On Wed, 07 Jun 2006 23:09:57 +0700, Michel Fortin
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I would also use <f> instead of <formula> (as Juan used in one of his
example), because it's shorter and fits well with many other wildly used
container elements: <p>, <h1>-<h6>, <ol>, <ul>, <li>, <dl>, <dt>, and
<dd>.
Why have <f> at all? When I'm writing about <var>x</var>, why should I
write <f><var>x</var></f>? What would be the difference? I think a
<formula> element is only needed for what is called "display equations" --
they are rendered out of line, usually centered, and sometimes numbered.
That way, inline math would require no special element at all -- just
write math in the middle of a sentence, and it should work. On the other
hand, when math is put inside a <formula>, it's displayed on a line by
itself, centered, numbered etc. And, by the way, one can actually have
just plain text inside a formula, such as some statement in prose that
needs to be centered and numbered like other formulae.
--
Alexey Feldgendler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[ICQ: 115226275] http://feldgendler.livejournal.com