Hello, Federico Beffa <be...@ieee.org> writes:
> According to the LaTeX manual and reference "LaTeX: A Document > Preparation System", L. Lamport, \[ ... \] is a short form for a > displaymath environment. Citing the reference: > "... Because displayed equations are used so frequently in > mathematics, LaTeX allows you to type \[ ... \] instead of > \begin{displaymath} ... \end{displaymath}. ..." > > However, org-mode classify \[ ... \] as a latex-fragment, the same as > \(...\). The two are however very different in LaTeX because, while > the latter displays some mathematical expression *inline*, the former > makes its content stand out by putting it on *its own line*. AFAIK, LaTeX allows to inline "\[...\]" constructs, so something like Some \[1+1\] text is perfectly valid. Thus, I think we need to support them. The other thing to consider is that having the same syntax for an inline and a non-inline element could introduce some bugs (e.g. when filling a paragraph). OTOH, allowing inline \[...\] is pretty harmless. > What I do not like about this is that "org-fill-paragraph" considers > the \[ ...\] environment part of a paragraph and therefore the > environment gets "lost" in the middle of a line. This is a minor annoyance, indeed. However, you can use the verbose form in this case (i.e., "\begin{displaymath}"). Regards, -- Nicolas Goaziou