Here is e^{-\lvert\frac{x-\mu}{\sigma}\rvert}
: $e^{-\lvert\frac{x-\mu}{\sigma}\rvert}$
The bars on the absolute value are too small, so I decided to make them bigger. Using \left
and \right
made them look pretty good:
e^{-\left\lvert\frac{x-\mu}{\sigma}\right\rvert}
: $e^{-\left\lvert\frac{x-\mu}{\sigma}\right\rvert}$
But I thought I'd see what happened if I used \bigl
and \bigr
, which are supposed to increase the size of the delimiters by one quantum. And I found that the bars became much too big and fat:
e^{-\bigl\lvert\frac{x-\mu}{\sigma}\bigr\rvert}
: $e^{-\bigl\lvert\frac{x-\mu}{\sigma}\bigr\rvert}$
I thought that \bigl
and \bigr
produced the smallest possible bigger-than-normal delimiters, and so
\left
and \right
delimiters would necessarily be at least as big.
Is the bug in my understanding of \bigl
and \bigr
, or in their implementation?
I am using:
Google Chrome 23.0.1271.64 (Official Build 165188)
OS Mac OS X
WebKit 537.11 (@132838)
JavaScript V8 3.13.7.5
Here's a screenshot:
Addendum
- With a different computer, the
\bigl
/\bigr
bars don't look absurdly thick, although they are still taller than the\left
/\right
bars:
Google Chrome 18.0.1025.142 (Official Build 129054)
OS Linux
WebKit 535.19 (@111933)
JavaScript V8 3.8.9.16
Addendum 2022-11-11
The bars produced by \bigl
and \bigr
are still fatter on Chrome than they ought to be:
This is:
Chrome: 107.0.5304.87 (Official Build) (x86_64)
OS: macOS Version 12.6 (Build 21G115)
WebKit: 537.36
JavaScript: V8 10.7.193.18