stacks-project
MathJax
stacks-project | MathJax | |
---|---|---|
15 | 57 | |
804 | 9,908 | |
4.7% | 0.4% | |
9.1 | 1.0 | |
4 days ago | 7 days ago | |
TeX | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
stacks-project
- The Clowder Project: an online resource for category theory and mathematics
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Wikipedia of Algebraic Geometry Will Forever Be Incomplete. (2022)
The Stacks project is meant to be a comprehensive Bourbaki-style textbook, not an encyclopedic survey, so the Wikipedia comparison is a miss. (The WP has a textbook level of detail on some topics, with proofs and examples, but these are few and far between and come from enthusiastic editors going above and beyond the WP's declared goals.)
Stacks is not finished, however -- still a lot of "Proof. Omitted.". From what I understand, the goal is to fill them all in (otherwise there would be references to the literature in their stead), but ultimately it is still mostly a one-person project (see https://github.com/stacks/stacks-project/graphs/contributors ).
I once filled in one of those missing proofs, only to see Johan replace it by a much better one that I would never have thought of. And this was (for him) a technical lemma, not one of the crown jewels of the project. His dedication to the project is truly incomparable to anything except Bourbaki and Serre. And the usefulness of the work extends far beyond algebraic stacks.
- I don't always use LaTeX, but when I do, I compile to HTML (2013)
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Ask HN: What are some well-designed websites?
Personally, I love the Stacks Project webpage (https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/); they way it is laid out, the font, the seamless integration of LaTeX in the test (https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/0A2U) has made me rethink mathematical text for the web.
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Tree linking all math concepts together?
For algebraic geometry, there is the Stacks project online, which builds up all mathematics needed to understand algebraic stacks, from foundations. This time, foundations truly mean its basic axioms. Everything is proven except maybe with a few exceptions in the introduction, and everything has links. As such, it is a monstrously large project (the pdf-version is around 7500 pages iirc). This one is I think among my suggestions closest to what you had in mind. The only thing is that it again only focuses on one area of math.
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LaTeX for books?
Some famous collaborative books: * https://github.com/HoTT/book * https://github.com/OpenLogicProject/OpenLogic * https://github.com/stacks/stacks-project * http://math.uchicago.edu/~amathew/cr.html
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What are the subfields of algebraic geometry?
There is not really one good reference for algebraic geometry (even the EGA, SGA, FGA series, and that's assuming you can even plough through them all), but the Stacks Project (https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/) is at least very good for CAG.
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Comprehensive math education
The Stacks Project is a massive project covering algebraic geometry. The nLab is a wiki that covers a staggering amount of material from its own, rather specific, point of view.
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I finished Hartshorne… now what?
Well, I talked to a friend who knows a lot of AG. He recommended "learning some things in topology like model categories" and discouraged learning about infinity categories without other stuff. Also, if you're interested in stacks, try the Stacks Project?
- The Stacks project: open-source textbook and reference on algebraic geometry
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?
tectonic - A modernized, complete, self-contained TeX/LaTeX engine, powered by XeTeX and TeXLive.
KaTeX - Fast math typesetting for the web.
numerical-linear-algebra - Free online textbook of Jupyter notebooks for fast.ai Computational Linear Algebra course
WeasyPrint - The awesome document factory
book - A textbook on informal homotopy type theory
mathquill - Easily type math in your webapp
OpenLogic - An open-source, customizable intermediate logic textbook
tikzjax - TikZJax is TikZ running under WebAssembly in the browser
maths_book - Planning for an entire maths LaTeX book
pandoc - Universal markup converter
microMathematics - microMathematics Plus - Extended visual calculator
asciidoctor-web-pdf - Convert AsciiDoc documents to PDF using web technologies