Mathjax is the best for math display on the web. The mathematics professional societies use it, as do major projects like webwork ( github.com/openwebwork, webwork.maa.org) and Sage (sagemath.org).
On Sunday, September 11, 2016, Igor Chudov <ichu...@gmail.com> wrote: > This mathml and asciimath is extremely interesting! Thank you! You are > awesome! > > I was a little unclear what browsers it works with, I would have to do > some testing. I hope that it is compatible with all modern browsers and > cell phones and such. If not it would not work, but if it is then I would > be delighted! I use something similar to asciimath internally, that I > developed 12 years ago, should not be hard to translate as I parse all > formulas deeply. > > > On Sun, Sep 11, 2016 at 9:06 PM, Michael Bochkaryov <mi...@rattler.kiev.ua > <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','mi...@rattler.kiev.ua');>> wrote: > >> >> On Sun, Sep 11, 2016 at 4:51 PM, Ruben Safir <ru...@mrbrklyn.com >> <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','ru...@mrbrklyn.com');>> wrote: >> >>> > GD::Graph is something that is not going to kill me (like if CGI.pm >>> became >>> > unavailable) but it is certainly a concern. >>> > >>> > Are there any alternatives to it? >>> > >>> imagemajic maybe >>> >> >> It also make sense to try something like this: >> https://www.mathjax.org/ >> >> Seems modern browsers may allow to move rendering to client side that >> also may decrease load on backend. >> >> >> Regards, >> Michael Bochkaryov >> >> >