Create a line break in a subscript-position term












2















My code is



documentclass{article}
usepackage{amssymb,bm}
begin{equation}
nabla_{theta} bm{J}(theta) =
mathbb{E}_{s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}
[nabla_{theta} log bm{pi}(a | s ) cdot Q(s, a) ],
end{equation}

end{document}


And I want to break {s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}} into two lines, not put it under mathbb{E}. In the picture below, how to move the second part after the comma and stack under the first part?



enter image description here



How can I do that? Thank you in advance.










share|improve this question

























  • Off-topic: To "snug up" the nabla and theta symbols, consider writing nabla_{!theta}. The ! (negative thinspace) directive moves the subscript term to the left, i.e., closer to the nabla symbol.

    – Mico
    30 mins ago
















2















My code is



documentclass{article}
usepackage{amssymb,bm}
begin{equation}
nabla_{theta} bm{J}(theta) =
mathbb{E}_{s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}
[nabla_{theta} log bm{pi}(a | s ) cdot Q(s, a) ],
end{equation}

end{document}


And I want to break {s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}} into two lines, not put it under mathbb{E}. In the picture below, how to move the second part after the comma and stack under the first part?



enter image description here



How can I do that? Thank you in advance.










share|improve this question

























  • Off-topic: To "snug up" the nabla and theta symbols, consider writing nabla_{!theta}. The ! (negative thinspace) directive moves the subscript term to the left, i.e., closer to the nabla symbol.

    – Mico
    30 mins ago














2












2








2








My code is



documentclass{article}
usepackage{amssymb,bm}
begin{equation}
nabla_{theta} bm{J}(theta) =
mathbb{E}_{s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}
[nabla_{theta} log bm{pi}(a | s ) cdot Q(s, a) ],
end{equation}

end{document}


And I want to break {s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}} into two lines, not put it under mathbb{E}. In the picture below, how to move the second part after the comma and stack under the first part?



enter image description here



How can I do that? Thank you in advance.










share|improve this question
















My code is



documentclass{article}
usepackage{amssymb,bm}
begin{equation}
nabla_{theta} bm{J}(theta) =
mathbb{E}_{s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}
[nabla_{theta} log bm{pi}(a | s ) cdot Q(s, a) ],
end{equation}

end{document}


And I want to break {s sim T^{bm{pi}}, a sim bm{pi}_{theta}} into two lines, not put it under mathbb{E}. In the picture below, how to move the second part after the comma and stack under the first part?



enter image description here



How can I do that? Thank you in advance.







amsmath subscripts






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 24 mins ago









Mico

280k31381770




280k31381770










asked 50 mins ago









GoingMyWayGoingMyWay

1947




1947













  • Off-topic: To "snug up" the nabla and theta symbols, consider writing nabla_{!theta}. The ! (negative thinspace) directive moves the subscript term to the left, i.e., closer to the nabla symbol.

    – Mico
    30 mins ago



















  • Off-topic: To "snug up" the nabla and theta symbols, consider writing nabla_{!theta}. The ! (negative thinspace) directive moves the subscript term to the left, i.e., closer to the nabla symbol.

    – Mico
    30 mins ago

















Off-topic: To "snug up" the nabla and theta symbols, consider writing nabla_{!theta}. The ! (negative thinspace) directive moves the subscript term to the left, i.e., closer to the nabla symbol.

– Mico
30 mins ago





Off-topic: To "snug up" the nabla and theta symbols, consider writing nabla_{!theta}. The ! (negative thinspace) directive moves the subscript term to the left, i.e., closer to the nabla symbol.

– Mico
30 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














I suggest you do two things:




  • Using DeclareMathOperator, make E a "math operator"


  • Use the substack macro to break the long line into two parts.



Both of these directives require loading of the amsmath package -- which you may be doing already.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage{amsmath} % for 'DeclareMathOperator' and 'substack' macros
usepackage{amssymb} % for 'mathbb' macro
usepackage{bm} % for 'bm' macro
DeclareMathOperator{E}{mathbb{E}} % define expectations operator
begin{document}

begin{equation}
nabla_{!theta} bm{J}(theta) =
E_{substack{s sim T^{bm{pi}}\ a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}}
[nabla_{!theta} logbm{pi}(amid s ) cdot Q(s,a) ]
end{equation}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

























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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    I suggest you do two things:




    • Using DeclareMathOperator, make E a "math operator"


    • Use the substack macro to break the long line into two parts.



    Both of these directives require loading of the amsmath package -- which you may be doing already.



    enter image description here



    documentclass{article}
    usepackage{amsmath} % for 'DeclareMathOperator' and 'substack' macros
    usepackage{amssymb} % for 'mathbb' macro
    usepackage{bm} % for 'bm' macro
    DeclareMathOperator{E}{mathbb{E}} % define expectations operator
    begin{document}

    begin{equation}
    nabla_{!theta} bm{J}(theta) =
    E_{substack{s sim T^{bm{pi}}\ a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}}
    [nabla_{!theta} logbm{pi}(amid s ) cdot Q(s,a) ]
    end{equation}
    end{document}





    share|improve this answer






























      3














      I suggest you do two things:




      • Using DeclareMathOperator, make E a "math operator"


      • Use the substack macro to break the long line into two parts.



      Both of these directives require loading of the amsmath package -- which you may be doing already.



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{amsmath} % for 'DeclareMathOperator' and 'substack' macros
      usepackage{amssymb} % for 'mathbb' macro
      usepackage{bm} % for 'bm' macro
      DeclareMathOperator{E}{mathbb{E}} % define expectations operator
      begin{document}

      begin{equation}
      nabla_{!theta} bm{J}(theta) =
      E_{substack{s sim T^{bm{pi}}\ a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}}
      [nabla_{!theta} logbm{pi}(amid s ) cdot Q(s,a) ]
      end{equation}
      end{document}





      share|improve this answer




























        3












        3








        3







        I suggest you do two things:




        • Using DeclareMathOperator, make E a "math operator"


        • Use the substack macro to break the long line into two parts.



        Both of these directives require loading of the amsmath package -- which you may be doing already.



        enter image description here



        documentclass{article}
        usepackage{amsmath} % for 'DeclareMathOperator' and 'substack' macros
        usepackage{amssymb} % for 'mathbb' macro
        usepackage{bm} % for 'bm' macro
        DeclareMathOperator{E}{mathbb{E}} % define expectations operator
        begin{document}

        begin{equation}
        nabla_{!theta} bm{J}(theta) =
        E_{substack{s sim T^{bm{pi}}\ a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}}
        [nabla_{!theta} logbm{pi}(amid s ) cdot Q(s,a) ]
        end{equation}
        end{document}





        share|improve this answer















        I suggest you do two things:




        • Using DeclareMathOperator, make E a "math operator"


        • Use the substack macro to break the long line into two parts.



        Both of these directives require loading of the amsmath package -- which you may be doing already.



        enter image description here



        documentclass{article}
        usepackage{amsmath} % for 'DeclareMathOperator' and 'substack' macros
        usepackage{amssymb} % for 'mathbb' macro
        usepackage{bm} % for 'bm' macro
        DeclareMathOperator{E}{mathbb{E}} % define expectations operator
        begin{document}

        begin{equation}
        nabla_{!theta} bm{J}(theta) =
        E_{substack{s sim T^{bm{pi}}\ a sim bm{pi}_{theta}}}
        [nabla_{!theta} logbm{pi}(amid s ) cdot Q(s,a) ]
        end{equation}
        end{document}






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 29 mins ago

























        answered 36 mins ago









        MicoMico

        280k31381770




        280k31381770






























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