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Call ~ tilde
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In the rest of the document and also according to the Unicode standard,
Wikipedia, and other sources the character ~ is called tilde, whereas tie is
the name of a different set of characters.
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fiveop committed Aug 28, 2024
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4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions en/lesson-09.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -73,10 +73,10 @@ Run LaTeX one more time and you'll be all set.
(Usually while writing you will run LaTeX several times anyway,
so in practice this is not a bother.)

Notice the tie (`~`) characters before the references.
Notice the tilde (`~`) characters before the references.
You don't want a line break between `subsection` and its number, or
between `equation` and its number.
Putting in a tie means LaTeX won't break the line there.
Putting in a tilde means LaTeX won't break the line there.

## Where to put `\label`

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4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions tr/lesson-09.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -68,10 +68,10 @@ Run LaTeX one more time and you'll be all set.
(Usually while writing you will run LaTeX several times anyway,
so in practice this is not a bother.)

Notice the tie (`~`) characters before the references.
Notice the tilde (`~`) characters before the references.
You don't want a line break between `subsection` and its number, or
between `equation` and its number.
Putting in a tie means LaTeX won't break the line there.
Putting in a tilde means LaTeX won't break the line there.

## Where to put `\label`

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