  Tobias Kienzler Apr 25 '13 at 14:02
Using the amsmath macros is good semantically, but I prefer the spacing with \atop. –  Charles Stewart Dec 7 '13 at 4:47