\ { } % $ & _ ^ # ~
¶Besides ligatures (see previous section), a few individual characters have special meaning to LaTeX. They are called reserved characters or special characters. Here they are:
Introduces a command name, as seen throughout this manual.
Delimits a required argument to a command or a level of grouping, as seen throughout this manual.
Starts a comment: the ‘%’ and all remaining characters on the current line are ignored.
Starts and ends math mode (see Math formulas).
Separates cells in a table (see tabular
).
Introduce a subscript or superscript, respectively, in math (see Subscripts & superscripts); they produce an error outside math mode. As a little-used special feature, two superscript characters in a row can introduce special notation for an arbitrary character.
Stands for arguments in a macro definition (see \newcommand
& \renewcommand
).
Produces a nonbreakable interword space (see ~
, \nobreakspace
).
See Printing special characters, for how to typeset these characters when you need them literally.