![]() ![]() To use them you simply type \Alpha then hit tab and there you have an \alpha character. In case you didn’t know Jupyter notebooks have special tab completions for a whole lot of special characters. So, I decided today that I was going to write this down here so I could reference this next time, and hopefully it helps others as well. ![]() But as I don’t use them too often at the moment I often forget how to.Īs a result, I will spend several minutes digging around on the internet for how a particular character is typed in a Jupyter notebook. I often find myself wanting to use a Greek Alphabet character when I’m putting together an article or within a Jupyter notebook. imatmul ( a, b ) ¶ operator.I often want to use characters from the Greek Alphabet in a Jupyter Notebook, and I’m hoping you do too if you’ve stumbled upon this post. _imul_ ( a, b ) ¶Ī = imul(a, b) is equivalent to a *= b. _imod_ ( a, b ) ¶Ī = imod(a, b) is equivalent to a %= b. _ilshift_ ( a, b ) ¶Ī = ilshift(a, b) is equivalent to a <<= b. _ifloordiv_ ( a, b ) ¶Ī = ifloordiv(a, b) is equivalent to a //= b. _iconcat_ ( a, b ) ¶Ī = iconcat(a, b) is equivalent to a = b for a and b sequences. _iand_ ( a, b ) ¶Ī = iand(a, b) is equivalent to a
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