Common Mistakes in LaTeX Equations and How to Fix Them

LaTeX is amazing for writing math, but when it comes to equations, beginners often get confused. Many people mix $$...$$, \[...\], equation, and align all together, which creates errors and formatting problems.

In this guide, we will explain everything step by step, with examples and best practices.

$$ … $$ vs \[ … \]

Using $$ . . . $$ for display math. This is old TeX syntax and not recommended with amsmath. It can cause spacing and numbering problems.

\[ a^2 + b^2 = c^2 \]

Always use \[ . . . \] for display math.

The equation Environment

If you want LaTeX to automatically number your equation, use the equation environment.

\begin{equation}
E = mc^2
\end{equation}

Writing \[ . . . \] or $$ . . . $$ inside equation. This creates double display mode errors.

Just use equation by itself.

For Multiple Equations (align Environment)

When you need to show multiple equations or align them by =, use align.

\begin{align}
a^2 + b^2 &= c^2 \\
x + y &= z
\end{align}

Here & marks the alignment point.

Mistake

  • Putting equation inside align
  • Using $$ … $$ inside align
  • Forgetting to control numbering

Numbering Control (\nonumber and \tag)

Sometimes you don’t want every equation to have a number. Then use \nonumber or \notag.

\begin{align}
a^2 + b^2 &= c^2 \nonumber \\
x + y &= z
\end{align}

Or you may want a custom tag.

\begin{equation}
E = mc^2 \tag{Einstein}
\end{equation}

Problems When Mixing Everything

If you mix $$, equation, and align randomly in the same document, problems appear.

  • Extra spacing issues
  • Wrong numbering
  • Conflicts with amsmath package
  • Compilation errors

Best Practices (Golden Rules)

Here are the golden rules for equations:
1. Inline math → $ ... $

2. Display math (unnumbered) → \[ ... \]

3. Single equation (numbered) → equation environment

4. Multiple equations / alignment → align or align*

5. Never use $$ ... $$ if you load amsmath

6. Use \tag{} for custom numbers

7. Always load amsmath for better equation handling.

Conclusion

Friend, if you follow these simple rules, your LaTeX document will be clean and error-free.

Beginners often mix everything together and get errors, but with these best practices, your equations will look professional.

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