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Any OpenType or TrueType font family with Greek letters at the right Unicode code points, using either the range= option of \setmathfont in unicode-math or the \setmathsfont command of mathspec; Various legacy math packages with their own 8-bit encodings; Any other font format, if you’re willing to convert it and do a lot of work on font metrics
1) Specify math font as \setmathfont {XITS Math} (I'm on a linux system and that is the name of the font my system reports) and 2) Adding \usepackage {bm} AFTER setting the math font. Without step 2), greek bold characters don't show up and latin bold appears to be typeset in Latin Modern Bold. – Orestes Mas.
7. You have the GFS font collection (8 fonts), developped by the Greek Font Society (whence the name) that exist in opentype and type 1 formats and can be used by (pdf)LaTeX as well as XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX. They also have latin letters, except 2 of them: Porson and Baskerville, but there is LaTeX support for (latin) Baskerville.
12. Instead of \textbf use \boldsymbol (load the amsmath package to get it) to get it bold, put everything in math mode, and to get it upright use the upgreek package and \uptheta instead of theta: \documentclass{article} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{upgreek} \begin{document} $\boldsymbol{\uptheta}$.
If you want to use one variant throughout and save yourself a few keystrokes, put \let\phi\varphi in your preamble. The kpfonts package contains slanted and upright greek letters for mathmode. psgreek provides some alternate Greek fonts. Share. Improve this answer. edited Jan 4, 2011 at 11:33. answered Jan 4, 2011 at 11:25.
1. That all depends on the font being used. Note that \mathbf produces upright bold letters. If that is what you are looking for with greek, then you should mention this in your question. I generally use \bm because it is bold italic, and using this as a vector, then it make sense that the items of \bm{x} are x_i with an italic x. – daleif.
3. Your options are: Load an OpenType math font with unicode-math, in LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX. All of them come with Greek alphabets. You can change its Greek alphabet with \setmathfont[Scale=MatchLowercase, range=it/{Greek,greek}]{Some Greek Italic Font}, etc. Load \setmathsfont(Greek} in mathspec in XeTeX. Load a legacy 8-bit font in the LGR ...
3. The easy way to do this is to use Xelatex with Linux Libertine which provides good greek characters and the accentuations. It's available here. If you want it juste for typesetting greek you can do a little : \newfontfamily{\gkfont}[]{Biolinum Regular} \newcommand{\greek}[1]{\gkfont #1}
The CMU fonts are based on Computer Modern (and the CB fonts for Greek): \documentclass{scrreprt} \usepackage{fontspec} \setmainfont{CMU Serif} \setsansfont{CMU Sans Serif} \newfontfamily{\greekfont}{CMU Serif} \newfontfamily{\greekfontsf}{CMU Sans Serif} \usepackage{polyglossia} \setdefaultlanguage{greek} \begin{document} \tableofcontents{} \section{Αυτό είναι ελληνικά ...
24. The mbboard package provides blackboard bold Greek letters, and the letter you want is \bbmu. However, I don't know if you like how the symbol looks. (I don't like it, actually.) The mathbbol package with the bbgreekl option also provides (a possibly nicer version of) \bbmu: Use \usepackage[bbgreekl]{mathbbol} in the preamble.