Stuart Rackham <[email protected]> writes:
>> Okay, that's not so good! So, it looks like the right way to go would be
>> to use a plugin to serve the JS up and add it to the header. This will
>> be nicer in many ways, because I can just include the JS, and serve it
>> from a single location which should be faster. Also, with a plugin, I
>> should be able to set up configuration options; I think having this run
>> for an entire blog is likely to cause problems.
>>
>> I think to get this working ideally, I'd like the option of adding some
>> custom fields to the post; I think these are supported in the XML-RPC
>> interface (haven't tried it, though). I could use the attributes support
>> you've just added to then switch this on or off on a per-post basis. 
>>
>> Anyway, it's going to take a while to do this; never written a wordpress
>> plugin. Or any PhP. But it doesn't sound too hard. 
>
> The alternative would be to display equations as images using an AsciiDoc
> filter (this is how the music filter works, see
> http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/music-filter.html). I hacked this example
> (http://www.amk.ca/python/code/mt-math) into a rough math2png.py script just
> to see if it was feasible. The advantages of this approach are:
>
> - It can be used to generate DocBook and HTML.
> - Equations appear identical across formats.
> - No JavaScript required in HTML outputs so no need for WordPress plugin.
>
> Disadvantages:
>
> - Inline filters have not been implemented yet, so no inline equations.


Ideally, I'd like to go for a non-image based solution; images are not
accessible. Also is blogpost clever enough to work out which images are
being created (rather than just linked to) as part of the asciidoc run?

The plugin also has the advantage that it's not asciidoc/blogpost
specific. There are some tools already that allow wordpress to show
maths, but the latex-u-like capabilities of javascript is attractive to
me. 

For me, also, lack of inline equations would be a big thing. I'm not a
heavy maths user, just need the occasional term included. 

I think, I'll try it and see how it works. 

Phil


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