Playing around getting MathJax to work in blogger. Below is the spherical law of cosines. It was getting cut off at the right so I had to break it up into two pieces. A bit ugly.
\[ d = \cos^{-1}(\sin(lat_1)\sin(lat_2) + \] \[ \cos(lat_1)\cos(lat_2)\cos(lon_2-lon_1))R \]And some other mess that I got from here. \[ z \left( 1 \ +\ \sqrt{\omega_{i+1} + \zeta -\frac{x+1}{\Theta +1} y + 1} \ \right) \ \ \ =\ \ \ 1 \]
And this is from the MathJax main page.
\[ J_\alpha(x) = \sum_{m=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^m}{m! \, \Gamma(m + \alpha + 1)}{\left({\frac{x}{2}}\right)}^{2 m + \alpha} \]So I think we can say it works. Right click on any equation and Show Source to see the LaTex.
So to use MathJax in a blog post you need to edit a post as HTML and insert the Javascript below.
<script src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/1.1-latest/MathJax.js">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
extensions: ["tex2jax.js"],
jax: ["input/TeX","output/HTML-CSS"],
tex2jax: {inlineMath: [["$","$"],["\\(","\\)"]]}
});
</script>
Now add LaTex equations in your HTML using \[ latex-equation \].
2 comments:
Thank you!
Woot! No more froggering around with clunky image generation!
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