How to display two-rows bracket in Latex?

Does anyone know how to modify the following string in order to display the two-lines bracket?

str = '$$c_i =\{\begin{array}{l l} 1 \quad L\left(Q_i\right) < 0 \\ 0 \quad L\left(Q_i\right) \geq 0 \\ \end{array}$$';


The current output is the following:

The sign '{' has to embrace both rows (1 and 0).

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This isn't a programming question. Try superuser.com. –  Marcelo Cantos May 14 '10 at 12:30
there are 973 questions on latex.. I don't think he is off topic. –  Alessandro Cuttin May 14 '10 at 13:30
For displayed math, better use $...$ rather than $$...$$. –  Alessandro Cuttin May 14 '10 at 13:32

$$c_i =\begin{cases} 1 & L\left(Q_i\right) < 0 \ 0 & L\left(Q_i\right) \geq 0 \end{cases}$$

The tex file should have "\usepackage{amsmath}" in the preamble.

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I have tried to use the suggested string but it doesn't work. I am using it in Matlab text() function btw but I think it's not the case of Matlab. –  Niko Gamulin May 14 '10 at 14:58
Your document must have \usepackage{amsmath} in the preamble to use cases. I thought array was in amsmath also (its not), so i didn't mention it. Output should look like this: quicklatex.com/cache/ql_35c820f1064bb80a3d501080c0e8eec3.gif –  Niall Murphy May 14 '10 at 15:34
If you can't get that to work, try putting \left\{ before the array, and \right. afterwards. The \left and \right commands size delimiters appropriately for what's in the middle, and the . is an invisible delimiter. –  Antal S-Z May 14 '10 at 19:07

This is derived from Niall Murphy's answer, "tidied up" a bit:

$c_i = \begin{cases} 1 & L (Q_i) < 0 \\ 0 & L (Q_i) \geq 0 \end{cases}$


Note that the "\" becomes "\\", and I've removed the \left and \right parenthesis modifiers, which introduce unwanted (I think) space between L and (.

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Try add '\left' before '{' and '\rigth.' at the end.

It should look like

$$\alpha_t = \left { {{\sqrt{\frac1N},\; t = 0 } \atop {\sqrt{\frac2N},\; t \ne 0 } } \right.$$

or

$$\left{\begin{tabular}{l} \textbf{Y} = 0,299\textbf{R} + 0,587\textbf{G} + 0,114\textbf{B} \ \textbf{Cb} = 128 + 0,5\textbf{R} - 0,418688\textbf{G} - 0,081312\textbf{B} \ \textbf{Cr} = 128 - 0,168736\textbf{R} - 0,331264\textbf{G} - 0,53\textbf{B} \end{tabular} \right. $$

edit: It's eating \ before { :(

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