How to put math symbol rotated with 90 degree in table cell?












2















documentclass{article}
usepackage{tabularx,multirow,booktabs}
begin{document}
begin{table}[h]
centering
begin{tabular}{@{}ccccccccc@{}}
toprule
multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{7}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & & textbf{y} & & textbf{z} && x\
multirow{3}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 &$>$& 4 &$<$& 5 &$<$&6\
& textbf{q} & 5 &$<$& 16 &$>$& 5 &=& 5\
& textbf{r} & 2 &$<$& 4 &$>$& -7 &$<$& 2\
bottomrule
end{tabular}
caption{Strategies}
label{tab:dominantColumn}
end{table}
end{document}


enter image description here



I want to do this type of comparison for row wise also. How can I put the symbol (90 degree shifted needed). > changed to v and < change to ^.



I need to something like this.



begin{table}[h]
centering
begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
toprule
multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
&&&&\%here the symbo
& textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
&&&&\%here the symbo
& textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
&&&&\%here the symbol
& textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
bottomrule
end{tabular}
caption{Strategies}
label{tab:dominantRow}
end{table}


enter image description here










share|improve this question



























    2















    documentclass{article}
    usepackage{tabularx,multirow,booktabs}
    begin{document}
    begin{table}[h]
    centering
    begin{tabular}{@{}ccccccccc@{}}
    toprule
    multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{7}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
    multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & & textbf{y} & & textbf{z} && x\
    multirow{3}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 &$>$& 4 &$<$& 5 &$<$&6\
    & textbf{q} & 5 &$<$& 16 &$>$& 5 &=& 5\
    & textbf{r} & 2 &$<$& 4 &$>$& -7 &$<$& 2\
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    caption{Strategies}
    label{tab:dominantColumn}
    end{table}
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    I want to do this type of comparison for row wise also. How can I put the symbol (90 degree shifted needed). > changed to v and < change to ^.



    I need to something like this.



    begin{table}[h]
    centering
    begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
    toprule
    multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
    multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
    multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
    &&&&\%here the symbo
    & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
    &&&&\%here the symbo
    & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
    &&&&\%here the symbol
    & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
    bottomrule
    end{tabular}
    caption{Strategies}
    label{tab:dominantRow}
    end{table}


    enter image description here










    share|improve this question

























      2












      2








      2








      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{tabularx,multirow,booktabs}
      begin{document}
      begin{table}[h]
      centering
      begin{tabular}{@{}ccccccccc@{}}
      toprule
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{7}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & & textbf{y} & & textbf{z} && x\
      multirow{3}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 &$>$& 4 &$<$& 5 &$<$&6\
      & textbf{q} & 5 &$<$& 16 &$>$& 5 &=& 5\
      & textbf{r} & 2 &$<$& 4 &$>$& -7 &$<$& 2\
      bottomrule
      end{tabular}
      caption{Strategies}
      label{tab:dominantColumn}
      end{table}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      I want to do this type of comparison for row wise also. How can I put the symbol (90 degree shifted needed). > changed to v and < change to ^.



      I need to something like this.



      begin{table}[h]
      centering
      begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
      toprule
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
      multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
      &&&&\%here the symbo
      & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
      &&&&\%here the symbo
      & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
      &&&&\%here the symbol
      & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
      bottomrule
      end{tabular}
      caption{Strategies}
      label{tab:dominantRow}
      end{table}


      enter image description here










      share|improve this question














      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{tabularx,multirow,booktabs}
      begin{document}
      begin{table}[h]
      centering
      begin{tabular}{@{}ccccccccc@{}}
      toprule
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{7}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & & textbf{y} & & textbf{z} && x\
      multirow{3}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 &$>$& 4 &$<$& 5 &$<$&6\
      & textbf{q} & 5 &$<$& 16 &$>$& 5 &=& 5\
      & textbf{r} & 2 &$<$& 4 &$>$& -7 &$<$& 2\
      bottomrule
      end{tabular}
      caption{Strategies}
      label{tab:dominantColumn}
      end{table}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      I want to do this type of comparison for row wise also. How can I put the symbol (90 degree shifted needed). > changed to v and < change to ^.



      I need to something like this.



      begin{table}[h]
      centering
      begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
      toprule
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
      multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
      multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
      &&&&\%here the symbo
      & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
      &&&&\%here the symbo
      & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
      &&&&\%here the symbol
      & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
      bottomrule
      end{tabular}
      caption{Strategies}
      label{tab:dominantRow}
      end{table}


      enter image description here







      tables symbols






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Apr 6 at 8:54









      alhelalalhelal

      1,035219




      1,035219






















          2 Answers
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          3














          rotatebox from graphicx can do it for you. Here I only add one "^" and one "v". To make the symbol accurately centered, you may need option origin=c, as suggested by @leandriis in his comment.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{booktabs}
          usepackage{multirow}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}
          newcommandupsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$>$}}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &downsym&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&upsym&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

            – leandriis
            Apr 6 at 11:02











          • @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

            – JouleV
            Apr 6 at 11:13



















          4














          Here is a different approach using the symbols vee and wedge:



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{multirow,booktabs}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          & & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          & & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{7}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&$vee$&$wedge$&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          Please note, that I have changed multirow{4} to multirow{7} in order to vertically center ROW. You might also want to keep in mind that the z column is wider than the x and y column. This is because the fcolumn header is wider than the combined width of the three columns. If you want to get rid of this, you might be interested in Table column widths disproportionate due to multicolumn cell being too long






          share|improve this answer
























          • You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

            – barbara beeton
            Apr 6 at 20:35












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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          rotatebox from graphicx can do it for you. Here I only add one "^" and one "v". To make the symbol accurately centered, you may need option origin=c, as suggested by @leandriis in his comment.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{booktabs}
          usepackage{multirow}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}
          newcommandupsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$>$}}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &downsym&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&upsym&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

            – leandriis
            Apr 6 at 11:02











          • @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

            – JouleV
            Apr 6 at 11:13
















          3














          rotatebox from graphicx can do it for you. Here I only add one "^" and one "v". To make the symbol accurately centered, you may need option origin=c, as suggested by @leandriis in his comment.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{booktabs}
          usepackage{multirow}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}
          newcommandupsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$>$}}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &downsym&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&upsym&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

            – leandriis
            Apr 6 at 11:02











          • @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

            – JouleV
            Apr 6 at 11:13














          3












          3








          3







          rotatebox from graphicx can do it for you. Here I only add one "^" and one "v". To make the symbol accurately centered, you may need option origin=c, as suggested by @leandriis in his comment.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{booktabs}
          usepackage{multirow}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}
          newcommandupsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$>$}}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &downsym&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&upsym&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer















          rotatebox from graphicx can do it for you. Here I only add one "^" and one "v". To make the symbol accurately centered, you may need option origin=c, as suggested by @leandriis in his comment.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{booktabs}
          usepackage{multirow}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}
          newcommandupsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$>$}}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          multicolumn{2}{c}{} & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{4}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &downsym&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&upsym&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 6 at 11:12

























          answered Apr 6 at 8:59









          JouleVJouleV

          12k22662




          12k22662













          • As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

            – leandriis
            Apr 6 at 11:02











          • @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

            – JouleV
            Apr 6 at 11:13



















          • As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

            – leandriis
            Apr 6 at 11:02











          • @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

            – JouleV
            Apr 6 at 11:13

















          As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

          – leandriis
          Apr 6 at 11:02





          As you might have noticed, the rotated symbols are not vertically centered (especially the downsym). To overcome this you might want to add the option origin=c as in newcommanddownsym{rotatebox[origin=c]{90}{$<$}}

          – leandriis
          Apr 6 at 11:02













          @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

          – JouleV
          Apr 6 at 11:13





          @leandriis Thanks for pointing that out! I did not even observe it. I edited my answer.

          – JouleV
          Apr 6 at 11:13











          4














          Here is a different approach using the symbols vee and wedge:



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{multirow,booktabs}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          & & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          & & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{7}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&$vee$&$wedge$&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          Please note, that I have changed multirow{4} to multirow{7} in order to vertically center ROW. You might also want to keep in mind that the z column is wider than the x and y column. This is because the fcolumn header is wider than the combined width of the three columns. If you want to get rid of this, you might be interested in Table column widths disproportionate due to multicolumn cell being too long






          share|improve this answer
























          • You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

            – barbara beeton
            Apr 6 at 20:35
















          4














          Here is a different approach using the symbols vee and wedge:



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{multirow,booktabs}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          & & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          & & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{7}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&$vee$&$wedge$&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          Please note, that I have changed multirow{4} to multirow{7} in order to vertically center ROW. You might also want to keep in mind that the z column is wider than the x and y column. This is because the fcolumn header is wider than the combined width of the three columns. If you want to get rid of this, you might be interested in Table column widths disproportionate due to multicolumn cell being too long






          share|improve this answer
























          • You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

            – barbara beeton
            Apr 6 at 20:35














          4












          4








          4







          Here is a different approach using the symbols vee and wedge:



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{multirow,booktabs}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          & & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          & & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{7}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&$vee$&$wedge$&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          Please note, that I have changed multirow{4} to multirow{7} in order to vertically center ROW. You might also want to keep in mind that the z column is wider than the x and y column. This is because the fcolumn header is wider than the combined width of the three columns. If you want to get rid of this, you might be interested in Table column widths disproportionate due to multicolumn cell being too long






          share|improve this answer













          Here is a different approach using the symbols vee and wedge:



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{multirow,booktabs}
          begin{document}
          begin{table}[h]
          centering
          begin{tabular}{@{}ccccc@{}}
          toprule
          & & multicolumn{3}{c}{bfseries COLUMN}\
          & & textbf{x} & textbf{y} & textbf{z}\
          multirow{7}{*}{bfseries ROW} & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          &&$vee$&$wedge$&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{q} & 5 & 16 & 5\
          &&&&\%here the symbo
          & textbf{r} & 2 & 4 & -7\
          &&&&\%here the symbol
          & textbf{p} & 6 & 4 & 5\
          bottomrule
          end{tabular}
          caption{Strategies}
          label{tab:dominantRow}
          end{table}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          Please note, that I have changed multirow{4} to multirow{7} in order to vertically center ROW. You might also want to keep in mind that the z column is wider than the x and y column. This is because the fcolumn header is wider than the combined width of the three columns. If you want to get rid of this, you might be interested in Table column widths disproportionate due to multicolumn cell being too long







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Apr 6 at 10:59









          leandriisleandriis

          11.2k1733




          11.2k1733













          • You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

            – barbara beeton
            Apr 6 at 20:35



















          • You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

            – barbara beeton
            Apr 6 at 20:35

















          You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

          – barbara beeton
          Apr 6 at 20:35





          You might want to consider using a real (math) minus for the -7 entry. Right now, it's a hyphen, and looks too narrow.

          – barbara beeton
          Apr 6 at 20:35


















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