How do I produce this Greek letter koppa: Ϟ in pdfLaTeX?












6















I have been trying to typeset the character GREEK LETTER KOPPA. It has not been working. I know the Unicode number (U+03DE), and tried the command ^^3de and ^^3DE. Neither worked. I also tried char and char", but those didn't work either, other symbols get produced.



Does anybody have an idea as to how I can get my computer to typeset the symbol Ϟ?



MWE:



documentclass[a4paper, 12pt]{article}  
usepackage[ngerman, polutonikogreek]{babel}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{arevmath}
usepackage{lmodern}
fontfamily{lmr}selectfont
usepackage{geometry}
geometry{
a4paper,
top=30mm,
left=25mm,
right=20mm,
bottom=20mm,
}

begin{document}
selectlanguage{ngerman}

$Koppa$

end{document}









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  • 1





    Do you use either LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX?

    – Mico
    5 hours ago
















6















I have been trying to typeset the character GREEK LETTER KOPPA. It has not been working. I know the Unicode number (U+03DE), and tried the command ^^3de and ^^3DE. Neither worked. I also tried char and char", but those didn't work either, other symbols get produced.



Does anybody have an idea as to how I can get my computer to typeset the symbol Ϟ?



MWE:



documentclass[a4paper, 12pt]{article}  
usepackage[ngerman, polutonikogreek]{babel}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{arevmath}
usepackage{lmodern}
fontfamily{lmr}selectfont
usepackage{geometry}
geometry{
a4paper,
top=30mm,
left=25mm,
right=20mm,
bottom=20mm,
}

begin{document}
selectlanguage{ngerman}

$Koppa$

end{document}









share|improve this question









New contributor




rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Do you use either LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX?

    – Mico
    5 hours ago














6












6








6


1






I have been trying to typeset the character GREEK LETTER KOPPA. It has not been working. I know the Unicode number (U+03DE), and tried the command ^^3de and ^^3DE. Neither worked. I also tried char and char", but those didn't work either, other symbols get produced.



Does anybody have an idea as to how I can get my computer to typeset the symbol Ϟ?



MWE:



documentclass[a4paper, 12pt]{article}  
usepackage[ngerman, polutonikogreek]{babel}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{arevmath}
usepackage{lmodern}
fontfamily{lmr}selectfont
usepackage{geometry}
geometry{
a4paper,
top=30mm,
left=25mm,
right=20mm,
bottom=20mm,
}

begin{document}
selectlanguage{ngerman}

$Koppa$

end{document}









share|improve this question









New contributor




rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have been trying to typeset the character GREEK LETTER KOPPA. It has not been working. I know the Unicode number (U+03DE), and tried the command ^^3de and ^^3DE. Neither worked. I also tried char and char", but those didn't work either, other symbols get produced.



Does anybody have an idea as to how I can get my computer to typeset the symbol Ϟ?



MWE:



documentclass[a4paper, 12pt]{article}  
usepackage[ngerman, polutonikogreek]{babel}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
usepackage{arevmath}
usepackage{lmodern}
fontfamily{lmr}selectfont
usepackage{geometry}
geometry{
a4paper,
top=30mm,
left=25mm,
right=20mm,
bottom=20mm,
}

begin{document}
selectlanguage{ngerman}

$Koppa$

end{document}






pdftex greek






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New contributor




rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question









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rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question




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edited 47 mins ago









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asked 6 hours ago









rensemilrensemil

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New contributor





rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1





    Do you use either LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX?

    – Mico
    5 hours ago














  • 1





    Do you use either LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX?

    – Mico
    5 hours ago








1




1





Do you use either LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX?

– Mico
5 hours ago





Do you use either LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX?

– Mico
5 hours ago










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















5














Using arevmath package you have the request symbol.



enter image description here



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{arevmath}
begin{document}

$Koppa$

end{document}





share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

    – rensemil
    5 hours ago








  • 1





    @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

    – Mico
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

    – rensemil
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

    – Sebastiano
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

    – zwol
    5 hours ago



















4














If you have a font on your system that you know has that character you can use a package such as fontspec or mathspec to typeset your document (either whole or part, as you prefer) in that font.






share|improve this answer
























  • Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

    – rensemil
    5 hours ago











  • Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

    – Miztli
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

    – Sebastiano
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

    – Miztli
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

    – Miztli
    5 hours ago



















4














You have it in the cm-unicode fonts, to be used with xelatex. They also have the archaic koppa. If you can type it directly on your keyboard, XeLaTeX will understand it. Other than that I defined two commands to obtain them (note the hexadecimal code is not the official unicode hexadecimal number):



documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{fontspec}
setmainfont{CMU Serif}
defkoppa{char "03DF}
defarchaickoppa{char "03D9}

begin{document}

koppa: qquad LARGEkoppaqquad ϟ

{normalsize archaic koppa: qquad}archaickoppaqquad ϙ


end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • No, where is it?

    – rensemil
    5 hours ago











  • @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

    – Sebastiano
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

    – Bernard
    5 hours ago



















1














Here is one definition that works with the modern toolchain. It requires LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX and an OpenType or TrueType font containing the glyph.



documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usepackage{unicode-math}

defaultfontfeatures{Scale = MatchLowercase }
setmainfont{DejaVu Serif}[Scale = 1.0]
setmathfont{TeX Gyre DejaVu Math}

newcommandkoppa{ifmmode%
{mathord{text{^^^^03de}}}else%
^^^^03defi}

begin{document}
Here is the symbol koppa.

( koppa = koppa_{koppa_koppa} )
end{document}


DejaVu font sample



There are other ways to declare the symbol as well, including loading a font containing Ϟ as a symbol alphabet and using DeclareMathSymbol, or loading the symbol in text mode from a newfontfamily declared with fontspec, or defining it with newunicodechar, or loading all Greek letters from that Unicode block with ucharclasses, or finding an OpenType math font that has the glyph, or char"03DE, or symbol{"03DE}.






share|improve this answer































    0














    The problem was the includment of the polutonikogreek package. Without it, everything works just fine.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















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      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      5














      Using arevmath package you have the request symbol.



      enter image description here



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{arevmath}
      begin{document}

      $Koppa$

      end{document}





      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago








      • 1





        @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

        – Mico
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

        – zwol
        5 hours ago
















      5














      Using arevmath package you have the request symbol.



      enter image description here



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{arevmath}
      begin{document}

      $Koppa$

      end{document}





      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago








      • 1





        @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

        – Mico
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

        – zwol
        5 hours ago














      5












      5








      5







      Using arevmath package you have the request symbol.



      enter image description here



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{arevmath}
      begin{document}

      $Koppa$

      end{document}





      share|improve this answer













      Using arevmath package you have the request symbol.



      enter image description here



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{arevmath}
      begin{document}

      $Koppa$

      end{document}






      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 6 hours ago









      SebastianoSebastiano

      11.5k42366




      11.5k42366








      • 1





        I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago








      • 1





        @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

        – Mico
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

        – zwol
        5 hours ago














      • 1





        I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago








      • 1





        @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

        – Mico
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

        – zwol
        5 hours ago








      1




      1





      I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago







      I have tried, and I get the following error message: ! LaTeX Error: Command `qoppa' already defined. See the LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation. Type H <return> for immediate help. ... l.28 ...Symbol{qoppa}{mathord}{extraitalic}{162} % uni03D9 ?

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago






      1




      1





      @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

      – Mico
      5 hours ago





      @rensemil - It looks like you're loading some font-related packages in addition to arevmath. Have you tried not loading arevmath and typing Koppa (in math mode, presumably)?

      – Mico
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago





      I know. That error message even occurs if I don't type Koppa in the document. As soon as I add the arevmath package, the error message pops up.

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

      – Sebastiano
      5 hours ago





      @Mico Thank you very much for your technical support.

      – Sebastiano
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

      – zwol
      5 hours ago





      @rensemil In my TeX Live installation, a command qoppa is defined by the packages teubner, alphabeta, and boisik, and the Babel language definitions greek, ibygreek, and bgreek, as well as by arevmath. Are you loading any of those?

      – zwol
      5 hours ago











      4














      If you have a font on your system that you know has that character you can use a package such as fontspec or mathspec to typeset your document (either whole or part, as you prefer) in that font.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago
















      4














      If you have a font on your system that you know has that character you can use a package such as fontspec or mathspec to typeset your document (either whole or part, as you prefer) in that font.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago














      4












      4








      4







      If you have a font on your system that you know has that character you can use a package such as fontspec or mathspec to typeset your document (either whole or part, as you prefer) in that font.






      share|improve this answer













      If you have a font on your system that you know has that character you can use a package such as fontspec or mathspec to typeset your document (either whole or part, as you prefer) in that font.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 5 hours ago









      MiztliMiztli

      2721313




      2721313













      • Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago



















      • Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

        – Miztli
        5 hours ago

















      Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago





      Unfortunately, I don't know either of those things.

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago













      Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

      – Miztli
      5 hours ago





      Fair enough. For what it's worth, some Google fonts that support that character are Noto Serif, Cardo and Tinos (all serif; some sans serif ones are Noto Sans, Fira Sans and Arimo).

      – Miztli
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

      – Sebastiano
      5 hours ago





      @Miztli Don't worry I voted the same you for the effort and the correct answer.

      – Sebastiano
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

      – Miztli
      5 hours ago





      Could you edit your answer to include a MWE (minimal working example)?

      – Miztli
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

      – Miztli
      5 hours ago





      Create a separate very simple (stripped down to the bare bones, including only the packages and content relevant for this issue) version of the code you have, click "edit" below your question and then include it in a code block (use the button with two curly braces).

      – Miztli
      5 hours ago











      4














      You have it in the cm-unicode fonts, to be used with xelatex. They also have the archaic koppa. If you can type it directly on your keyboard, XeLaTeX will understand it. Other than that I defined two commands to obtain them (note the hexadecimal code is not the official unicode hexadecimal number):



      documentclass[12pt]{article}
      usepackage{fontspec}
      setmainfont{CMU Serif}
      defkoppa{char "03DF}
      defarchaickoppa{char "03D9}

      begin{document}

      koppa: qquad LARGEkoppaqquad ϟ

      {normalsize archaic koppa: qquad}archaickoppaqquad ϙ


      end{document}


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


























      • No, where is it?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

        – Bernard
        5 hours ago
















      4














      You have it in the cm-unicode fonts, to be used with xelatex. They also have the archaic koppa. If you can type it directly on your keyboard, XeLaTeX will understand it. Other than that I defined two commands to obtain them (note the hexadecimal code is not the official unicode hexadecimal number):



      documentclass[12pt]{article}
      usepackage{fontspec}
      setmainfont{CMU Serif}
      defkoppa{char "03DF}
      defarchaickoppa{char "03D9}

      begin{document}

      koppa: qquad LARGEkoppaqquad ϟ

      {normalsize archaic koppa: qquad}archaickoppaqquad ϙ


      end{document}


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


























      • No, where is it?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

        – Bernard
        5 hours ago














      4












      4








      4







      You have it in the cm-unicode fonts, to be used with xelatex. They also have the archaic koppa. If you can type it directly on your keyboard, XeLaTeX will understand it. Other than that I defined two commands to obtain them (note the hexadecimal code is not the official unicode hexadecimal number):



      documentclass[12pt]{article}
      usepackage{fontspec}
      setmainfont{CMU Serif}
      defkoppa{char "03DF}
      defarchaickoppa{char "03D9}

      begin{document}

      koppa: qquad LARGEkoppaqquad ϟ

      {normalsize archaic koppa: qquad}archaickoppaqquad ϙ


      end{document}


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer















      You have it in the cm-unicode fonts, to be used with xelatex. They also have the archaic koppa. If you can type it directly on your keyboard, XeLaTeX will understand it. Other than that I defined two commands to obtain them (note the hexadecimal code is not the official unicode hexadecimal number):



      documentclass[12pt]{article}
      usepackage{fontspec}
      setmainfont{CMU Serif}
      defkoppa{char "03DF}
      defarchaickoppa{char "03D9}

      begin{document}

      koppa: qquad LARGEkoppaqquad ϟ

      {normalsize archaic koppa: qquad}archaickoppaqquad ϙ


      end{document}


      enter image description here







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 5 hours ago









      Snobbish Hi-rep users

      1438




      1438










      answered 5 hours ago









      BernardBernard

      177k779211




      177k779211













      • No, where is it?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

        – Bernard
        5 hours ago



















      • No, where is it?

        – rensemil
        5 hours ago











      • @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

        – Sebastiano
        5 hours ago






      • 1





        @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

        – Bernard
        5 hours ago

















      No, where is it?

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago





      No, where is it?

      – rensemil
      5 hours ago













      @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

      – Sebastiano
      5 hours ago





      @Bernard Hi, have you seen my message for vast command?

      – Sebastiano
      5 hours ago




      1




      1





      @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

      – Bernard
      5 hours ago





      @rensemil: I think this message is for me. It's unrelated to your question.@Sebastiano>. I've found it this morning (grazie tante!), but didn't have time to look at your link. I've taken alook this evening. It seems to be a command to obtain delimiters still larger than Bigg. I dihad never heard of this construct, but I'm no guru.

      – Bernard
      5 hours ago











      1














      Here is one definition that works with the modern toolchain. It requires LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX and an OpenType or TrueType font containing the glyph.



      documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
      usepackage{mathtools}
      usepackage{unicode-math}

      defaultfontfeatures{Scale = MatchLowercase }
      setmainfont{DejaVu Serif}[Scale = 1.0]
      setmathfont{TeX Gyre DejaVu Math}

      newcommandkoppa{ifmmode%
      {mathord{text{^^^^03de}}}else%
      ^^^^03defi}

      begin{document}
      Here is the symbol koppa.

      ( koppa = koppa_{koppa_koppa} )
      end{document}


      DejaVu font sample



      There are other ways to declare the symbol as well, including loading a font containing Ϟ as a symbol alphabet and using DeclareMathSymbol, or loading the symbol in text mode from a newfontfamily declared with fontspec, or defining it with newunicodechar, or loading all Greek letters from that Unicode block with ucharclasses, or finding an OpenType math font that has the glyph, or char"03DE, or symbol{"03DE}.






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        Here is one definition that works with the modern toolchain. It requires LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX and an OpenType or TrueType font containing the glyph.



        documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
        usepackage{mathtools}
        usepackage{unicode-math}

        defaultfontfeatures{Scale = MatchLowercase }
        setmainfont{DejaVu Serif}[Scale = 1.0]
        setmathfont{TeX Gyre DejaVu Math}

        newcommandkoppa{ifmmode%
        {mathord{text{^^^^03de}}}else%
        ^^^^03defi}

        begin{document}
        Here is the symbol koppa.

        ( koppa = koppa_{koppa_koppa} )
        end{document}


        DejaVu font sample



        There are other ways to declare the symbol as well, including loading a font containing Ϟ as a symbol alphabet and using DeclareMathSymbol, or loading the symbol in text mode from a newfontfamily declared with fontspec, or defining it with newunicodechar, or loading all Greek letters from that Unicode block with ucharclasses, or finding an OpenType math font that has the glyph, or char"03DE, or symbol{"03DE}.






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1







          Here is one definition that works with the modern toolchain. It requires LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX and an OpenType or TrueType font containing the glyph.



          documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
          usepackage{mathtools}
          usepackage{unicode-math}

          defaultfontfeatures{Scale = MatchLowercase }
          setmainfont{DejaVu Serif}[Scale = 1.0]
          setmathfont{TeX Gyre DejaVu Math}

          newcommandkoppa{ifmmode%
          {mathord{text{^^^^03de}}}else%
          ^^^^03defi}

          begin{document}
          Here is the symbol koppa.

          ( koppa = koppa_{koppa_koppa} )
          end{document}


          DejaVu font sample



          There are other ways to declare the symbol as well, including loading a font containing Ϟ as a symbol alphabet and using DeclareMathSymbol, or loading the symbol in text mode from a newfontfamily declared with fontspec, or defining it with newunicodechar, or loading all Greek letters from that Unicode block with ucharclasses, or finding an OpenType math font that has the glyph, or char"03DE, or symbol{"03DE}.






          share|improve this answer













          Here is one definition that works with the modern toolchain. It requires LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX and an OpenType or TrueType font containing the glyph.



          documentclass[varwidth]{standalone}
          usepackage{mathtools}
          usepackage{unicode-math}

          defaultfontfeatures{Scale = MatchLowercase }
          setmainfont{DejaVu Serif}[Scale = 1.0]
          setmathfont{TeX Gyre DejaVu Math}

          newcommandkoppa{ifmmode%
          {mathord{text{^^^^03de}}}else%
          ^^^^03defi}

          begin{document}
          Here is the symbol koppa.

          ( koppa = koppa_{koppa_koppa} )
          end{document}


          DejaVu font sample



          There are other ways to declare the symbol as well, including loading a font containing Ϟ as a symbol alphabet and using DeclareMathSymbol, or loading the symbol in text mode from a newfontfamily declared with fontspec, or defining it with newunicodechar, or loading all Greek letters from that Unicode block with ucharclasses, or finding an OpenType math font that has the glyph, or char"03DE, or symbol{"03DE}.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          DavislorDavislor

          7,5741433




          7,5741433























              0














              The problem was the includment of the polutonikogreek package. Without it, everything works just fine.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                0














                The problem was the includment of the polutonikogreek package. Without it, everything works just fine.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  The problem was the includment of the polutonikogreek package. Without it, everything works just fine.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.










                  The problem was the includment of the polutonikogreek package. Without it, everything works just fine.







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




                  rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  answered 4 hours ago









                  rensemilrensemil

                  314




                  314




                  New contributor




                  rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                  New contributor





                  rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  rensemil is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                      rensemil is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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