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AsciiMath

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Adius (talk | contribs) at 13:54, 29 April 2016 (Adius moved page ASCIIMathML to AsciiMath: Official name used on http://asciimath.org). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

AsciiMath is a client-side mathematical markup language for displaying mathematical expressions in web browsers.[1][2]

Using the JavaScript script ASCIIMathML.js, AsciiMath notation is converted to MathML at the time the page is loaded by the browser, natively in Mozilla Firefox, Safari, and via a plug-in in IE7. The simplified markup language supports a subset of the LaTeX language instructions, as well as a less verbose syntax (which, for example, replaces "\times" with "xx" to produce the "×" symbol). The resulting MathML mathematics can be styled by applying CSS to class "mstyle".[3]

The script ASCIIMathML.js is freely available under the MIT License.[4] The latest version also includes support for SVG graphics, natively in Mozilla Firefox and via a plug-in in IE7.

Per May 2009 there is a new version available. This new version still contains the original ASCIIMathML and LaTeXMathML as developed by Peter Jipsen, but the ASCIIsvg part has been extended with linear-logarithmic, logarithmic-linear, logarithmic-logarithmic, polar graphs and pie charts, normal and stacked bar charts, different functions like integration and differentiation and a series of event trapping functions, buttons and sliders, in order to create interactive lecture material and exams online in web pages.

ASCIIMathML.js has been integrated into MathJax, starting with MathJax v2.0.[5][6]

Example

The well-known quadratic formula

looks in AsciiMath like this

x=(-b +- sqrt(b^2 – 4ac))/(2a)

See also

References

  1. ^ Gray, James (2007), "ASCIIMathML: now everyone can type MathML", MSOR Connections, 7 (3): 26–30, doi:10.11120/msor.2007.07030026.
  2. ^ Johnson, Brian (January 2005), Interactive LATEX to MathML/HTML translation (PDF), Maersk Mc-Kinney Moller Institute for Production Technology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense.
  3. ^ Sorge, Volker; Chen, Charles; Raman, T. V.; Tseng, David (2014), "Towards Making Mathematics a First Class Citizen in General Screen Readers", Proceedings of the 11th Web for All Conference (W4A '14), New York, NY, USA: ACM, pp. 40:1–40:10, doi:10.1145/2596695.2596700, ISBN 978-1-4503-2651-3.
  4. ^ asciimathml/LICENSE at master · mathjax/asciimathml
  5. ^ "MathJax v2.0 beta available".
  6. ^ Cervone, Davide (February 2012), "MathJax: A Platform for Mathematics on the Web" (PDF), Notices of the AMS, 59 (2): 312–316.