Why am I getting Unidcode Error for some equations after updating Microsoft Windows from 7 to 10?












5















I have upgraded Windows from 7 to 10. When I am compiling some latex files, which were already built in Windows 7 and used to work fine - now in Windows 10 I am getting this error message for some equations:



! Package ucs Error: Unknown Unicode character 8289 = U+2061,
(ucs) possibly declared in uni-32.def.
(ucs) Type H to see if it is available with options.


Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits.



Here is an example...
When compiling the below tex file, eq1 and eq2 are fine, while eq3 and eq4 are not. Why and how can this tex file be compiled "in windows 10" without getting a Unicode error?



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min⁡(X)]}{[max⁡(X)-min⁡(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{Standardized}= frac{[x-mean⁡(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}









share|improve this question




















  • 2





    This will be unrelated to the operating system, also it is generally better to avoid usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}usepackage{ucs} unless you know you need that version and use the standard utf8 inputenc option (which is enabled by default in recent releases, so you don't need inputenc at all) How are you producing the file, why do you have U+2061 characters in the input?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:54






  • 2





    "Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits." I don't really understand this statement, your TeX distribution should presumably supply Xe(La)TeX, Lua(La)TeX, and pdf(La)TeX, so you shouldn't need to go to an online system to make use of XeLaTeX.

    – aoi
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:55






  • 1





    @mhdella you never answered the question of where the U+2061 character came from, it is rather hard to type this invisible character by accident, is this tex converted from some other format?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:20






  • 1





    @mhdella no the windows version does not affect this at all, the error comes from the tex macros and they are not dependent on the operating system

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 23:02






  • 1





    @mhdella I quite understand that the file works on one and not the other but the version of windows won't be the cause, you may have older package version or the file might be in different encoding or ...

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:43
















5















I have upgraded Windows from 7 to 10. When I am compiling some latex files, which were already built in Windows 7 and used to work fine - now in Windows 10 I am getting this error message for some equations:



! Package ucs Error: Unknown Unicode character 8289 = U+2061,
(ucs) possibly declared in uni-32.def.
(ucs) Type H to see if it is available with options.


Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits.



Here is an example...
When compiling the below tex file, eq1 and eq2 are fine, while eq3 and eq4 are not. Why and how can this tex file be compiled "in windows 10" without getting a Unicode error?



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min⁡(X)]}{[max⁡(X)-min⁡(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{Standardized}= frac{[x-mean⁡(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}









share|improve this question




















  • 2





    This will be unrelated to the operating system, also it is generally better to avoid usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}usepackage{ucs} unless you know you need that version and use the standard utf8 inputenc option (which is enabled by default in recent releases, so you don't need inputenc at all) How are you producing the file, why do you have U+2061 characters in the input?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:54






  • 2





    "Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits." I don't really understand this statement, your TeX distribution should presumably supply Xe(La)TeX, Lua(La)TeX, and pdf(La)TeX, so you shouldn't need to go to an online system to make use of XeLaTeX.

    – aoi
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:55






  • 1





    @mhdella you never answered the question of where the U+2061 character came from, it is rather hard to type this invisible character by accident, is this tex converted from some other format?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:20






  • 1





    @mhdella no the windows version does not affect this at all, the error comes from the tex macros and they are not dependent on the operating system

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 23:02






  • 1





    @mhdella I quite understand that the file works on one and not the other but the version of windows won't be the cause, you may have older package version or the file might be in different encoding or ...

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:43














5












5








5


0






I have upgraded Windows from 7 to 10. When I am compiling some latex files, which were already built in Windows 7 and used to work fine - now in Windows 10 I am getting this error message for some equations:



! Package ucs Error: Unknown Unicode character 8289 = U+2061,
(ucs) possibly declared in uni-32.def.
(ucs) Type H to see if it is available with options.


Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits.



Here is an example...
When compiling the below tex file, eq1 and eq2 are fine, while eq3 and eq4 are not. Why and how can this tex file be compiled "in windows 10" without getting a Unicode error?



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min⁡(X)]}{[max⁡(X)-min⁡(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{Standardized}= frac{[x-mean⁡(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}









share|improve this question
















I have upgraded Windows from 7 to 10. When I am compiling some latex files, which were already built in Windows 7 and used to work fine - now in Windows 10 I am getting this error message for some equations:



! Package ucs Error: Unknown Unicode character 8289 = U+2061,
(ucs) possibly declared in uni-32.def.
(ucs) Type H to see if it is available with options.


Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits.



Here is an example...
When compiling the below tex file, eq1 and eq2 are fine, while eq3 and eq4 are not. Why and how can this tex file be compiled "in windows 10" without getting a Unicode error?



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min⁡(X)]}{[max⁡(X)-min⁡(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{Standardized}= frac{[x-mean⁡(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}






math-mode pdftex compiling unicode






share|improve this question















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edited Dec 12 '18 at 5:19









Mico

280k31381770




280k31381770










asked Dec 11 '18 at 20:32









mhdellamhdella

997




997








  • 2





    This will be unrelated to the operating system, also it is generally better to avoid usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}usepackage{ucs} unless you know you need that version and use the standard utf8 inputenc option (which is enabled by default in recent releases, so you don't need inputenc at all) How are you producing the file, why do you have U+2061 characters in the input?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:54






  • 2





    "Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits." I don't really understand this statement, your TeX distribution should presumably supply Xe(La)TeX, Lua(La)TeX, and pdf(La)TeX, so you shouldn't need to go to an online system to make use of XeLaTeX.

    – aoi
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:55






  • 1





    @mhdella you never answered the question of where the U+2061 character came from, it is rather hard to type this invisible character by accident, is this tex converted from some other format?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:20






  • 1





    @mhdella no the windows version does not affect this at all, the error comes from the tex macros and they are not dependent on the operating system

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 23:02






  • 1





    @mhdella I quite understand that the file works on one and not the other but the version of windows won't be the cause, you may have older package version or the file might be in different encoding or ...

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:43














  • 2





    This will be unrelated to the operating system, also it is generally better to avoid usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}usepackage{ucs} unless you know you need that version and use the standard utf8 inputenc option (which is enabled by default in recent releases, so you don't need inputenc at all) How are you producing the file, why do you have U+2061 characters in the input?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:54






  • 2





    "Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits." I don't really understand this statement, your TeX distribution should presumably supply Xe(La)TeX, Lua(La)TeX, and pdf(La)TeX, so you shouldn't need to go to an online system to make use of XeLaTeX.

    – aoi
    Dec 11 '18 at 20:55






  • 1





    @mhdella you never answered the question of where the U+2061 character came from, it is rather hard to type this invisible character by accident, is this tex converted from some other format?

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:20






  • 1





    @mhdella no the windows version does not affect this at all, the error comes from the tex macros and they are not dependent on the operating system

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 11 '18 at 23:02






  • 1





    @mhdella I quite understand that the file works on one and not the other but the version of windows won't be the cause, you may have older package version or the file might be in different encoding or ...

    – David Carlisle
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:43








2




2





This will be unrelated to the operating system, also it is generally better to avoid usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}usepackage{ucs} unless you know you need that version and use the standard utf8 inputenc option (which is enabled by default in recent releases, so you don't need inputenc at all) How are you producing the file, why do you have U+2061 characters in the input?

– David Carlisle
Dec 11 '18 at 20:54





This will be unrelated to the operating system, also it is generally better to avoid usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}usepackage{ucs} unless you know you need that version and use the standard utf8 inputenc option (which is enabled by default in recent releases, so you don't need inputenc at all) How are you producing the file, why do you have U+2061 characters in the input?

– David Carlisle
Dec 11 '18 at 20:54




2




2





"Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits." I don't really understand this statement, your TeX distribution should presumably supply Xe(La)TeX, Lua(La)TeX, and pdf(La)TeX, so you shouldn't need to go to an online system to make use of XeLaTeX.

– aoi
Dec 11 '18 at 20:55





"Using XeLaTex works well, but I prefer compiling tex files, to do any online edits." I don't really understand this statement, your TeX distribution should presumably supply Xe(La)TeX, Lua(La)TeX, and pdf(La)TeX, so you shouldn't need to go to an online system to make use of XeLaTeX.

– aoi
Dec 11 '18 at 20:55




1




1





@mhdella you never answered the question of where the U+2061 character came from, it is rather hard to type this invisible character by accident, is this tex converted from some other format?

– David Carlisle
Dec 11 '18 at 22:20





@mhdella you never answered the question of where the U+2061 character came from, it is rather hard to type this invisible character by accident, is this tex converted from some other format?

– David Carlisle
Dec 11 '18 at 22:20




1




1





@mhdella no the windows version does not affect this at all, the error comes from the tex macros and they are not dependent on the operating system

– David Carlisle
Dec 11 '18 at 23:02





@mhdella no the windows version does not affect this at all, the error comes from the tex macros and they are not dependent on the operating system

– David Carlisle
Dec 11 '18 at 23:02




1




1





@mhdella I quite understand that the file works on one and not the other but the version of windows won't be the cause, you may have older package version or the file might be in different encoding or ...

– David Carlisle
Dec 12 '18 at 0:43





@mhdella I quite understand that the file works on one and not the other but the version of windows won't be the cause, you may have older package version or the file might be in different encoding or ...

– David Carlisle
Dec 12 '18 at 0:43










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














Compiling your code under LuaLaTeX (while also loading the unicode-math package) yields the following screenshot for equations 3 and 4:



enter image description here



I've highlighted the four occurrences of U+2061. Why is this character in your tex file to begin with?



I believe you should re-write your code using min and max along the following lines (to be compiled under pdfLaTeX):



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage{ucs} % is this really needed?
usepackage{amsmath}
DeclareMathOperator{mean}{mean}
DeclareMathOperator{std}{std}

begin{document}
begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+dots+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{mathrm{Scaled}}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{mathrm{Standardized}}= frac{[x-mean(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}
end{document}





share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

    – egreg
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:13











  • Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:45






  • 2





    @mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

    – Mico
    Dec 12 '18 at 3:56



















6














Your file contains hidden characters that LaTeX can't deal with, copy-paste in a good editor to see it. The following image shows these hidden characters shown as f() after min, max, and mean, remove these and recompile. Also min and max are typset in up roman, also mean and std.



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs,amsmath}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_text{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_text{Standardized}= frac{[x-mathrm{mean}(X)]}{mathrm{std}(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}


The correct output:




enter image description here







share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:16











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














Compiling your code under LuaLaTeX (while also loading the unicode-math package) yields the following screenshot for equations 3 and 4:



enter image description here



I've highlighted the four occurrences of U+2061. Why is this character in your tex file to begin with?



I believe you should re-write your code using min and max along the following lines (to be compiled under pdfLaTeX):



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage{ucs} % is this really needed?
usepackage{amsmath}
DeclareMathOperator{mean}{mean}
DeclareMathOperator{std}{std}

begin{document}
begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+dots+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{mathrm{Scaled}}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{mathrm{Standardized}}= frac{[x-mean(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}
end{document}





share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

    – egreg
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:13











  • Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:45






  • 2





    @mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

    – Mico
    Dec 12 '18 at 3:56
















9














Compiling your code under LuaLaTeX (while also loading the unicode-math package) yields the following screenshot for equations 3 and 4:



enter image description here



I've highlighted the four occurrences of U+2061. Why is this character in your tex file to begin with?



I believe you should re-write your code using min and max along the following lines (to be compiled under pdfLaTeX):



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage{ucs} % is this really needed?
usepackage{amsmath}
DeclareMathOperator{mean}{mean}
DeclareMathOperator{std}{std}

begin{document}
begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+dots+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{mathrm{Scaled}}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{mathrm{Standardized}}= frac{[x-mean(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}
end{document}





share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

    – egreg
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:13











  • Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:45






  • 2





    @mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

    – Mico
    Dec 12 '18 at 3:56














9












9








9







Compiling your code under LuaLaTeX (while also loading the unicode-math package) yields the following screenshot for equations 3 and 4:



enter image description here



I've highlighted the four occurrences of U+2061. Why is this character in your tex file to begin with?



I believe you should re-write your code using min and max along the following lines (to be compiled under pdfLaTeX):



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage{ucs} % is this really needed?
usepackage{amsmath}
DeclareMathOperator{mean}{mean}
DeclareMathOperator{std}{std}

begin{document}
begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+dots+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{mathrm{Scaled}}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{mathrm{Standardized}}= frac{[x-mean(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}
end{document}





share|improve this answer













Compiling your code under LuaLaTeX (while also loading the unicode-math package) yields the following screenshot for equations 3 and 4:



enter image description here



I've highlighted the four occurrences of U+2061. Why is this character in your tex file to begin with?



I believe you should re-write your code using min and max along the following lines (to be compiled under pdfLaTeX):



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage{ucs} % is this really needed?
usepackage{amsmath}
DeclareMathOperator{mean}{mean}
DeclareMathOperator{std}{std}

begin{document}
begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+dots+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_{mathrm{Scaled}}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_{mathrm{Standardized}}= frac{[x-mean(X)]}{std(X)}
end{equation}
end{document}






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 11 '18 at 21:06









MicoMico

280k31381770




280k31381770








  • 2





    I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

    – egreg
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:13











  • Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:45






  • 2





    @mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

    – Mico
    Dec 12 '18 at 3:56














  • 2





    I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

    – egreg
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:13











  • Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:45






  • 2





    @mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

    – Mico
    Dec 12 '18 at 3:56








2




2





I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

– egreg
Dec 11 '18 at 22:13





I guess the OP is using some equation editor and the new version adds that Unicode invisible character (which makes sense for translations to MathML, I believe).

– egreg
Dec 11 '18 at 22:13













Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

– mhdella
Dec 11 '18 at 22:45





Thanks Mico for your response and correcting the tex file. Thanks egreg for the comment. I managed the Unicode error by just adding usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc} and DeclareUnicodeCharacter{"2061}{}

– mhdella
Dec 11 '18 at 22:45




2




2





@mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

– Mico
Dec 12 '18 at 3:56





@mhdella - Glad you found a workaround. A separate issue: I would hope you’ll still do your readers a favor and start writing mib, max, etc. That’ll make it much easier for them to notice what’s an operator and what’s a string of one-letter variable names.

– Mico
Dec 12 '18 at 3:56











6














Your file contains hidden characters that LaTeX can't deal with, copy-paste in a good editor to see it. The following image shows these hidden characters shown as f() after min, max, and mean, remove these and recompile. Also min and max are typset in up roman, also mean and std.



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs,amsmath}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_text{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_text{Standardized}= frac{[x-mathrm{mean}(X)]}{mathrm{std}(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}


The correct output:




enter image description here







share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:16
















6














Your file contains hidden characters that LaTeX can't deal with, copy-paste in a good editor to see it. The following image shows these hidden characters shown as f() after min, max, and mean, remove these and recompile. Also min and max are typset in up roman, also mean and std.



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs,amsmath}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_text{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_text{Standardized}= frac{[x-mathrm{mean}(X)]}{mathrm{std}(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}


The correct output:




enter image description here







share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:16














6












6








6







Your file contains hidden characters that LaTeX can't deal with, copy-paste in a good editor to see it. The following image shows these hidden characters shown as f() after min, max, and mean, remove these and recompile. Also min and max are typset in up roman, also mean and std.



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs,amsmath}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_text{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_text{Standardized}= frac{[x-mathrm{mean}(X)]}{mathrm{std}(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}


The correct output:




enter image description here







share|improve this answer















Your file contains hidden characters that LaTeX can't deal with, copy-paste in a good editor to see it. The following image shows these hidden characters shown as f() after min, max, and mean, remove these and recompile. Also min and max are typset in up roman, also mean and std.



enter image description here



documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} 
usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
usepackage{ucs,amsmath}

begin{document}

begin{equation}label{eq 1}
F=W_{A}*M_{A}+W_{B}*M_{B}+..+W_{N}*M_{N}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq 2}
RR=frac{dP(t)}{dt}=frac{P(t)-P(t-D)}{D}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_3}
X_text{Scaled}=a+ frac{[x-min(X)]}{[max(X)-min(X)]}*{b-a}
end{equation}

begin{equation}label{eq_4}
X_text{Standardized}= frac{[x-mathrm{mean}(X)]}{mathrm{std}(X)}
end{equation}

end{document}


The correct output:




enter image description here








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 11 '18 at 21:05

























answered Dec 11 '18 at 20:54









AboAmmarAboAmmar

34.1k32884




34.1k32884













  • Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:16



















  • Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

    – mhdella
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:16

















Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

– mhdella
Dec 11 '18 at 21:16





Thanks very much indeed, AboAmmar

– mhdella
Dec 11 '18 at 21:16


















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