Definitely, this is the technology to use to produce HTML for the web. Note the interactive typesetting feature
http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/talks/2010-01-15.mathjax/lab.html (tick 'typeset as you type') Some browser based technology is going to present a serious challenge to TeXmacs soon, at least at the level of small fragments. Content is very atomized anyways on the web, where pagination is not an issue, and more and more on-screen reading is to be expected as hardware gets better. I would like to know what is the vision, if there is one, for TeXmacs integration with the web. The wiki and chat servers never worked for me... In a sense, mathjax works like the library TeXmacs never became (cf. suggestion by Stéphane Payrard around in 2002). Related, it is interesting to know about the progress of the LyX frontend to LaTeX v. 2.0 enhancements: http://wiki.lyx.org/LyX/NewInLyX20 user suggestion page (a similar repository would be useful for TeXmacs): http://wiki.lyx.org/LyX/FeaturePoll Is the officialization of QTeXmacs the time for a TeXmacs 2.0, possibly with name change and promotion of the collaborative aspects added lately, such as chat/wiki/version control? -á. On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 01:08, Massimiliano Gubinelli <[email protected]> wrote: > I found this new technology to add math to html pages using javascript > > http://www.mathjax.org/ > > maybe it would be interesting to understand if we can output html with it. > > it has to be compared with mathjs. > > > best > massimiliano > > _______________________________________________ > Texmacs-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/texmacs-dev > _______________________________________________ Texmacs-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/texmacs-dev
