Answer by Tore H-W for Adjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
This is a little late, but I have been experiencing the same problem.Until now I have been passive about it, but after I made the effort to switch to MathTime Pro II, I decided it was time to try to...
View ArticleAnswer by Black Mild for Adjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
To increase the vertical spacing above and below the fraction line, we can use TikZ to customize as follows.\documentclass{article}\usepackage{tikz,amsmath}\begin{document}This is from OP. The vertical...
View ArticleAnswer by user1362373 for Adjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
After unsuccessfully playing around trying to find a fix, I searched tex.stackexchange.com once more and found too little space between the bar on the denominator and the horizontal line, where...
View ArticleAnswer by Bernard for Adjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
Use\cfrac, combined with \bigstrut for the numerator:\documentclass{article}\usepackage{amsmath}\usepackage{bigstrut}\begin{document}\begin{equation*} t =...
View ArticleAnswer by Mico for Adjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
I would use inline-fraction notation rather than stack two \dfrac expressions. The presence of the / characters ensures almost automatically that the numerator and denominator terms are not placed too...
View ArticleAnswer by egreg for Adjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
You can use \cfrac, which is thought for continued fractions, which this is a case of:\documentclass{article}\usepackage{amsmath}\begin{document}\begin{equation*}t...
View ArticleAdjusting vertical spacing in fractions?
Consider the following MWE:\documentclass{article}\usepackage{amsmath}\begin{document}\begin{equation*} t = \frac{\dfrac{T_1}{T_2}}{1+\dfrac{Q_1}{Q_2}}\end{equation*}\end{document}It produces:For my...
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