Hi Dan, Dan Davison <davi...@stats.ox.ac.uk> writes:
> It's quite convenient already (see below), so what exactly would the > option involve? Can the javascript and fonts be located remotely? >From what I understand, no, the javascript and fonts have to be on the server. I just installed an instance on orgmode.org: http://orgmode.org/mathjax/test/ > - Darlan Cavalcante has written a Worg article[1] on using jsMath with > org > - Basically, to use jsMath all you need is > > #+options: latex:verbatim > #+style: <script src="/path/to/jsMath/easy/load.js"></script> Great! So to use mathjax on orgmode.org (Worg etc.) : #+options: latex:verbatim #+style: <script type="text/javascript" src="/mathjax/MathJax.js"></script> > - Mathjax was considerably slower to render the maths. (I think that > under the hood it converts to mathML which jsMath does not do (?)) I'm not sure. Maybe MathJax is faster once reasonably tweaked. > As I said the other day[2], one reason I am excited about these > technologies is that we can produce a pdf with pretty source code > fontification via htmlize (rather than ugly[3] latex listings output) > and genuine mathematical fonts rather than ugly dvipng images. I do this > via CUPS print to file under linux, which allows the web browser to > produce a .ps or .pdf. I'd be interested to know how we can make this a > more "genuine" org export path. You mean org -> HTML -> ps? Is it not possible to call firefox (or Xulrunner) in batch mode to convert an HTML page into .ps? If so, we can have two ways of producing org->pdf, one through LaTeX, one through HTML... -- Bastien _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode