asciimathml
publisher
asciimathml | publisher | |
---|---|---|
11 | 8 | |
948 | 288 | |
0.0% | 0.7% | |
0.0 | 9.3 | |
over 1 year ago | 21 days ago | |
JavaScript | Lua | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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asciimathml
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[R] Any tools to convert math?
Or ascii math, http://asciimath.org
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The fastest math typesetting library for the web
Sure thing, a quick search yields Asciimath which seems at least at first glance as huge improvement in the syntax department: http://asciimath.org
As for LaTeX in general, Markdown beats it soundly in most aspects.
- AsciiMath: An easy-to-write markup language for mathematics
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Compilable Markdown for Linear Algebra
What are the syntax differences to https://asciimath.org?
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How to write more complex math expressions in AsciiDoc?
I did some Googling, and thought AsciiMath is the answer (simply because it also contains "Ascii" in the name). Turns out it's a different solution.
- How to write PDF that contains rather complicated math expressions?
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LaTex alternative/replacement written in Rust?
Math syntax is a bit more challenging, because I'm sure no one wants 12 even if that would make the grammar simpler. Attempts to do this are thin on the ground: as you note, Markdown and other similar tools completely punted on math. AsciiMath is one idea, although not what you want in a full-fledged typesetting language.
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Rendering LaTeX in Markdown with actual LaTeX
I like to use asciimath for this, though I realize that it's not as powerful as LaTeX or MathJax. There's a decent Rust port: asciimath-rs.
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I love LaTeX. I hate LaTeX
There's this:
http://asciimath.org/
I wish someone would integrate this into pandoc so I could use it in rmarkdown.
publisher
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Unit Testing PDF Generation
https://github.com/speedata/publisher/tree/develop/qa (the tests)
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seeking options: data + template = PDF output (print ready)
The link: https://www.speedata.de/
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How does OSS projects handle their enterprise editions in terms of codebase?
See for example the directory here: https://github.com/speedata/publisher/tree/develop/src/go/server
- Speedata Publisher
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I love LaTeX. I hate LaTeX
I have a related feeling about TeX. It has superb output quality but the programming is awful. When LuaTeX finally arrived a few years ago, it was possible to do almost everything you have done before in the TeX language (starting with \backslashes) in Lua.
See http://wiki.luatex.org/index.php/TeX_without_TeX for an introduction.
I have (shameless plug) created a database publishing software using this technique (https://github.com/speedata/publisher/). Once in a while I have to use LaTeX and it feels a bit old school to do the macro programming.
My next project is to rewrite the TeX algorithms in Go - see https://github.com/speedata/boxesandglue. Already usable but not TeX like in any way (this is just a library, not a frontend software like TeX)
- Speedata Publisher – a professional database Publishing system
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LuaTeX Comes of Age
LuaTeX is what TeX should have been from the start (and would have been, if the technology of the time had permitted it). Apart from modern Unicode and font-handling, the main thing IMO is the hooks it provides (in the form of callbacks).
With other TeX engines (mainly: pdfTeX, XeTeX, or the original Knuth TeX), the only "programming" facility is in the form of macros, which were originally added by Knuth only for some simple text substitution to save typing. He never intended to add programming features into TeX, but of course, it doesn't take much to become "accidentally Turing-complete", and that's what TeX macros became. (There's also some rudimentary support for counters/registers, which Knuth added after he found users were (ab)using macros to encode numbers using unary or Church numerals.) So the only way to influence anything TeX does automatically, whether it's hyphenation or line-breaking or page-breaking or whatever, is to set up some macros whose blind expansion will ultimately result in the outcome you want, without affecting anything else (e.g. even an accidental space might get typeset with undesirable results). This of course is cumbersome and error-prone.
With LuaTeX you can program these things at the level you actually intend, e.g. while you can still use macros (or use the `process_input_buffer` callback in Lua), you can now also directly, say, influence the page layout, in a Lua callback that is actually aware of data at the relevant level of abstraction (the vboxes on the page, say), rather than everything being at the lowest (text expansion) level.
Knuth has said that he never intended for TeX macros to be used as a full-fledged programming language (he expected people would directly edit the SAIL/Pascal code of the TeX program for anything nontrivial), and that he dislikes each tool coming with its own Turing-complete programming language, and that if a standard embeddable programming language had been available he'd of course have used it in TeX — I think Lua would count.
You can see "TeX without TeX" page on the LuaTeX wiki for an example of the power of LuaTeX, typesetting with TeX while completely bypassing TeX syntax: http://wiki.luatex.org/index.php/TeX_without_TeX — a more elaborate production system is Speedata Publisher: https://github.com/speedata/publisher
As for myself, here is the most fancy thing I did with LuaTeX: https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/401604/book-on-a-sin... (never "productionized" into a package or whatever). Also, something possibly illuminating is this TeX-vs-LuaTeX comparison of something hyphenation-related (https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/378704/how-to-avoid-...), and in this answer (https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/398310/why-in-2017-d...) I link to some other times I used LuaTeX, though some of them just use the Lua part of LuaTeX rather than LuaTeX hooks, such as computing digits of pi for generating pretty pictures (https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/367902/tikz-color-op...).
- Show HN: I built Creodocs, a document creation platform based on LaTeX
What are some alternatives?
RusTeX - A (somewhat experimental) implementation of a TeX engine in rust, used to convert LaTeX documents to xhtml.
pagedown - Paginate the HTML Output of R Markdown with CSS for Print
tex-rs - A port of TeX82 to Rust. (WIP)
digestif - A language server for TeX and friends
KeenType - Pure Java typesetting system
keenwrite-themes - Document typesetting configurations using ConTeXt
rpg_module - rpg-module: a LaTeX class for typesetting RPG adventure modules in the style of D&D modules from the 1980s
xml2lua - XML Parser written entirely in Lua that works for Lua 5.1+. Convert XML to and from Lua Tables 🌖💱
realhats - realhats LaTeX package
mupdf - mupdf mirror
iheartla - compilable markdown for linear algebra
boxesandglue - PDF rendering library for Go using TeX algorithms.