cremma-16-17-print
LaTeX-OCR
cremma-16-17-print | LaTeX-OCR | |
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1 | 21 | |
0 | 10,860 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 3.6 | |
over 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
XSLT | Python | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | MIT License |
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cremma-16-17-print
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What would you love to see in a modern edition of a 16th-century work?
I would also recommend to look into OCR and the progress in this area, at least to help you kickstart the trancription. Simon Gabay at Geneva is leading a project where they host eScriptorium, and their results are quite good. I have produced myself some data for Latin ( https://github.com/HTR-United/cremma-16-17-print ) and, except for some rare characters, the results are more than promising (much more than what Abbyy can do).
LaTeX-OCR
- Detexify LaTeX Handwriting Symbol Recognition
- Pix2tex: Using a ViT to convert images of equations into LaTeX code
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Why copyng a math formula gives me duplicated characters
I didn't know that such tools exists (completly new to LaTex). Thanks to your suggestion I looked for an open source althernative (to avoid anoyances of freemium) and I found pix2tex That works really like a charm.
- I have just started using LaTeX in my Physics and Math courses and I love it and want to learn all about it. Does anyone know any obscure (or well known that I just don't know about) things about LaTeX that are really cool and helpful?
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Github packages/Apps that are must have for Physicists using Linux
I have recently discovered a few very helpful github packages which help me make notes while listening to lectures. These would be 1. pix2tex (allows you to scan an equation and convert it to latex) 2. pix2text (allows you to scan an equation with words in it and converts it to latex and text) 3. Tesseract (not really a physics related package, but it does allow me to copy notes from transcripts easily) 4. Mathpix an app that performs all the above mentioned operations better than the packages above, but one which ain't free.
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The fastest math typesetting library for the web
This is also a great aid to learing LaTex. I wonder if anyone has ever tried to make an OCR system that generates the appropriate LaTex from an picture of an equation?
Turns out the answer is yes:
https://github.com/lukas-blecher/LaTeX-OCR
- A very useful package which I don't know to set up
- LaTeX AI
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Any alternatives to Mathpix/Latex-OCR?
LaTeX-OCR
What are some alternatives?
EasyOCR - Ready-to-use OCR with 80+ supported languages and all popular writing scripts including Latin, Chinese, Arabic, Devanagari, Cyrillic and etc.
transformer-pytorch - Transformer: PyTorch Implementation of "Attention Is All You Need"
PaperTools - Tools for writing papers
SwinIR - SwinIR: Image Restoration Using Swin Transformer (official repository)
mmocr - OpenMMLab Text Detection, Recognition and Understanding Toolbox
rebiber - A simple tool to update bib entries with their official information (e.g., DBLP or the ACL anthology).
Pix2Text - An Open-Source Python3 tool for recognizing layouts, tables, math formulas, and text in images, converting them into Markdown format. A free alternative to Mathpix, empowering seamless conversion of visual content into text-based representations. 80+ languages are supported.
MPViT - [CVPR 2022] MPViT:Multi-Path Vision Transformer for Dense Prediction
im2markup - Neural model for converting Image-to-Markup (by Yuntian Deng yuntiandeng.com)
text - Models, data loaders and abstractions for language processing, powered by PyTorch
Graphormer - Graphormer is a general-purpose deep learning backbone for molecular modeling.
pikepdf - A Python library for reading and writing PDF, powered by QPDF