Latex Huge

Latex Huge




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https://www.overleaf.com/learn/latex/Font_sizes,_families,_and_styles
Introduction
Font Sizes
Font Families
Font Styles
The syntax to set a font size or font style is easy: This example shows how to use the smallest available font (tiny) in LaTeX and the small capsstyle. Open an example in Overleaf
https://www.jianshu.com/p/ad400d7fe885
Перевести · Latex设置字体大小 全局模式 \documentclass[12pt]{article} 在文档的开头,有设置整个文章的字体大小,如:12pt。 局部模式. 设置字体大小的命令从小到大为: \tiny \scriptsize \footnotesize \small \normalsize \large \Large \LARGE \huge \Huge
https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/265
Перевести · TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for users of TeX, LaTeX, ConTeXt, and related typesetting systems. It only takes a minute to sign up. ... The \HUGE Font Size. For when it absolutely has to be bigger than \Huge, crank it to 11 with \HUGE…
You can use the Memoir document class . It provides two things that are relevant to your question: More Base Font Sizes The standard LaTeX documen...
If you use Type 1 fonts (e.g., package mathptmx or mathpazo ), you can simply use the \fontsize command with large point sizes: {\fontsize{50}...
A quick search on CTAN turned up anyfontsize . To quote the description: The package allows the to user select any font size (via e.g. \fontsize...
The \resizebox command (from graphicx package) is convenient if you want to produce, e.g., a title that fills the entire page width: \resizebox...
To extend on @Yiannis and the comment by @isomorphismes I also needed to have the fix-cm package loaded \documentclass[10pt,a4paper]{article}...
In your class add: %% Define a HUGE \newcommand\HUGE{\@setfontsize\Huge{38}{47}}
In XeTeX (using fontspec) you can use system fonts many of which have a "Scale" attribute you can set to a large number. For instance, in one docu...
According to http://www.mostlymaths.net/2009/03/big-fonts-in-latex.html , you can use the fix-cm package to get arbitrary-size fonts. In fact,...
There is also a package called moresize that can be useful. And another trick is to use, 10pt, 11pt, or 12pt but with a proportional, smaller " g...
https://texblog.org/2012/08/29/changing-the-font-size-in-latex
Перевести · 29.08.2012 · LaTeX knows several font size modifier-commands (from biggest to smallest): \Huge \huge \LARGE \Large \large \normalsize …
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How can I make text that is larger than the size of the output of {\Huge ...}?
I would like to be able to make text arbitrarily large (even if that is done by some suboptimal scaling routine).
bryn
bryn 9,254●1313 gold badges●4242 silver badges●4343 bronze badges
N.N.
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You can use the Memoir document class. It provides two things that are relevant to your question:
The standard LaTeX document classes only allow you to choose 10pt, 11pt or 12point as the "base" font size for your document. Memoir provides many more choices: 9pt, 10pt, 11pt, 12pt, 14pt, 17pt, 20pt, 25pt, 30pt, 36pt, 48pt and 60pt. Since all font size declarations are affected by the base font size, using a bigger base font size will make \Huge render in a bigger font.
For when it absolutely has to be bigger than \Huge, crank it to 11 with \HUGE.
Sharpie
Sharpie 12.1k●22 gold badges●4444 silver badges●5757 bronze badges
The answer was great, and the xkcd made it even better! – Vivi Jul 29 '10 at 12:03
Using memoir is a total hack. But it makes sense that someone writing his memoirs would need a larger font ... – g33kz0r Apr 17 '13 at 18:11
Is this an answer? Given a base font size, how do you obtain text larger than \Huge? Still unanswered... – Antonio Sesto Nov 9 '17 at 16:16
The following sets global font size to 36pt: \documentclass[36pt,extrafontsizes]{memoir} – ebrahim Oct 5 '18 at 13:24
If you use Type 1 fonts (e.g., package mathptmx or mathpazo), you can simply use the \fontsize command with large point sizes:
(The first parameter (50) is font size. The second parameter (60) is line spacing. An appropriate line spacing depends on the font. Something like 1.2 times font size is commonly used with CM fonts. But it does not really matter if you are typesetting just one line of text.)
Jukka Suomela
Jukka Suomela 18.9k●1313 gold badges●6767 silver badges●9090 bronze badges
Could you add an explanation what the meaning of the first and 2nd argument is (50 and 60)? Width times height in points? – maxschlepzig Oct 18 '11 at 9:47
@JukkaSuomela: Is 50 the biggest font size? I'm trying to get the header as big as possible (source). Terve! – Emanuel Berg Oct 3 '12 at 23:29
How / Where to check if the fonts I'm using are indeed Type 1 (or not) ? – nutty about natty Jul 9 '13 at 15:44
You can use this with any type of font, not just type1, you may need to modify the fd files (eg fix-cm package in the case of cm fonts) – David Carlisle Dec 17 '13 at 19:15
Tried to play with line spacing parameter but did not see it having any effect. – ajeh Jul 28 '16 at 16:50
A quick search on CTAN turned up anyfontsize. To quote the description:
The package allows the to user select any font size (via e.g. \fontsize{...}{...}\selectfont ), even those sizes that are not listed in the .fd file. If such a size is requested, LaTeX will search for and select the nearest listed size; anyfontsize will then scale the font to the size actually requested.
Similar functionality is available for the CM family (type1cm), for the EC family (type1ec), or for either computer modern encoding (fix-cm); the present package generalises the facility.
Andrew Stacey
Andrew Stacey 139k●3737 gold badges●346346 silver badges●679679 bronze badges
The \resizebox command (from graphicx package) is convenient if you want to produce, e.g., a title that fills the entire page width:
Jukka Suomela
Jukka Suomela 18.9k●1313 gold badges●6767 silver badges●9090 bronze badges
That's a neat solution... – Seamus Aug 12 '11 at 9:58
This is much easier and to the point for what I'm trying to do as well :) – pefmath Oct 1 '15 at 18:27
To extend on @Yiannis and the comment by @isomorphismes I also needed to have the fix-cm package loaded
Daniel Chen
Daniel Chen 311●22 silver badges●33 bronze badges
This was the only fix that worked for me! – Blairg23 May 16 '17 at 3:02
Yiannis Lazarides
Yiannis Lazarides 110k●2828 gold badges●257257 silver badges●533533 bronze badges
In order to make this work, I needed to preface it with \makeatletter and postface it with \makeatother. – isomorphismes May 26 '15 at 5:16
In XeTeX (using fontspec) you can use system fonts many of which have a "Scale" attribute you can set to a large number. For instance, in one document I have this line for a largeish Japanese font:
José Figueroa-O'Farrill
José Figueroa-O'Farrill 3,845●22 gold badges●2424 silver badges●3434 bronze badges
N.N.
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According to http://www.mostlymaths.net/2009/03/big-fonts-in-latex.html, you can use the fix-cm package to get arbitrary-size fonts. In fact, searching CTAN for fix-cm seems to give a few different packages that provide this functionality. I've never used any of them myself so I couldn't tell you which ones might work or not, but it shouldn't be hard to try them.
David Z
David Z 10.9k●55 gold badges●4343 silver badges●6161 bronze badges
Yeah, searching CTAN for fix-cm gives three results: type1cm, which recommends fix-cm, fix-cm itself, and the more general anyfontsize that's in Andrew Stacey's answer. – ShreevatsaR Jul 31 '10 at 1:56
There is also a package called moresize that can be useful.
And another trick is to use, 10pt, 11pt, or 12pt but with a proportional, smaller "geometry" than the one desired.
Andrestand
Andrestand 935●66 silver badges●2323 bronze badges
Whilst this may theoretically answer the question, it would be preferable to include the essential parts of the answer here, and provide the link for reference. – bodo Feb 25 '14 at 9:30
Thanks for mentioning my ancient moresize package. It does not provide arbitrary fontsizes however, just some more, so that one could try the EC font design sizes for example, and it can tune math scriptsize settings that should bring multiline headlines with math in a better shape. To solve the OP's problem, I'd go with one of the other recommendations. – ccorn Jul 31 '16 at 11:29
This piece of code worked for me and also provided better control over the size by adjusting the scale factor
Binoy Pilakkat
Binoy Pilakkat 11●22 bronze badges
Au101
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Better use a scalable font than scaling up. – Johannes_B Jul 31 '16 at 11:07
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