> On Aug 17, 2020, at 17:27, Christopher Browne via talk <[email protected]> > wrote: > > On Mon, 17 Aug 2020 at 17:15, Howard Gibson via talk <[email protected] > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: > I brought this up at our last meeting and we discussed it. > > Officially, you can insert equations into your website using MathML. > Unfortunately, Google Chrome does not support this, so it does not work. I > uploaded my MathML page to my website, and you can try it out. > > http://rev/~howard/hgibson2/MathML.html > <http://rev/~howard/hgibson2/MathML.html> > > A URL that seems to work better for those of us outside your network ;-) is > this one: > http://home.eol.ca/~hgibson/MathML.html > <http://home.eol.ca/~hgibson/MathML.html> > > I'll note that the browsers I had handy were Firefox and Chrome; I concur > with your comments on the handling of the quadratic equation. > > Those results are not extraordinarily surprising. The one I'd wonder about > is Safari; I would assume it doesn't support it.
Safari handles those equations without any issue. If you want to cause some Safari rendering errors, add a binomial coefficient. Based off one of the links I put in the etherpad, Chrome used to support MathML. It stopped after Google forked WebKit into Blink.
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