I am trying to compute the (anomalous) transformation law of the free fermion stress tensor, not with the usual CFT arguments, but by explicit computation. We can define the classical stress tensor $T=i\psi^{\dagger}\partial\psi$. The quantum counterpart will be divergent, we regularize by point-splitting. The vacuum expectation value is then determined by the correlator $$\langle T(x,x') \rangle=i \langle \psi^{\dagger}(x)\partial_{x'}\psi(x')\rangle=i\partial_{x'}\langle \psi^{\dagger}(x)\psi(x')\rangle=-\frac{1}{2\pi}\frac{1}{(x-x')^2}$$ where I have used $\langle \psi(x)\psi^{\dagger}(x')\rangle=\frac{1}{2 \pi i}\frac{1}{x-x'}$. Now we define the normal ordered stress tensor by subtracting the divergence $$:T(x):=\lim_{x' \to x} i\psi^{\dagger}(x)\partial_{x'}\psi(x') +\frac{1}{2\pi}\frac{1}{(x-x')^2}$$ In a different coordinate system, $x \to y(x)$, we do the same, $$:T(y):=\lim_{y' \to y} i \psi^{\dagger}(y)\partial_{y'}\psi(y') +\frac{1}{2\pi}\frac{1}{(y-y')^2}$$ From the transformation law of the fermion, $\psi(y)=\left(\frac{dx}{dy}\right)^{1/2}\psi(x)$, I should be able to deduce now that $$:T(y):=\left(\frac{dx}{dy}\right)^2 :T(x): - \frac{c}{24 \pi} \{x,y\}.$$ with $c=1/2$ for the free fermion. Rewriting gives $$i \psi^{\dagger}(y)\partial_{y'}\psi(y')=i\left(\frac{dx}{dy}\right)^{1/2}\psi^{\dagger}(x)\frac{dx'}{dy'}\partial_{x'}\left(\left(\frac{dx'}{dy'}\right)^{1/2}\psi(x') \right) $$ The derivative acting on the second term gives $$i\left(\frac{dx}{dy}\right)^{1/2}\left(\frac{dx'}{dy'}\right)^{3/2}\psi^{\dagger}(x)\partial_{x'}\psi(x')$$ but what happens to the other term? I tried ignoring it (since I thought it might be zero), but then I don't get the correct transformation law. Would appreciate any help.