![]() (Not sure how it looks on reddit for you probably depends on your browser and its font set up, but you could copy and paste from here: ?īut in your shoes, I'd just use the italic variant of Latin Modern Roman, or people copying and pasting from your image won't get the letter "a" but "?" instead, and it wouldn't be searchable in the normal way, etc., which could be confusing.ĮDIT: To whoever downvoted this … I'm not mad, just … confused. In particular it has the character ? (U ID44E MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL A) which appears as an italic "a". What it does have, however, is separate characters in the "Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols" unicode block. That font doesn't itself have an italic version. ![]() If you want to get the italic "a" using specifically the font called "Latin Modern Math", the process is more roundabout. When matching it in Inkscape, you could just use the regular italic version of Latin Modern Roman, and its "a" should appear pretty much identically, even though technically that's a different font than Latin Modern Math. Latin Modern is very close in design to Computer Modern a casual viewer wouldn't be able to tell them apart. Free for commercial use The url/latin-modern-fonts.htmlLatin Modern/url fonts are derived from the famous Computer Modern fonts designed by Donald E. In lualatex, \usepackage should give you Latin Modern in math mode rather than Computer Modern. Not sure if Inkscape supports those, but even if it does I'd steer clear of type 1 fonts if you want to match your LaTeX fonts in other programs in general. ![]() CMMI12 (Computer Modern Math Italic optical size 12) is a type-1 font, not ttf or otf. ![]()
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