![Blackboard bold](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvZW4vdGh1bWIvNC80Mi9CbGFja2JvYXJkX2JvbGRfaW5fdHlwZXdyaXR0ZW5fbm90ZXNfZnJvbV9OYXJhc2ltaGFuXyUyODE5NjYlMjkucG5nLzE2MDBweC1CbGFja2JvYXJkX2JvbGRfaW5fdHlwZXdyaXR0ZW5fbm90ZXNfZnJvbV9OYXJhc2ltaGFuXyUyODE5NjYlMjkucG5n.png )
Blackboard bold is a style of writing bold symbols on a blackboard by doubling certain strokes, commonly used in mathematical lectures, and the derived style of typeface used in printed mathematical texts. The style is most commonly used to represent the number sets (natural numbers), (integers), (rational numbers), (real numbers), and (complex numbers).
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHpMek5pTDBKc1lXTnJZbTloY21SZlltOXNaRjl2Ymw5aFgySnNZV05yWW05aGNtUXVhbkJuTHpJeU1IQjRMVUpzWVdOclltOWhjbVJmWW05c1pGOXZibDloWDJKc1lXTnJZbTloY21RdWFuQm4uanBn.jpg)
To imitate a bold typeface on a typewriter, a character can be typed over itself (called double-striking); symbols thus produced are called double-struck, and this name is sometimes adopted for blackboard bold symbols, for instance in Unicode glyph names.
In typography, a typeface with characters that are not solid is called inline, handtooled, or open face.
History
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2WlM5bFppOUNiR0ZqYTJKdllYSmtYMkp2YkdSZmFXNWZkSGx3WlhkeWFYUjBaVzVmYm05MFpYTmZabkp2YlY5SGRXNXVhVzVuWHlVeU9ERTVOallsTWprdWFuQm5Mekk0TUhCNExVSnNZV05yWW05aGNtUmZZbTlzWkY5cGJsOTBlWEJsZDNKcGRIUmxibDl1YjNSbGMxOW1jbTl0WDBkMWJtNXBibWRmSlRJNE1UazJOaVV5T1M1cWNHYz0uanBn.jpg)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2TkM4ME1pOUNiR0ZqYTJKdllYSmtYMkp2YkdSZmFXNWZkSGx3WlhkeWFYUjBaVzVmYm05MFpYTmZabkp2YlY5T1lYSmhjMmx0YUdGdVh5VXlPREU1TmpZbE1qa3VjRzVuTHpJNE1IQjRMVUpzWVdOclltOWhjbVJmWW05c1pGOXBibDkwZVhCbGQzSnBkSFJsYmw5dWIzUmxjMTltY205dFgwNWhjbUZ6YVcxb1lXNWZKVEk0TVRrMk5pVXlPUzV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
Traditionally, various symbols were indicated by boldface in print but on blackboards and in manuscripts "by wavy underscoring, or enclosure in a circle, or even by wavy overscoring".
Most typewriters have no dedicated bold characters at all. To produce a bold effect on a typewriter, a character can be double-struck with or without a small offset. By the mid 1960s, typewriter accessories such as the "Doublebold" could automatically double-strike every character while engaged. While this method makes a character bolder, and can effectively emphasize words or passages, in isolation a double-struck character is not always clearly different from its single-struck counterpart.
Blackboard bold originated from the attempt to write bold symbols on typewriters and blackboards that were legible but distinct, perhaps starting in the late 1950s in France, and then taking hold at the Princeton University mathematics department in the early 1960s. Mathematical authors began typing faux-bold letters by double-striking them with a significant offset or over-striking them with the letter I, creating new symbols such as IR, IN, CC, or ZZ; at the blackboard, lecturers began writing bold symbols with certain doubled strokes. The notation caught on: blackboard bold spread from classroom to classroom and is now used around the world.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2T1M4NVppOUNiR0ZqYTJKdllYSmtYMkp2YkdSZmFXNWZjSEpwYm5SZmFXNWZURzl2YldselgyRnVaRjlUZEdWeWJtSmxjbWRmSlRJNE1UazJPQ1V5T1M1cWNHY3ZNamd3Y0hndFFteGhZMnRpYjJGeVpGOWliMnhrWDJsdVgzQnlhVzUwWDJsdVgweHZiMjFwYzE5aGJtUmZVM1JsY201aVpYSm5YeVV5T0RFNU5qZ2xNamt1YW5Cbi5qcGc=.jpg)
The style made its way into print starting in the mid 1960s. Early examples include Robert Gunning and Hugo Rossi's Analytic Functions of Several Complex Variables (1965) and Lynn Loomis and Shlomo Sternberg's Advanced Calculus (1968). Initial adoption was sporadic, however, and most publishers continued using boldface. In 1979, Wiley recommended its authors avoid "double-backed shadow or outline letters, sometimes called blackboard bold", because they could not always be printed; in 1982, Wiley refused to include blackboard bold characters in mathematical books because the type was difficult and expensive to obtain.
Donald Knuth preferred boldface to blackboard bold and so did not include blackboard bold in the Computer Modern typeface that he created for the TeX mathematical typesetting system he first released in 1978. When Knuth's 1984 The TeXbook needed an example of blackboard bold for the index, he produced using the letters I and R with a negative space between; in 1988 Robert Messer extended this to a full set of "poor person's blackboard bold" macros, overtyping each capital letter with carefully placed I characters or vertical lines.
Not all mathematical authors were satisfied with such workarounds. The American Mathematical Society created a simple chalk-style blackboard bold typeface in 1985 to go with the AMS-TeX package created by Michael Spivak, accessed using the \Bbb
command (for "blackboard bold"); in 1990, the AMS released an update with a new inline-style blackboard bold font intended to better match Times. Since then, a variety of other blackboard bold typefaces have been created, some following the style of traditional inline typefaces and others closer in form to letters drawn with chalk.
Unicode included the most common blackboard bold letters among the "Letterlike Symbols" in version 1.0 (1991), inherited from the Xerox Character Code Standard. Later versions of Unicode extended this set to all uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and a variety of other symbols, among the "Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols".
In professionally typeset books, publishers and authors have gradually adopted blackboard bold, and its use is now commonplace, but some still use ordinary bold symbols. Some authors use blackboard bold letters on the blackboard or in manuscripts, but prefer an ordinary bold typeface in print; for example, Jean-Pierre Serre has used blackboard bold in lectures, but has consistently used ordinary bold for the same symbols in his published works. The Chicago Manual of Style's recommendation has evolved over time: In 1993, for the 14th edition, it advised that "blackboard bold should be confined to the classroom" (13.14); In 2003, for the 15th edition, it stated that "open-faced (blackboard) symbols are reserved for familiar systems of numbers" (14.12). The international standard ISO 80000-2:2019 lists R as the symbol for the real numbers but notes "the symbols IR and are also used", and similarly for N, Z, Q, C, and P (prime numbers).
Encoding
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelF6TDBKc1lXTnJZbTloY21SZlltOXNaRjl1ZFcxaVpYSmZjMlYwY3k1emRtY3ZNamd3Y0hndFFteGhZMnRpYjJGeVpGOWliMnhrWDI1MWJXSmxjbDl6WlhSekxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
TeX, the standard typesetting system for mathematical texts, does not contain direct support for blackboard bold symbols, but the American Mathematical Society distributes the AMSFonts collection, loaded from the amssymb
package, which includes a blackboard bold typeface for uppercase Latin letters accessed using \mathbb
(e.g. \mathbb{R}
produces ).
In Unicode, a few of the more common blackboard bold characters (ℂ, ℍ, ℕ, ℙ, ℚ, ℝ, and ℤ) are encoded in the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP) in the Letterlike Symbols (2100–214F) area, named DOUBLE-STRUCK CAPITAL C etc. The rest, however, are encoded outside the BMP, in Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols (1D400–1D7FF), specifically from 1D538–1D550 (uppercase, excluding those encoded in the BMP), 1D552–1D56B (lowercase) and 1D7D8–1D7E1 (digits). Blackboard bold Arabic letters are encoded in Arabic Mathematical Alphabetic Symbols (1EE00–1EEFF), specifically 1EEA1–1EEBB.
Usage
The following table shows all available Unicode blackboard bold characters.
The first column shows the letter as typically rendered by the LaTeX markup system. The second column shows the Unicode code point. The third column shows the Unicode symbol itself (which will only display correctly on browsers that support Unicode and have access to a suitable typeface). The fourth column describes some typical usage in mathematical texts. Some of the symbols (particularly and
) are nearly universal in their interpretation, while others are more varied in use.
LaTeX | Unicode code point (hex) | Unicode symbol | Mathematics usage |
---|---|---|---|
Uppercase Latin | |||
U+1D538 | 𝔸 | Represents affine space, | |
U+1D539 | 𝔹 | Sometimes represents a ball, a boolean domain, or the Brauer group of a field. | |
U+2102 | ℂ | Represents the set of complex numbers. | |
U+1D53B | 𝔻 | Represents the unit disk in the complex plane, for example as the conformal disk model of the hyperbolic plane. By generalisation | |
U+1D53C | 𝔼 | Represents the expected value of a random variable, or Euclidean space, or a field in a tower of fields, or the Eudoxus reals. | |
U+1D53D | 𝔽 | Represents a field. Often used for finite fields, with a subscript to indicate the order. Also represents a Hirzebruch surface or a free group, with a subscript to indicate the number of generators (or generating set, if infinite). | |
U+1D53E | 𝔾 | Represents a Grassmannian or a group, especially an algebraic group. | |
U+210D | ℍ | Represents the quaternions (the H stands for Hamilton), or the upper half-plane, or hyperbolic space, or hyperhomology of a complex. | |
U+1D540 | 𝕀 | The closed unit interval or the ideal of polynomials vanishing on a subset. Occasionally the identity mapping on an algebraic structure, or an indicator function. The set of purely imaginary numbers (i.e., the set of all real multiples of the imaginary unit). | |
U+1D541 | 𝕁 | Sometimes represents the irrational numbers, | |
U+1D542 | 𝕂 | Represents a field. This is derived from the German word Körper, which is German for field (literally, 'body'; in French the term is corps). May also be used to denote a compact space. | |
U+1D543 | 𝕃 | Represents the Lefschetz motive. See Motive (algebraic geometry). | |
U+1D544 | 𝕄 | Sometimes represents the monster group. The set of all m-by-n matrices is sometimes denoted | |
U+2115 | ℕ | Represents the set of natural numbers. May or may not include zero. | |
U+1D546 | 𝕆 | Represents the octonions. | |
U+2119 | ℙ | Represents projective space, the probability of an event, the prime numbers, a power set, the positive reals, the irrational numbers, or a forcing poset. | |
U+211A | ℚ | Represents the set of rational numbers. (The Q stands for quotient.) | |
U+211D | ℝ | Represents the set of real numbers. | |
U+1D54A | 𝕊 | Represents a sphere, or the sphere spectrum, or occasionally the sedenions. | |
U+1D54B | 𝕋 | Represents the circle group, particularly the unit circle in the complex plane (and | |
U+1D54C | 𝕌 | ||
U+1D54D | 𝕍 | Represents a vector space or an affine variety generated by a set of polynomials, or in probability theory and statistics the variance. | |
U+1D54E | 𝕎 | Represents the whole numbers (here in the sense of non-negative integers), which also are represented by | |
U+1D54F | 𝕏 | Occasionally used to denote an arbitrary metric space. | |
U+1D550 | 𝕐 | ||
U+2124 | ℤ | Represents the set of integers. (The Z is for Zahlen, German for 'numbers', and zählen, German for 'to count'.) When it has a positive integer subscript, it can mean the finite cyclic group of that size. | |
Lowercase Latin | |||
U+1D552 | 𝕒 | ||
U+1D553 | 𝕓 | ||
U+1D554 | 𝕔 | ||
U+1D555 | 𝕕 | ||
U+1D556 | 𝕖 | ||
U+1D557 | 𝕗 | ||
U+1D558 | 𝕘 | ||
U+1D559 | 𝕙 | ||
U+1D55A | 𝕚 | ||
U+1D55B | 𝕛 | ||
U+1D55C | 𝕜 | Represents a field. | |
U+1D55D | 𝕝 | ||
U+1D55E | 𝕞 | ||
U+1D55F | 𝕟 | ||
U+1D560 | 𝕠 | ||
U+1D561 | 𝕡 | ||
U+1D562 | 𝕢 | ||
U+1D563 | 𝕣 | ||
U+1D564 | 𝕤 | ||
U+1D565 | 𝕥 | ||
U+1D566 | 𝕦 | ||
U+1D567 | 𝕧 | ||
U+1D568 | 𝕨 | ||
U+1D569 | 𝕩 | ||
U+1D56A | 𝕪 | ||
U+1D56B | 𝕫 | ||
Italic Latin | |||
U+2145 | ⅅ | ||
U+2146 | ⅆ | ||
U+2147 | ⅇ | ||
U+2148 | ⅈ | ||
U+2149 | ⅉ | ||
Greek | |||
U+213E | ℾ | ||
U+213D | ℽ | ||
U+213F | ℿ | ||
U+213C | ℼ | ||
U+2140 | ⅀ | ||
Digits | |||
U+1D7D8 | 𝟘 | In algebra of logical propositions, it represents a contradiction or falsity. | |
U+1D7D9 | 𝟙 | In set theory, the top element of a forcing poset, or occasionally the identity matrix in a matrix ring. Also used for the indicator function and the unit step function, and for the identity operator or identity matrix. In geometric algebra, represents the unit antiscalar, the identity element under the geometric antiproduct. In algebra of logical propositions, it represents a tautology. | |
U+1D7DA | 𝟚 | In category theory, the interval category. | |
U+1D7DB | 𝟛 | ||
U+1D7DC | 𝟜 | ||
U+1D7DD | 𝟝 | ||
U+1D7DE | 𝟞 | ||
U+1D7DF | 𝟟 | ||
U+1D7E0 | 𝟠 | ||
U+1D7E1 | 𝟡 | ||
Arabic | |||
U+1EEA1 | 𞺡 | Arabic Mathematical Double-Struck Beh (based on ب) | |
U+1EEA2 | 𞺢 | ||
U+1EEA3 | 𞺣 | ||
U+1EEA5 | 𞺥 | ||
U+1EEA6 | 𞺦 | ||
U+1EEA7 | 𞺧 | ||
U+1EEA8 | 𞺨 | ||
U+1EEA9 | 𞺩 | ||
U+1EEAB | 𞺫 | ||
U+1EEAC | 𞺬 | ||
U+1EEAD | 𞺭 | ||
U+1EEAE | 𞺮 | ||
U+1EEAF | 𞺯 | ||
U+1EEB0 | 𞺰 | ||
U+1EEB1 | 𞺱 | ||
U+1EEB2 | 𞺲 | ||
U+1EEB3 | 𞺳 | ||
U+1EEB4 | 𞺴 | ||
U+1EEB5 | 𞺵 | ||
U+1EEB6 | 𞺶 | ||
U+1EEB7 | 𞺷 | ||
U+1EEB8 | 𞺸 | ||
U+1EEB9 | 𞺹 | ||
U+1EEBA | 𞺺 | ||
U+1EEBB | 𞺻 |
In addition, a blackboard-bold μn (not found in Unicode or amsmath
LaTeX) is sometimes used by number theorists and algebraic geometers to designate the group scheme of n-th roots of unity.
Note: Only uppercase Roman letters are given LaTeX renderings because Wikipedia's implementation uses the AMSFonts blackboard bold typeface, which does not support other characters.
See also
- Latin letters used in mathematics, science, and engineering
- Mathematical alphanumeric symbols
- Set notation
References
- Gilreath, Charles T. (1993). "Graphic cueing of text: The typographic and diagraphic dimensions". Visible Language. 27 (3): 336–361.
- Rosendorf, Theodore (2009). The Typographic Desk Reference. Oak Knoll Press. pp. 89–90.
- Bringhurst, Robert (1992). "Glossary of Typographic Terms". Elements of Typographic Style. Hartley & Marks. p. 234. ISBN 0-88179-033-8.
Inline: A letter in which the inner portions of the main strokes have been carved away, leaving the edges more or less intact. Inline faces lighten the color while preserving the shapes and proportions of the original face.
Hutchings, R.S. (1965). "Inlines and Outlines". A Manual of Decorated Typefaces. Hastings House. pp. 10–11.Consuegra, David (2004). American Type: Design & Designers. Allworth Press. "Handtooled typefaces", p. 280; "Inline typefaces", p. 282; "Open face typefaces", p. 286–287.
- Gunning, Robert C. (1966). Lectures on Riemann Surfaces. Mathematical Notes. Princeton University Press. p. 1.
- Narasimhan, Raghavan (1966). Introduction to the Theory of Analytic Spaces. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol. 25. Springer. p. 9. doi:10.1007/bfb0077071. ISBN 978-3-540-03608-1.
- Hodgman, Charles D.; Selby, Samuel M.; Weast, Robert C., eds. (1959). C.R.C. Standard Mathematical Tables (12th ed.). Chemical Rubber Publishing Company. p. 494. Chaundy, Theodore W.; Barrett, P.R.; Batey, Charles (1954). The Printing of Mathematics. Oxford University Press. p. 52.
The sign for bold type is a wavy line beneath the words or symbols in question; for security the word 'bold' may be added in the margin.
- Karch, R. Randolph (1970). Graphic Arts Procedures. American Technical Society. p. 199.
- Webb, Stephen (2018). "Set of Natural Numbers ℕ". Clash Of Symbols: A Ride Through The Riches Of Glyphs. Springer. pp. 198–199, 233.
- An example of double-struck type produced by an impact printer of the early 1980s can be found in: Waite, Mitchell; Arca, Julie (1982). Word Processing Primer. BYTE/McGraw-Hill. pp. 76–77.
- Rudolph, Lee (2003-10-06). "Re: History of blackboard bold?". Newsgroup: compt.text.tex. Archived from the original on 2021-09-23. Retrieved 2023-07-25. This usenet post (as mirrored by The Math Forum) seems to have been one of the sources for Webb 2018; see p. 233
- Loomis, Lynn Harold; Sternberg, Shlomo (1968). Advanced Calculus. Addison Wesley. p. 241. The later revised edition is available from Sternberg's website.
- Gunning, Robert C.; Rossi, Hugo (1965). Analytic functions of several complex variables. Prentice-Hall.
- A guide for Wiley-Interscience and Ronald Press Authors in the Preparation and Production of Manuscript and Illustrations (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. 1979.
- Krantz, S. (2001). "2.8 Technical Issues". Handbook of Typography for the Mathematical Sciences. Chapman & Hall/CRC. p. 35. ISBN 9781584881490.
- Knuth, Donald (1984). The TeXbook. Addison-Wesley. p. 460.
- Messer, Robert (1988). "Blackboard Bold" (PDF). TUGboat. 9 (1): 19–20.
- Beeton, Barbara (1985). "Mathematical Symbols and Cyrillic Fonts Ready for Distribution" (PDF). TUGboat. 6 (2): 59–63. Spivak, Michael (1986). The Joy of TeX: A Gourmet Guide to Typesetting with the AMS-TeX Macro Package. American Mathematical Society. p. 260. "Coming in January from the American Mathematical Society" (PDF). TUGboat. 10 (3): 365–366. 1989. Beeton, Barbara (2020-09-05). "Re: Who designed the mathematical blackboard bold letters of AMS, and when?". TeX–LaTeX Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
The [1985] blackboard bold letters [...] are blocky in appearance, somewhat similar to those in the Monotype blackboard bold, but of much lower quality. (It's no surprise that Knuth did not like them.)
- Vieth, Ulrik (2012). "OpenType math font development: Progress and challenges" (PDF). TUGboat. 33 (3): 302–308.
Design choices of Blackboard Bold alphabets again fall into multiple groups. One group favors a serif design which is derived from the main serif font: [...] Another group favor a sans-serif design which may be unrelated to the main sans-serif font: [...] Finally, the designs of individual letters can vary significantly among different math fonts, and are an additional consideration in font choice. For example, some users may have fairly strong preferences regarding such details as to whether the stem or the diagonal of the letter 'N' is double-struck.
- Aliprand, Joan; Allen, Julie; et al., eds. (2003). "Math Alphanumeric Symbols: U+1D400–U+1D7FF". The Unicode Standard, Version 4.0. Addison-Wesley. pp. 354–357.
- Example Serre lecture: "Writing Mathematics Badly" video talk (part 3/3), starting at 7′08″ Example Serre book: Serre, Jean-Pierre (1994). Cohomologie galoisienne. Springer.
- "7. Standard number sets and intervals". ISO 80000-2 Quantities and Units: Mathematics (2nd ed.). International Organization for Standardization. August 2019. Table 3, No. 2-7.4.
- Kummer, Olaf (2006). "doublestroke – Typeset mathematical double stroke symbols". Comprehensive TeX Archive Network. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- Pakin, Scott (25 June 2020). The Comprehensive LATEX Symbol List (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
- Carlisle, David; Ion, Patrick (2023). "Double Struck (Open Face, Blackboard Bold)". XML Entity Definitions for Characters (Technical report) (3rd ed.). World Wide Web Consortium. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
Note: Characters highlighted [in yellow] are in the Plane 0 [Basic Multilingual Plane], not in the Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block in Plane 1.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Doublestruck". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2022-12-21.
- Sevryuk, Mikhail B. (1998-12-02). "Writing on a computer: some discouraging experiences". Arnold's Mathematical Seminar.
- Milne, James S. (1980). Étale cohomology. Princeton University Press. pp. xiii, 66.
Blackboard bold is a style of writing bold symbols on a blackboard by doubling certain strokes commonly used in mathematical lectures and the derived style of typeface used in printed mathematical texts The style is most commonly used to represent the number sets N displaystyle mathbb N natural numbers Z displaystyle mathbb Z integers Q displaystyle mathbb Q rational numbers R displaystyle mathbb R real numbers and C displaystyle mathbb C complex numbers Blackboard bold used on a blackboard To imitate a bold typeface on a typewriter a character can be typed over itself called double striking symbols thus produced are called double struck and this name is sometimes adopted for blackboard bold symbols for instance in Unicode glyph names In typography a typeface with characters that are not solid is called inline handtooled or open face HistoryTypewritten lecture notes by Gunning 1966 showing blackboard bold style R and C achieved by double striking each letter with significant offset Typewritten lecture notes by Narasimhan 1966 with blackboard bold style R and C achieved with an inline typewriter face Traditionally various symbols were indicated by boldface in print but on blackboards and in manuscripts by wavy underscoring or enclosure in a circle or even by wavy overscoring Most typewriters have no dedicated bold characters at all To produce a bold effect on a typewriter a character can be double struck with or without a small offset By the mid 1960s typewriter accessories such as the Doublebold could automatically double strike every character while engaged While this method makes a character bolder and can effectively emphasize words or passages in isolation a double struck character is not always clearly different from its single struck counterpart Blackboard bold originated from the attempt to write bold symbols on typewriters and blackboards that were legible but distinct perhaps starting in the late 1950s in France and then taking hold at the Princeton University mathematics department in the early 1960s Mathematical authors began typing faux bold letters by double striking them with a significant offset or over striking them with the letter I creating new symbols such as IR IN CC or ZZ at the blackboard lecturers began writing bold symbols with certain doubled strokes The notation caught on blackboard bold spread from classroom to classroom and is now used around the world A page from Loomis amp Sternberg 1968 showing an early example of blackboard bold style R and C in a printed book The style made its way into print starting in the mid 1960s Early examples include Robert Gunning and Hugo Rossi s Analytic Functions of Several Complex Variables 1965 and Lynn Loomis and Shlomo Sternberg s Advanced Calculus 1968 Initial adoption was sporadic however and most publishers continued using boldface In 1979 Wiley recommended its authors avoid double backed shadow or outline letters sometimes called blackboard bold because they could not always be printed in 1982 Wiley refused to include blackboard bold characters in mathematical books because the type was difficult and expensive to obtain Donald Knuth preferred boldface to blackboard bold and so did not include blackboard bold in the Computer Modern typeface that he created for the TeX mathematical typesetting system he first released in 1978 When Knuth s 1984 The TeXbook needed an example of blackboard bold for the index he produced IR displaystyle mathrm I R using the letters I and R with a negative space between in 1988 Robert Messer extended this to a full set of poor person s blackboard bold macros overtyping each capital letter with carefully placed I characters or vertical lines Not all mathematical authors were satisfied with such workarounds The American Mathematical Society created a simple chalk style blackboard bold typeface in 1985 to go with the AMS TeX package created by Michael Spivak accessed using the Bbb command for blackboard bold in 1990 the AMS released an update with a new inline style blackboard bold font intended to better match Times Since then a variety of other blackboard bold typefaces have been created some following the style of traditional inline typefaces and others closer in form to letters drawn with chalk Unicode included the most common blackboard bold letters among the Letterlike Symbols in version 1 0 1991 inherited from the Xerox Character Code Standard Later versions of Unicode extended this set to all uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and a variety of other symbols among the Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols In professionally typeset books publishers and authors have gradually adopted blackboard bold and its use is now commonplace but some still use ordinary bold symbols Some authors use blackboard bold letters on the blackboard or in manuscripts but prefer an ordinary bold typeface in print for example Jean Pierre Serre has used blackboard bold in lectures but has consistently used ordinary bold for the same symbols in his published works The Chicago Manual of Style s recommendation has evolved over time In 1993 for the 14th edition it advised that blackboard bold should be confined to the classroom 13 14 In 2003 for the 15th edition it stated that open faced blackboard symbols are reserved for familiar systems of numbers 14 12 The international standard ISO 80000 2 2019 lists R as the symbol for the real numbers but notes the symbols IR and R displaystyle mathbb R are also used and similarly for N Z Q C and P prime numbers EncodingBlackboard bold variants from top to bottom poor person s blackboard bold AMSFonts mathbb based on Times doublestroke package based on Computer Modern STIX Two inspired by Monotype Special Alphabets 4 TeX the standard typesetting system for mathematical texts does not contain direct support for blackboard bold symbols but the American Mathematical Society distributes the AMSFonts collection loaded from the amssymb package which includes a blackboard bold typeface for uppercase Latin letters accessed using mathbb e g mathbb R produces R displaystyle mathbb R In Unicode a few of the more common blackboard bold characters ℂ ℍ ℕ ℙ ℚ ℝ and ℤ are encoded in the Basic Multilingual Plane BMP in the Letterlike Symbols 2100 214F area named DOUBLE STRUCK CAPITAL C etc The rest however are encoded outside the BMP in Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols 1D400 1D7FF specifically from 1D538 1D550 uppercase excluding those encoded in the BMP 1D552 1D56B lowercase and 1D7D8 1D7E1 digits Blackboard bold Arabic letters are encoded in Arabic Mathematical Alphabetic Symbols 1EE00 1EEFF specifically 1EEA1 1EEBB UsageThe following table shows all available Unicode blackboard bold characters The first column shows the letter as typically rendered by the LaTeX markup system The second column shows the Unicode code point The third column shows the Unicode symbol itself which will only display correctly on browsers that support Unicode and have access to a suitable typeface The fourth column describes some typical usage in mathematical texts Some of the symbols particularly C Q R displaystyle mathbb C mathbb Q mathbb R and Z displaystyle mathbb Z are nearly universal in their interpretation while others are more varied in use LaTeX Unicode code point hex Unicode symbol Mathematics usageUppercase LatinA displaystyle mathbb A U 1D538 𝔸 Represents affine space An displaystyle mathbb A n or the ring of adeles Occasionally represents the algebraic numbers the algebraic closure of Q displaystyle mathbb Q more commonly written Q displaystyle overline mathbb Q or Q or the algebraic integers an important subring of the algebraic numbers B displaystyle mathbb B U 1D539 𝔹 Sometimes represents a ball a boolean domain or the Brauer group of a field C displaystyle mathbb C U 2102 ℂ Represents the set of complex numbers D displaystyle mathbb D U 1D53B 𝔻 Represents the unit disk in the complex plane for example as the conformal disk model of the hyperbolic plane By generalisation Dn displaystyle mathbb D n may mean the n dimensional ball Occasionally D displaystyle mathbb D may mean the decimal fractions see number split complex numbers or domain of discourse E displaystyle mathbb E U 1D53C 𝔼 Represents the expected value of a random variable or Euclidean space or a field in a tower of fields or the Eudoxus reals F displaystyle mathbb F U 1D53D 𝔽 Represents a field Often used for finite fields with a subscript to indicate the order Also represents a Hirzebruch surface or a free group with a subscript to indicate the number of generators or generating set if infinite G displaystyle mathbb G U 1D53E 𝔾 Represents a Grassmannian or a group especially an algebraic group H displaystyle mathbb H U 210D ℍ Represents the quaternions the H stands for Hamilton or the upper half plane or hyperbolic space or hyperhomology of a complex I displaystyle mathbb I U 1D540 𝕀 The closed unit interval or the ideal of polynomials vanishing on a subset Occasionally the identity mapping on an algebraic structure or an indicator function The set of purely imaginary numbers i e the set of all real multiples of the imaginary unit J displaystyle mathbb J U 1D541 𝕁 Sometimes represents the irrational numbers R Q displaystyle mathbb R smallsetminus mathbb Q K displaystyle mathbb K U 1D542 𝕂 Represents a field This is derived from the German word Korper which is German for field literally body in French the term is corps May also be used to denote a compact space L displaystyle mathbb L U 1D543 𝕃 Represents the Lefschetz motive See Motive algebraic geometry M displaystyle mathbb M U 1D544 𝕄 Sometimes represents the monster group The set of all m by n matrices is sometimes denoted M m n displaystyle mathbb M m n In geometric algebra represents the motor group of rigid motions In functional programming and formal semantics denotes the type constructor for a monad N displaystyle mathbb N U 2115 ℕ Represents the set of natural numbers May or may not include zero O displaystyle mathbb O U 1D546 𝕆 Represents the octonions P displaystyle mathbb P U 2119 ℙ Represents projective space the probability of an event the prime numbers a power set the positive reals the irrational numbers or a forcing poset Q displaystyle mathbb Q U 211A ℚ Represents the set of rational numbers The Q stands for quotient R displaystyle mathbb R U 211D ℝ Represents the set of real numbers S displaystyle mathbb S U 1D54A 𝕊 Represents a sphere or the sphere spectrum or occasionally the sedenions T displaystyle mathbb T U 1D54B 𝕋 Represents the circle group particularly the unit circle in the complex plane and Tn displaystyle mathbb T n the n dimensional torus occasionally the trigintaduonions or a Hecke algebra Hecke denoted his operators as Tn or Tn displaystyle mathbb T n or the tropical semiring or twistor space U displaystyle mathbb U U 1D54C 𝕌V displaystyle mathbb V U 1D54D 𝕍 Represents a vector space or an affine variety generated by a set of polynomials or in probability theory and statistics the variance W displaystyle mathbb W U 1D54E 𝕎 Represents the whole numbers here in the sense of non negative integers which also are represented by N0 displaystyle mathbb N 0 X displaystyle mathbb X U 1D54F 𝕏 Occasionally used to denote an arbitrary metric space Y displaystyle mathbb Y U 1D550 𝕐Z displaystyle mathbb Z U 2124 ℤ Represents the set of integers The Z is for Zahlen German for numbers and zahlen German for to count When it has a positive integer subscript it can mean the finite cyclic group of that size Lowercase LatinU 1D552 𝕒U 1D553 𝕓U 1D554 𝕔U 1D555 𝕕U 1D556 𝕖U 1D557 𝕗U 1D558 𝕘U 1D559 𝕙U 1D55A 𝕚U 1D55B 𝕛k displaystyle mathbb k U 1D55C 𝕜 Represents a field U 1D55D 𝕝U 1D55E 𝕞U 1D55F 𝕟U 1D560 𝕠U 1D561 𝕡U 1D562 𝕢U 1D563 𝕣U 1D564 𝕤U 1D565 𝕥U 1D566 𝕦U 1D567 𝕧U 1D568 𝕨U 1D569 𝕩U 1D56A 𝕪U 1D56B 𝕫Italic LatinU 2145 ⅅU 2146 ⅆU 2147 ⅇU 2148 ⅈU 2149 ⅉGreekU 213E ℾU 213D ℽU 213F ℿU 213C ℼU 2140 DigitsU 1D7D8 𝟘 In algebra of logical propositions it represents a contradiction or falsity U 1D7D9 𝟙 In set theory the top element of a forcing poset or occasionally the identity matrix in a matrix ring Also used for the indicator function and the unit step function and for the identity operator or identity matrix In geometric algebra represents the unit antiscalar the identity element under the geometric antiproduct In algebra of logical propositions it represents a tautology U 1D7DA 𝟚 In category theory the interval category U 1D7DB 𝟛U 1D7DC 𝟜U 1D7DD 𝟝U 1D7DE 𝟞U 1D7DF 𝟟U 1D7E0 𝟠U 1D7E1 𝟡ArabicU 1EEA1 𞺡 Arabic Mathematical Double Struck Beh based on ب U 1EEA2 𞺢U 1EEA3 𞺣U 1EEA5 𞺥U 1EEA6 𞺦U 1EEA7 𞺧U 1EEA8 𞺨U 1EEA9 𞺩U 1EEAB 𞺫U 1EEAC 𞺬U 1EEAD 𞺭U 1EEAE 𞺮U 1EEAF 𞺯U 1EEB0 𞺰U 1EEB1 𞺱U 1EEB2 𞺲U 1EEB3 𞺳U 1EEB4 𞺴U 1EEB5 𞺵U 1EEB6 𞺶U 1EEB7 𞺷U 1EEB8 𞺸U 1EEB9 𞺹U 1EEBA 𞺺U 1EEBB 𞺻 In addition a blackboard bold mn not found in Unicode or amsmath LaTeX is sometimes used by number theorists and algebraic geometers to designate the group scheme of n th roots of unity Note Only uppercase Roman letters are given LaTeX renderings because Wikipedia s implementation uses the AMSFonts blackboard bold typeface which does not support other characters See alsoLatin letters used in mathematics science and engineering Mathematical alphanumeric symbols Set notationReferencesGilreath Charles T 1993 Graphic cueing of text The typographic and diagraphic dimensions Visible Language 27 3 336 361 Rosendorf Theodore 2009 The Typographic Desk Reference Oak Knoll Press pp 89 90 Bringhurst Robert 1992 Glossary of Typographic Terms Elements of Typographic Style Hartley amp Marks p 234 ISBN 0 88179 033 8 Inline A letter in which the inner portions of the main strokes have been carved away leaving the edges more or less intact Inline faces lighten the color while preserving the shapes and proportions of the original face Hutchings R S 1965 Inlines and Outlines A Manual of Decorated Typefaces Hastings House pp 10 11 Consuegra David 2004 American Type Design amp Designers Allworth Press Handtooled typefaces p 280 Inline typefaces p 282 Open face typefaces p 286 287 Gunning Robert C 1966 Lectures on Riemann Surfaces Mathematical Notes Princeton University Press p 1 Narasimhan Raghavan 1966 Introduction to the Theory of Analytic Spaces Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 25 Springer p 9 doi 10 1007 bfb0077071 ISBN 978 3 540 03608 1 Hodgman Charles D Selby Samuel M Weast Robert C eds 1959 C R C Standard Mathematical Tables 12th ed Chemical Rubber Publishing Company p 494 Chaundy Theodore W Barrett P R Batey Charles 1954 The Printing of Mathematics Oxford University Press p 52 The sign for bold type is a wavy line beneath the words or symbols in question for security the word bold may be added in the margin Karch R Randolph 1970 Graphic Arts Procedures American Technical Society p 199 Webb Stephen 2018 Set of Natural Numbers ℕ Clash Of Symbols A Ride Through The Riches Of Glyphs Springer pp 198 199 233 An example of double struck type produced by an impact printer of the early 1980s can be found in Waite Mitchell Arca Julie 1982 Word Processing Primer BYTE McGraw Hill pp 76 77 Rudolph Lee 2003 10 06 Re History of blackboard bold Newsgroup compt text tex Archived from the original on 2021 09 23 Retrieved 2023 07 25 This usenet post as mirrored by The Math Forum seems to have been one of the sources for Webb 2018 see p 233 Loomis Lynn Harold Sternberg Shlomo 1968 Advanced Calculus Addison Wesley p 241 The later revised edition is available from Sternberg s website Gunning Robert C Rossi Hugo 1965 Analytic functions of several complex variables Prentice Hall A guide for Wiley Interscience and Ronald Press Authors in the Preparation and Production of Manuscript and Illustrations 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons 1979 Krantz S 2001 2 8 Technical Issues Handbook of Typography for the Mathematical Sciences Chapman amp Hall CRC p 35 ISBN 9781584881490 Knuth Donald 1984 The TeXbook Addison Wesley p 460 Messer Robert 1988 Blackboard Bold PDF TUGboat 9 1 19 20 Beeton Barbara 1985 Mathematical Symbols and Cyrillic Fonts Ready for Distribution PDF TUGboat 6 2 59 63 Spivak Michael 1986 The Joy of TeX A Gourmet Guide to Typesetting with the AMS TeX Macro Package American Mathematical Society p 260 Coming in January from the American Mathematical Society PDF TUGboat 10 3 365 366 1989 Beeton Barbara 2020 09 05 Re Who designed the mathematical blackboard bold letters of AMS and when TeX LaTeX Stack Exchange Retrieved 2023 07 27 The 1985 blackboard bold letters are blocky in appearance somewhat similar to those in the Monotype blackboard bold but of much lower quality It s no surprise that Knuth did not like them Vieth Ulrik 2012 OpenType math font development Progress and challenges PDF TUGboat 33 3 302 308 Design choices of Blackboard Bold alphabets again fall into multiple groups One group favors a serif design which is derived from the main serif font Another group favor a sans serif design which may be unrelated to the main sans serif font Finally the designs of individual letters can vary significantly among different math fonts and are an additional consideration in font choice For example some users may have fairly strong preferences regarding such details as to whether the stem or the diagonal of the letter N is double struck Aliprand Joan Allen Julie et al eds 2003 Math Alphanumeric Symbols U 1D400 U 1D7FF The Unicode Standard Version 4 0 Addison Wesley pp 354 357 Example Serre lecture Writing Mathematics Badly video talk part 3 3 starting at 7 08 Example Serre book Serre Jean Pierre 1994 Cohomologie galoisienne Springer 7 Standard number sets and intervals ISO 80000 2Quantities and Units Mathematics 2nd ed International Organization for Standardization August 2019 Table 3 No 2 7 4 Kummer Olaf 2006 doublestroke Typeset mathematical double stroke symbols Comprehensive TeX Archive Network Retrieved 2023 07 27 Pakin Scott 25 June 2020 The Comprehensive LATEX Symbol List PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Carlisle David Ion Patrick 2023 Double Struck Open Face Blackboard Bold XML Entity Definitions for Characters Technical report 3rd ed World Wide Web Consortium Retrieved 2023 07 27 Note Characters highlighted in yellow are in the Plane 0 Basic Multilingual Plane not in the Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block in Plane 1 Weisstein Eric W Doublestruck mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2022 12 21 Sevryuk Mikhail B 1998 12 02 Writing on a computer some discouraging experiences Arnold s Mathematical Seminar Milne James S 1980 Etale cohomology Princeton University Press pp xiii 66