| title | Setting bold Greek letters in LaTeX maths |
|---|---|
| category | formatting |
| permalink | /FAQ-boldgreek |
The issue here is complicated by the fact that \mathbf (the
command for setting bold text in TeX maths) affects a select
few mathematical "symbols" (the uppercase Greek letters).
In the default configuration, lower-case Greek letters behave differently from upper-case Greek letters (the lower-case greek letters are in the maths fonts, while the upper-case letters are in the original (OT1-encoded) text fonts).
The Plain TeX solution does work, in a limited way; you set a maths style, before you start an equation; thus
{\boldmath$\theta$}does the job, but \boldmath may not be used in maths mode. As a
result, this solution requires that you embed single bold characters
in a text box:
$... \mbox{\boldmath$\theta$} ...$which then causes problems in superscripts, etc. With
amsmath loaded,
$... \text{\boldmath$\theta$} ...$does the trick (and is less bad in regard to superscripts, etc), but is an unsatisfactory solution, too.
These problems may be addressed by using a bold mathematics package.
- The
bmpackage, which is part of the LaTeX tools distribution, defines a command\bmwhich may be used anywhere in maths mode. - The
amsbsypackage (which is part ofamsmathbundle) defines a command\boldsymbol, which (though slightly less comprehensive than\bm) covers almost all common cases.
All these solutions apply to all mathematical symbols, not merely Greek letters.