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Aug 31 at 3:23 comment added David K @AndreLin In any case \tag is a commonly-used LaTeX/MathJax command, for example here.
Aug 30 at 3:01 comment added Andre Lin @DavidK Isn’t it a WiFi issue
Aug 30 at 3:00 comment added Andre Lin @DavidK I don’t think your situation is common
Aug 30 at 2:50 comment added David K @AndreLin That's strange. I sometimes don't see the $(1)$ at all if the page is loading too slowly, but when I do see it it's as far to the right as any of the math or text gets, which is as much space from the rest of the equation as you can get.
Aug 29 at 3:31 comment added Andre Lin @DavidK Between the equation and$(1)$
Aug 28 at 19:09 comment added David K @AndreLin Space between what and what?
Aug 28 at 9:49 comment added Andre Lin @DavidK but I couldn't create a space between them
Feb 2, 2021 at 0:59 comment added David K @SomeGuy First, this is what \tag is meant for. It puts the (1) exactly where it should be, at the right margin. Second, if you have an equation like 0 = ax^2+bx+c and you just use (1) on it instead of \tag1, you end up with $0 = ax^2+bx+c(1)$. To fix this, instead of \tag you have to insert other commands to make enough blank space. Not a net gain, in my opinion.
Feb 1, 2021 at 21:13 comment added Some Guy Why would you use \tag, instead of just using ()?
Jun 2, 2019 at 5:20 comment added David K @code_dredd The particular formatting in this answer still seems to work. Perhaps you could post your formulas in a new meta question to get help with them.
Jun 1, 2019 at 20:19 comment added code_dredd Using multiple \tag commands in my equations causes them to break. It only takes one tag per equation and it labels the entire thing instead of allowing tagging on a per-line basis. Any ideas?
Feb 15, 2016 at 18:33 history edited David K CC BY-SA 3.0
left-align the "reasons"
S Aug 27, 2015 at 14:14 history answered David K CC BY-SA 3.0
S Aug 27, 2015 at 14:14 history made wiki Post Made Community Wiki by David K