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>Interesting. We haven't seen this character in
technical publications.
>Where did you run into it?
This double-struck capital E is sometimes used
instead of a standard, italic capital E to distinguish it from energy. It's at
least used for this purpose in Sweden. I'm sorry that I don't know the proper
English names for the Q and the "double-struck italic capital E" units,
but I hope that someone on this list with knowledge in physics can help
identifying their names from the units.
>You can create it with markup, which is the fallback approach for rare >usage. Yes. In HTML this would be
"<i>𝔼</i>".
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- Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Stefan Persson
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Doug Ewell
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Kenneth Whistler
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Stefan Persson
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathemat... Markus Scherer
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Doug Ewell
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathemat... Asmus Freytag
- Re: Double-struck italic E for math... Doug Ewell
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Doug Ewell
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Stefan Persson
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Miikka-Markus Alhonen
- Re: Double-struck italic E for mathematics? Jungshik Shin

