# LaTeX, tildes and verbatim mode

Following on from this question, I'm totally stumped on getting LaTeX to give me a tilde when I'm in verbatim mode. It has to be a tilde because it's the type of a function!

sig symm : (Board, [(Int, Int)]) ~> Bool


Standard methods for displaying a tilde are printed verbatim, of course..

Any suggestions?

An edit to clarify: Typing a ~ in verbatim mode gives an accent above a blank space. I'm after a tilde as it appears at the beginning of this sentence.

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If there are some characters that do not occur in your input, you can use fancyvrb and its commandchars option to insert TeX commands within verbatim text:

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fancyvrb}
\begin{document}
\newcommand{\mytilde}{$\sim$}
\begin{Verbatim}[commandchars=\\\{\}]
sig symm : (Board, [(Int, Int)]) \mytilde> Bool
\end{Verbatim}
\end{document}


See the documentation of fancyvrb for more.

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That's exactly what I needed. Thanks a lot! – sjcorbett Mar 25 '09 at 18:04

Perhaps you should look at: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/300521/latex-package-to-do-syntax-highlighting-of-code-in-various-languages which has suggestions for typesetting code...

I assumed that listing would do it for you, but failing that alltt and fancyvrb are alternatives to verbatim. See this search on CTAN for other possibilities.

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That's an awful lot of effort just to get a tilde! And as far as I can see with experimenting and reading documentation, it still doesn't solve my problem. – sjcorbett Mar 25 '09 at 16:19
ooh, alltt looks cool – Noah Mar 25 '09 at 16:43
alltt looked promising but still appears to give the accented tilde. I'll hunt though the options of both packages, cheers. – sjcorbett Mar 25 '09 at 17:16

If you are using listing command, you can set the tilde to be literal. Likt this.

\documentclass
\usepackage{listings}
\lstset{
literate={~} {$\sim$}{1} % set tilde as a literal (no process)
}

\begin{document}

\begin{lstlisting}
~
\end{lstlisting}

\end{document}
-
\begin{verbatim}
~
\end{verbatim}

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LOL. I just assume that aradnuk had alread tried and failed! +1 – dmckee Mar 25 '09 at 16:50
A single tilde places an accent over an invisible letter, if you will, so it's up high rather than in the centre of the line. – sjcorbett Mar 25 '09 at 17:10
@aradnuk: You should probably edit the question to reflect your desire to have a "full-sized" tilde centered vertically... – dmckee Mar 25 '09 at 17:21
@aradnuk: no, it places tilde in the centre of the line. I tried many combinations and I get always tilde in the center of line. – klew Mar 25 '09 at 21:59
maybe this depends on the encoding of the input file? just a guess – Kim Stebel Apr 8 '09 at 6:51