MathJax
latex-to-html | MathJax | |
---|---|---|
2 | 57 | |
6 | 9,925 | |
- | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 1.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 20 days ago | |
TeX | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Apache License 2.0 |
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latex-to-html
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MathJax – Beautiful and accessible math in all browsers
If you're going to send out math as SVGs anyway, you can also just use your normal latex to PDF renderer (e.g. pdflatex) on each formula, and then convert the output PDFs to SVGs. That way, you get the same output you'd get with latex, and you can also use latex packages that aren't supported by MathJax (e.g. tikz-cd). I've prototyped a latex to html converter [1] based on that approach, but it's probably not ready for serious use. Here's an example: https://www.mbid.me/lcc-model/
[1] https://github.com/mbid/latex-to-html
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Compile latex documents into webpages with latex-to-html
I made a small tool called latex-to-html that compiles latex documents into webpages. The tool can be found here, and here is an example webpage generated by the tool.
MathJax
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AsciidocFX: The Asciidoc Editor for documentation and authoring
MathJax - Mathematical Notations expressed using Tex or MathML
- Ask HN: Tips to get started on my own server
- I don't always use LaTeX, but when I do, I compile to HTML (2013)
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Linear Transformers Are Faster After All
Developer tools point to MathJax https://www.mathjax.org/. If you disable javascript you can see some LaTex.
- MathJax – Beautiful and accessible math in all browsers
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Superscript and subscript
It is something we could add, but it is not planned in the near future. We also have requests for adding math notation (like https://www.mathjax.org/), and that could be a more general solution.
- Is it possible to learn maths and physics with Obsidian?
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Overline doesen't work properly
I don't know what Obsidian is, but if it's requiring old TeX math mode toggles (the double dollar sign), then it might not actually be using LaTeX underneath. Many tools that provide LaTeX-style syntax for equations are actually using something like MathJaX, BlahTex, or some custom system by which to translate LaTeX-like syntax into their own equation rendering. This often means you only get a pre-defined subset of what's possible with LaTeX (and the results are never quite faithful to how LaTeX would typeset them).
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What software do you use to correctly format math questions online?
This will depend heavily on where you're asking the question, e.g. stackexchange has built in mathjax to render it. I'm going to assume you're intending to ask here (because that would make sense), in which case check out the bottom of the sidebar.
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Need help installing Latex on Linux
From the screenshot, Obsidian looks like a typical Markdown editor that supports some LaTeX math syntax, probably rendered with something like Mathjax. On the other hand, Xournalapp seems to actually use LaTeX, even allowing you to use LaTeX packages like graphicx, tikz, etc.
What are some alternatives?
ascii-tables - ⚡ Quickly format table in ASCII. Great for code comments, or Github Markdown!
KaTeX - Fast math typesetting for the web.
UnicodeMathML - JavaScript-based translation of UnicodeMath to MathML that can be integrated into arbitrary HTML or Markdeep documents. An interactive "playground" allows for experimentation with the syntax and insight into the translation pipeline.
WeasyPrint - The awesome document factory
Temml - TeX-to-MathML conversion library in JavaScript
mathquill - Easily type math in your webapp
Mastodon - Your self-hosted, globally interconnected microblogging community
tikzjax - TikZJax is TikZ running under WebAssembly in the browser
pandoc - Universal markup converter
asciidoctor-web-pdf - Convert AsciiDoc documents to PDF using web technologies
mermaid - Generation of diagrams like flowcharts or sequence diagrams from text in a similar manner as markdown