Difference between revisions of "Math"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Added a link to the LaTeXMath page.) |
m (Renaming LaTeXMath page) |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
[[Metapost]] and [[MetaFun]]. | [[Metapost]] and [[MetaFun]]. | ||
− | It is also possible to use most LaTeX equations in ConTeXt with a relatively small set of supporting definitions; that is discussed in the [[ | + | It is also possible to use most LaTeX equations in ConTeXt with a relatively small set of supporting definitions; that is discussed in the [[LaTeX Math in ConTeXt]] page. |
Revision as of 21:19, 2 August 2004
You can use all of PlainTeX math and most of AMSmath in ConTeXt; for the latter you may need the nath module (see on CTAN).
The "native" ConTeXt way of math is MathML - rather verbose but mighty. Here's the docs:
- MathML (general) by Pragma
- MathML in ConTeXt (examples) by Pragma
- ChemML (MathML extension for chemistry) (screen) by Pragma
- PhysML (MathML extension for physics) (screen) by Pragma
- Steps (XML step charts) (screen) by Pragma
- Euler in ConTeXt (using Euler math font) by Adam Lindsay
Esp. for physics there's the units module.
There's a module for chemical structure formulae: PPCHTeX (works also with LaTeX). It's based on Metapost and MetaFun.
It is also possible to use most LaTeX equations in ConTeXt with a relatively small set of supporting definitions; that is discussed in the LaTeX Math in ConTeXt page.