%
% Place the argument in matching left/right parntheses.
-\DeclarePairedDelimiter{\of}{ \lparen }{ \rparen }
+\providecommand*{\of}[1]{ \left( {#1} \right) }
% Group terms using parentheses.
-\newcommand*{\qty}[1]{ \left\lparen {#1} \right\rparen }
+\providecommand*{\qty}[1]{ \left( {#1} \right) }
% Create a set from the given elements
-\DeclarePairedDelimiter{\set}{ \lbrace }{ \rbrace }
+\providecommand*{\set}[1]{ \left\lbrace {#1} \right\rbrace }
% A set comprehension, where the ``such that...'' bar is added
% automatically. The bar was chosen over a colon to avoid ambiguity
% with the L : V -> V notation. We can't leverage \set here because \middle
% needs \left and \right present.
-\newcommand*{\setc}[2]{ \left\lbrace {#1}\ \middle|\ {#2} \right\rbrace }
+\providecommand*{\setc}[2]{ \left\lbrace {#1}\ \middle|\ {#2} \right\rbrace }
% A pair of things.
-\DeclarePairedDelimiterX{\pair}[2]{ \lparen }{ \rparen}{ {#1}, {#2} }
+\providecommand*{\pair}[2]{ \left( {#1}, {#2} \right) }