If that's good enough for you, in the current version of Windows Word you can also insert that character when using UnicodeMath (rather than LaTex) using \scriptP ( \scriptp for the lowercase version). The glyph for that codepoint in the Cambria Math typeface that Word uses is "simpler" than the examples you give, more like the ones in the typeface Euclid Math One referenced by the article you referenced. These Script characters can be inserted from Word's menu of Characters in Equation->Symbols. If you use, say \mathcal using that feature, Word inserts a "Mathematical Script Character P", Unicode U+1D4AB. ![]() In the current version of Windows Word if you use LaTex directly instead of the "UnicodeMath" that Word's current equation editor originally used.
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