Embed LaTeX math equations into Microsoft Word
up vote
105
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Let's say I have a (comparatively) lovely-looking document in LaTeX, full of lovingly typeset, (relatively) complex equations.
Now, let's say some Philistines come along one day and decide that the document has to be put into Microsoft Word (2007).
...after the usual mourning period associated with such events, let's say I value my job (more specifically, the bread it provides) enough to get all the text and tables formatted and references organised into the Word document. –...related questions here and here–
Now I'm looking at the equations with fear and dread.
One option of course is to just lift screenshots from the original document, but this is painstaking if I need to refer to parts of the equation in the text. Also, I might need to edit equations on the fly.
Anyone know of a free application which allows embedding LaTeX math into MS Word?
I've looked at Aurora and TexPoint which do roughly what I want... they build LaTeX images from source and embed them into the Word document, allowing to edit the source later... but both are commerical.
...any help in these troubling times will be greatly appreciated.
EDIT: Just a note that Aurora offers a 30-day free trial and is working out really nicely... but still, it's not free. Might be a good solution for those with short-term needs, or money.
conversion msword
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
105
down vote
favorite
Let's say I have a (comparatively) lovely-looking document in LaTeX, full of lovingly typeset, (relatively) complex equations.
Now, let's say some Philistines come along one day and decide that the document has to be put into Microsoft Word (2007).
...after the usual mourning period associated with such events, let's say I value my job (more specifically, the bread it provides) enough to get all the text and tables formatted and references organised into the Word document. –...related questions here and here–
Now I'm looking at the equations with fear and dread.
One option of course is to just lift screenshots from the original document, but this is painstaking if I need to refer to parts of the equation in the text. Also, I might need to edit equations on the fly.
Anyone know of a free application which allows embedding LaTeX math into MS Word?
I've looked at Aurora and TexPoint which do roughly what I want... they build LaTeX images from source and embed them into the Word document, allowing to edit the source later... but both are commerical.
...any help in these troubling times will be greatly appreciated.
EDIT: Just a note that Aurora offers a 30-day free trial and is working out really nicely... but still, it's not free. Might be a good solution for those with short-term needs, or money.
conversion msword
1
I'm not sure, but Pandoc might help you. It doesn't support MSOffice format out of the box, but I know it can export to RTF or ODT, so you could use OpenOffice/LibreOffice to save them to the properdoc/docx
format.
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 17:52
2
Word 2007 has better math typesetting than LaTeX, so there's no need to embed anything. Press Alt+= and have fun.
– Philipp
Aug 8 '11 at 20:27
17
@Philipp: "better than TeX" is a very blatant assertion, it has some nice features but nothing ground breaking and it has its share of problems too.
– Khaled Hosny
Aug 9 '11 at 1:28
1
@Khaled, a few reasons: (1) I already have the equations in TeX from an existing document, (2) I can do new equations the way I like them much quicker in TeX than Word, (3) I'm don't want to invest time figuring out Word's way of doing things for a (hopefully) once-off job. ;)
– badroit
Aug 9 '11 at 23:01
3
See also superuser.com/q/340650/35237
– Tobias Kienzler
Oct 22 '12 at 13:32
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
105
down vote
favorite
up vote
105
down vote
favorite
Let's say I have a (comparatively) lovely-looking document in LaTeX, full of lovingly typeset, (relatively) complex equations.
Now, let's say some Philistines come along one day and decide that the document has to be put into Microsoft Word (2007).
...after the usual mourning period associated with such events, let's say I value my job (more specifically, the bread it provides) enough to get all the text and tables formatted and references organised into the Word document. –...related questions here and here–
Now I'm looking at the equations with fear and dread.
One option of course is to just lift screenshots from the original document, but this is painstaking if I need to refer to parts of the equation in the text. Also, I might need to edit equations on the fly.
Anyone know of a free application which allows embedding LaTeX math into MS Word?
I've looked at Aurora and TexPoint which do roughly what I want... they build LaTeX images from source and embed them into the Word document, allowing to edit the source later... but both are commerical.
...any help in these troubling times will be greatly appreciated.
EDIT: Just a note that Aurora offers a 30-day free trial and is working out really nicely... but still, it's not free. Might be a good solution for those with short-term needs, or money.
conversion msword
Let's say I have a (comparatively) lovely-looking document in LaTeX, full of lovingly typeset, (relatively) complex equations.
Now, let's say some Philistines come along one day and decide that the document has to be put into Microsoft Word (2007).
...after the usual mourning period associated with such events, let's say I value my job (more specifically, the bread it provides) enough to get all the text and tables formatted and references organised into the Word document. –...related questions here and here–
Now I'm looking at the equations with fear and dread.
One option of course is to just lift screenshots from the original document, but this is painstaking if I need to refer to parts of the equation in the text. Also, I might need to edit equations on the fly.
Anyone know of a free application which allows embedding LaTeX math into MS Word?
I've looked at Aurora and TexPoint which do roughly what I want... they build LaTeX images from source and embed them into the Word document, allowing to edit the source later... but both are commerical.
...any help in these troubling times will be greatly appreciated.
EDIT: Just a note that Aurora offers a 30-day free trial and is working out really nicely... but still, it's not free. Might be a good solution for those with short-term needs, or money.
conversion msword
conversion msword
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:35
Community♦
1
1
asked Aug 8 '11 at 17:39
badroit
3,38373352
3,38373352
1
I'm not sure, but Pandoc might help you. It doesn't support MSOffice format out of the box, but I know it can export to RTF or ODT, so you could use OpenOffice/LibreOffice to save them to the properdoc/docx
format.
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 17:52
2
Word 2007 has better math typesetting than LaTeX, so there's no need to embed anything. Press Alt+= and have fun.
– Philipp
Aug 8 '11 at 20:27
17
@Philipp: "better than TeX" is a very blatant assertion, it has some nice features but nothing ground breaking and it has its share of problems too.
– Khaled Hosny
Aug 9 '11 at 1:28
1
@Khaled, a few reasons: (1) I already have the equations in TeX from an existing document, (2) I can do new equations the way I like them much quicker in TeX than Word, (3) I'm don't want to invest time figuring out Word's way of doing things for a (hopefully) once-off job. ;)
– badroit
Aug 9 '11 at 23:01
3
See also superuser.com/q/340650/35237
– Tobias Kienzler
Oct 22 '12 at 13:32
|
show 2 more comments
1
I'm not sure, but Pandoc might help you. It doesn't support MSOffice format out of the box, but I know it can export to RTF or ODT, so you could use OpenOffice/LibreOffice to save them to the properdoc/docx
format.
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 17:52
2
Word 2007 has better math typesetting than LaTeX, so there's no need to embed anything. Press Alt+= and have fun.
– Philipp
Aug 8 '11 at 20:27
17
@Philipp: "better than TeX" is a very blatant assertion, it has some nice features but nothing ground breaking and it has its share of problems too.
– Khaled Hosny
Aug 9 '11 at 1:28
1
@Khaled, a few reasons: (1) I already have the equations in TeX from an existing document, (2) I can do new equations the way I like them much quicker in TeX than Word, (3) I'm don't want to invest time figuring out Word's way of doing things for a (hopefully) once-off job. ;)
– badroit
Aug 9 '11 at 23:01
3
See also superuser.com/q/340650/35237
– Tobias Kienzler
Oct 22 '12 at 13:32
1
1
I'm not sure, but Pandoc might help you. It doesn't support MSOffice format out of the box, but I know it can export to RTF or ODT, so you could use OpenOffice/LibreOffice to save them to the proper
doc/docx
format.– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 17:52
I'm not sure, but Pandoc might help you. It doesn't support MSOffice format out of the box, but I know it can export to RTF or ODT, so you could use OpenOffice/LibreOffice to save them to the proper
doc/docx
format.– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 17:52
2
2
Word 2007 has better math typesetting than LaTeX, so there's no need to embed anything. Press Alt+= and have fun.
– Philipp
Aug 8 '11 at 20:27
Word 2007 has better math typesetting than LaTeX, so there's no need to embed anything. Press Alt+= and have fun.
– Philipp
Aug 8 '11 at 20:27
17
17
@Philipp: "better than TeX" is a very blatant assertion, it has some nice features but nothing ground breaking and it has its share of problems too.
– Khaled Hosny
Aug 9 '11 at 1:28
@Philipp: "better than TeX" is a very blatant assertion, it has some nice features but nothing ground breaking and it has its share of problems too.
– Khaled Hosny
Aug 9 '11 at 1:28
1
1
@Khaled, a few reasons: (1) I already have the equations in TeX from an existing document, (2) I can do new equations the way I like them much quicker in TeX than Word, (3) I'm don't want to invest time figuring out Word's way of doing things for a (hopefully) once-off job. ;)
– badroit
Aug 9 '11 at 23:01
@Khaled, a few reasons: (1) I already have the equations in TeX from an existing document, (2) I can do new equations the way I like them much quicker in TeX than Word, (3) I'm don't want to invest time figuring out Word's way of doing things for a (hopefully) once-off job. ;)
– badroit
Aug 9 '11 at 23:01
3
3
See also superuser.com/q/340650/35237
– Tobias Kienzler
Oct 22 '12 at 13:32
See also superuser.com/q/340650/35237
– Tobias Kienzler
Oct 22 '12 at 13:32
|
show 2 more comments
16 Answers
16
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up vote
43
down vote
accepted
If you're going completely free/open source, then I guess dropping MS Word for something like OpenOffice Writer might also be considered. For this, there's OOoLaTeX. From the OOoLaTeX SourceForge project webpage:
OOoLatex is a set of macros designed to bring the power of LaTeX
into OpenOffice. It contains two main modules: the first one,
Equation
, allows to insert LaTeX equations into Writer and
Impress documents as png or emf images while the second one,
Expand
, can be used for simpler equations to expand LaTeX code into
appropriated symbol characters and insert them as regular text.
This should work as a cross-platform alternative.
Back to MS Word, a number of work-arounds exist using MS Powerpoint. Copy-and-paste the resulting equation (from Powerpoint) across the Office Suite.
The first is via TeX4PPT. The maintainer(s) suggest it provides an alternative to TeXPoint that is faster:
TeX4PPT is designed following the philosophy of TeXPoint, to
enable PowerPoint to typeset sentences and equations using the
power of TeX. It differs from TeXPoint in that it uses a native
DVI to PowerPoint converter, providing extremely fast conversion.
Additionally, the result is set using native truetype fonts under
windows, providing the highest fidelity.
TeX4PPT seems to be a little lagging in up-to-date support, since "a compatible version for PP2007 will be forthcoming" (from the website).
The second is via Iguanatex. From the homepage:
IguanaTex is a PowerPoint plug-in which allows you to insert
LaTeX equations into your PowerPoint presentation. It is
distributed completely for free.
The third is via MyTeXPoint. From the homepage:
Free simplified version of TeXPoint. Partly compatible with the
original TeXPoint. It has integrated screenshot tool to copy
equations and pictures right from the screen. Supports Microsoft
Powerpoint (tested with version 2007 and 2005). Compatible with
Microsoft Office 2010.
If you're stuck with an old version of MS Word (for whatever reason), older - free - versions of TeXPoint still exist. I haven't tested any of the choices listed below, but it's worth a shot:
- Office 2002
- Office 2003
- All versions of Office
The last version of TeXPoint (v1.5.4) apparently works for all versions, but it is much older the current, non-free version (v3.3.1), so it probably doesn't provide the latest functionality.
For a complete list of formula editors across many platforms and compatibility criteria (including compatibility with TeX), consider viewing the Wikipedia entry on formula editors.
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
add a comment |
up vote
67
down vote
You should be able to cut and paste mathematics from your web browser to Word (or any of the Micorsoft Office suite). Unfortunately at present you have to make a small edit but any text editor will do for that.
Given
x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}
Make a small html file that looks like
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<title>tex texample</title>
</head>
<body>
$$x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}$$
</body>
</html>
View that in a web browser and select "show MathML as/MathML Code" from the right menu:
Select the MathML text from the popup window.
Normally you can paste MathML in to word but for various reasons you need to give Word a hint in this case, so first paste it into a text editor and add the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the start:
Then cut out the edited text and paste it into Word (any version since 2007).
Note the result is a fully editable Word Math Zone, using scalable fonts, not an image.
I used MathJax in a web browser for the initial TeX to MathML conversion as it is the easiest to set up, there are other alternatives. Also, to make it simple, I described the process in terms of cutting and pasting, which works well for one or two expressions but clearly not if you are converting thousands, however the process can be automated in various ways.
8
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
4
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
|
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up vote
22
down vote
For the Mac, there is the wonderful LaTexiT
application which allows you to quickly generate latex fragments and export them in a variety of formats, including PDF. You can store fragments in libraries, so keeping equations organized isn't too hard. This isn't quite the same as editing them directly from within the Word document, but it's pretty close.
I use this regularly for including LaTeX into Powerpoint (if I'm not using Beamer) and InDesign (which I use for posters.)
I don't know if there's an equivalent program for Windows.
add a comment |
up vote
16
down vote
For me MathJax has been the way to go as per David Carlisle's suggestion. The one addition I would make is that Microsoft Word by default brings across the formatting of the page displaying the MathML code. I don't think the addition of <?xml version="1.0"?>
was doing anything for me except making me go via an editor that doesn't have any formatting to copy.
Instead I have found it quicker to simply copy and paste the MathML from the "show MathML as/MathML Code" window then tap Ctrl then T (or alternately click the relevant buttons in the small menu that appears at the bottom right of the text you've pasted). This tells Word to only pay attention to the text itself at which point it realises that this is the code for a formula and displays it correctly. This is also quicker than going via a text editor.
Sorry for not making this a comment to David Carlisle's answer, apparently I lack the reputation to do so.
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
1
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
add a comment |
up vote
15
down vote
I found a fairly new opensource project that might help you. It's called LaTeX in Word. According to description:
Latex in Word provides macros for Microsoft Word that allow the use of
LaTeX input to create equations images in both inline and display
modes without having to install any software on the local computer.
All of the LaTeX processing happens on a remotes server. All the user
needs is Microsoft Word!
If you really get ambitious, you can set up your own server for even
faster equation editing. It requires a little work, but it's not too
hard.
Similar macros for other word processors will hopefully be added in
the future.
Get started today by downloading the example Word document from our
SourceForge project page. It's easy!
It's available in the project area at SourceForge. I think it's worth a shot.
BONUS: Some screenshots! =P
Seems to be a very interesting approach.
1
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
1
@Alan: indeed.=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set ofVBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if thedocm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official).=)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
1
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
1
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
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up vote
9
down vote
There's is a form on my website where you can write LaTeX formulas and paste the generated MathML code directly into Word:
http://engenharialivre.com/latex-para-word/
It's in Portuguese (because I'm Brazilian), but I believe that you won't find any dificulties to use it.
Thanks to the author of this answer, I had the idea.
Here is a demonstration (click on the GIF in order to get a better view):
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
I've created LatexToWordEquation based on answers.
It is a Word AddIn.
The source code I've pushed to Github. Link here
If you prefer you can download the installer directly from here.
Note: This is an active download link that will immediately download the file when you click on it.
How to do it
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
Resurrecting this old question, it is now fully supported in Word. So no need for external tools or workarounds.
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
The above suggestion are really good. But there are similar options like latex built in latest version of MS Word right from 2007 version. I don't know about previous of office. Here is a video (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbTE-xLDPxtBP-TE2fS1MysSqFCkHh1N3 )which gives details of most of the common features.
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
2
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I'm not sure that this is right for you, but the opportunity it is always a good idea?
Look at the program AnEasyCalc.
It allows you to quickly gain formula in RTF format and receive the expression of latex. With this you can use RTF or LaTeX string in RTF editors.
The first takes advantage of text representation, but looks like a palliative. The second looks fine, but is inserted as a picture.
The main thing is freedom of choice, as always. Good luck)
All details in help and home page.
1
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
1
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I have made good experiences with latex2rtf - a freeware that converts latex source into an rtf-file with all equations nicely typeset. Opening this rtf-file in word works nicely.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
One neat solution is:
Convert your TeX formula to MathML code using, for example, the website www.mathtowebonline.com (put your formula between
$
signs ... e.g.$sigma = frac{e^2nu _f^2}{2}$
);Copy the MathML code into Word and watch the magic happen!
1
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such asamsmath
,amssymb
, andmathtools
?
– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Adding on Douglas de Moura and
David Carlisle's responses,
I have found a way to do it on MS Word 2007 without requiring internet.
The steps are as follows:
1) The source files of "MathJax" needs to be downloaded from here:
http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/installation.html
2) From the MathJax file folder, go to the "test" folder.
3) Create an .html file with the following code:
<html>
<head>
<title>MathJax TeX Test Page</title>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2010-2017 The MathJax Consortium -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
tex2jax: {inlineMath: [["$","$"],["\(","\)"]]}
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS_HTML-full"></script>
</head>
<body>
<p>
$$x = frac{1}{2}$$
</p>
</body>
</html>
where the stuff in $$ is the desired Latex code.
Note that this is just reverse-engineered from one of MathJax's sample html codes.
4) Open the created html file in browser, i.e.: Chrome.
5) Right click on equation -> "Show Math As" -> "MathML Code".
6) Copy and paste result to notepad,
adding the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the beginning of the MathML code;
for my case, I've got this:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="block">
<mi>x</mi>
<mo>=</mo>
<mfrac>
<mn>1</mn>
<mn>2</mn>
</mfrac>
</math>
7) Then on MS Word 2007, open equation editor (ALT and = keys together), then copy and paste the above result.
So in the end, it is possible to start out with Latex code and end up with an MS Word 2007-compatible equations, all without relying on an internet connection.
EDIT (2018, JAN. 26)
As per cengique's answer here, there is also a method for converting the Word 2007 format to the Word 2003's Equation 3.0 format using the free Libreoffice Writer program.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Use the LaTeX2Word-Equation Chrome Extension. It allows you to select a raw LaTeX equation, copy it, and paste directly into Word.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Isn't this what Pandoc is for?
I just checked, and it supports
pandoc file.tex -s -o file.docx
I don't have MS Word on my machine, but I uploaded the document to google docs and it looks usable. If necessary, you can manually make cosmetic adjustments from this point (although I doubt the Philistines would care). If you haven't checked it out, I really recommend it. It allows me to live in the world of markdown and latex, but still be able to produce docx formatted files when necessary. All with a single command!
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I have been using KlatexFormula on Windows for several years. It can be found at SourceForge. It uses MiKTeX on Windows systems and can export a wide range of formats including PNG, PDF, and SVG which can be inserted in any program.
In your case, I would copy the LaTeX code from your source, paste it into KLatexFormula then save the equation to your preferred image format (I would also save a version in the native format for any future editing).
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16
active
oldest
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active
oldest
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up vote
43
down vote
accepted
If you're going completely free/open source, then I guess dropping MS Word for something like OpenOffice Writer might also be considered. For this, there's OOoLaTeX. From the OOoLaTeX SourceForge project webpage:
OOoLatex is a set of macros designed to bring the power of LaTeX
into OpenOffice. It contains two main modules: the first one,
Equation
, allows to insert LaTeX equations into Writer and
Impress documents as png or emf images while the second one,
Expand
, can be used for simpler equations to expand LaTeX code into
appropriated symbol characters and insert them as regular text.
This should work as a cross-platform alternative.
Back to MS Word, a number of work-arounds exist using MS Powerpoint. Copy-and-paste the resulting equation (from Powerpoint) across the Office Suite.
The first is via TeX4PPT. The maintainer(s) suggest it provides an alternative to TeXPoint that is faster:
TeX4PPT is designed following the philosophy of TeXPoint, to
enable PowerPoint to typeset sentences and equations using the
power of TeX. It differs from TeXPoint in that it uses a native
DVI to PowerPoint converter, providing extremely fast conversion.
Additionally, the result is set using native truetype fonts under
windows, providing the highest fidelity.
TeX4PPT seems to be a little lagging in up-to-date support, since "a compatible version for PP2007 will be forthcoming" (from the website).
The second is via Iguanatex. From the homepage:
IguanaTex is a PowerPoint plug-in which allows you to insert
LaTeX equations into your PowerPoint presentation. It is
distributed completely for free.
The third is via MyTeXPoint. From the homepage:
Free simplified version of TeXPoint. Partly compatible with the
original TeXPoint. It has integrated screenshot tool to copy
equations and pictures right from the screen. Supports Microsoft
Powerpoint (tested with version 2007 and 2005). Compatible with
Microsoft Office 2010.
If you're stuck with an old version of MS Word (for whatever reason), older - free - versions of TeXPoint still exist. I haven't tested any of the choices listed below, but it's worth a shot:
- Office 2002
- Office 2003
- All versions of Office
The last version of TeXPoint (v1.5.4) apparently works for all versions, but it is much older the current, non-free version (v3.3.1), so it probably doesn't provide the latest functionality.
For a complete list of formula editors across many platforms and compatibility criteria (including compatibility with TeX), consider viewing the Wikipedia entry on formula editors.
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
add a comment |
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
If you're going completely free/open source, then I guess dropping MS Word for something like OpenOffice Writer might also be considered. For this, there's OOoLaTeX. From the OOoLaTeX SourceForge project webpage:
OOoLatex is a set of macros designed to bring the power of LaTeX
into OpenOffice. It contains two main modules: the first one,
Equation
, allows to insert LaTeX equations into Writer and
Impress documents as png or emf images while the second one,
Expand
, can be used for simpler equations to expand LaTeX code into
appropriated symbol characters and insert them as regular text.
This should work as a cross-platform alternative.
Back to MS Word, a number of work-arounds exist using MS Powerpoint. Copy-and-paste the resulting equation (from Powerpoint) across the Office Suite.
The first is via TeX4PPT. The maintainer(s) suggest it provides an alternative to TeXPoint that is faster:
TeX4PPT is designed following the philosophy of TeXPoint, to
enable PowerPoint to typeset sentences and equations using the
power of TeX. It differs from TeXPoint in that it uses a native
DVI to PowerPoint converter, providing extremely fast conversion.
Additionally, the result is set using native truetype fonts under
windows, providing the highest fidelity.
TeX4PPT seems to be a little lagging in up-to-date support, since "a compatible version for PP2007 will be forthcoming" (from the website).
The second is via Iguanatex. From the homepage:
IguanaTex is a PowerPoint plug-in which allows you to insert
LaTeX equations into your PowerPoint presentation. It is
distributed completely for free.
The third is via MyTeXPoint. From the homepage:
Free simplified version of TeXPoint. Partly compatible with the
original TeXPoint. It has integrated screenshot tool to copy
equations and pictures right from the screen. Supports Microsoft
Powerpoint (tested with version 2007 and 2005). Compatible with
Microsoft Office 2010.
If you're stuck with an old version of MS Word (for whatever reason), older - free - versions of TeXPoint still exist. I haven't tested any of the choices listed below, but it's worth a shot:
- Office 2002
- Office 2003
- All versions of Office
The last version of TeXPoint (v1.5.4) apparently works for all versions, but it is much older the current, non-free version (v3.3.1), so it probably doesn't provide the latest functionality.
For a complete list of formula editors across many platforms and compatibility criteria (including compatibility with TeX), consider viewing the Wikipedia entry on formula editors.
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
add a comment |
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
If you're going completely free/open source, then I guess dropping MS Word for something like OpenOffice Writer might also be considered. For this, there's OOoLaTeX. From the OOoLaTeX SourceForge project webpage:
OOoLatex is a set of macros designed to bring the power of LaTeX
into OpenOffice. It contains two main modules: the first one,
Equation
, allows to insert LaTeX equations into Writer and
Impress documents as png or emf images while the second one,
Expand
, can be used for simpler equations to expand LaTeX code into
appropriated symbol characters and insert them as regular text.
This should work as a cross-platform alternative.
Back to MS Word, a number of work-arounds exist using MS Powerpoint. Copy-and-paste the resulting equation (from Powerpoint) across the Office Suite.
The first is via TeX4PPT. The maintainer(s) suggest it provides an alternative to TeXPoint that is faster:
TeX4PPT is designed following the philosophy of TeXPoint, to
enable PowerPoint to typeset sentences and equations using the
power of TeX. It differs from TeXPoint in that it uses a native
DVI to PowerPoint converter, providing extremely fast conversion.
Additionally, the result is set using native truetype fonts under
windows, providing the highest fidelity.
TeX4PPT seems to be a little lagging in up-to-date support, since "a compatible version for PP2007 will be forthcoming" (from the website).
The second is via Iguanatex. From the homepage:
IguanaTex is a PowerPoint plug-in which allows you to insert
LaTeX equations into your PowerPoint presentation. It is
distributed completely for free.
The third is via MyTeXPoint. From the homepage:
Free simplified version of TeXPoint. Partly compatible with the
original TeXPoint. It has integrated screenshot tool to copy
equations and pictures right from the screen. Supports Microsoft
Powerpoint (tested with version 2007 and 2005). Compatible with
Microsoft Office 2010.
If you're stuck with an old version of MS Word (for whatever reason), older - free - versions of TeXPoint still exist. I haven't tested any of the choices listed below, but it's worth a shot:
- Office 2002
- Office 2003
- All versions of Office
The last version of TeXPoint (v1.5.4) apparently works for all versions, but it is much older the current, non-free version (v3.3.1), so it probably doesn't provide the latest functionality.
For a complete list of formula editors across many platforms and compatibility criteria (including compatibility with TeX), consider viewing the Wikipedia entry on formula editors.
If you're going completely free/open source, then I guess dropping MS Word for something like OpenOffice Writer might also be considered. For this, there's OOoLaTeX. From the OOoLaTeX SourceForge project webpage:
OOoLatex is a set of macros designed to bring the power of LaTeX
into OpenOffice. It contains two main modules: the first one,
Equation
, allows to insert LaTeX equations into Writer and
Impress documents as png or emf images while the second one,
Expand
, can be used for simpler equations to expand LaTeX code into
appropriated symbol characters and insert them as regular text.
This should work as a cross-platform alternative.
Back to MS Word, a number of work-arounds exist using MS Powerpoint. Copy-and-paste the resulting equation (from Powerpoint) across the Office Suite.
The first is via TeX4PPT. The maintainer(s) suggest it provides an alternative to TeXPoint that is faster:
TeX4PPT is designed following the philosophy of TeXPoint, to
enable PowerPoint to typeset sentences and equations using the
power of TeX. It differs from TeXPoint in that it uses a native
DVI to PowerPoint converter, providing extremely fast conversion.
Additionally, the result is set using native truetype fonts under
windows, providing the highest fidelity.
TeX4PPT seems to be a little lagging in up-to-date support, since "a compatible version for PP2007 will be forthcoming" (from the website).
The second is via Iguanatex. From the homepage:
IguanaTex is a PowerPoint plug-in which allows you to insert
LaTeX equations into your PowerPoint presentation. It is
distributed completely for free.
The third is via MyTeXPoint. From the homepage:
Free simplified version of TeXPoint. Partly compatible with the
original TeXPoint. It has integrated screenshot tool to copy
equations and pictures right from the screen. Supports Microsoft
Powerpoint (tested with version 2007 and 2005). Compatible with
Microsoft Office 2010.
If you're stuck with an old version of MS Word (for whatever reason), older - free - versions of TeXPoint still exist. I haven't tested any of the choices listed below, but it's worth a shot:
- Office 2002
- Office 2003
- All versions of Office
The last version of TeXPoint (v1.5.4) apparently works for all versions, but it is much older the current, non-free version (v3.3.1), so it probably doesn't provide the latest functionality.
For a complete list of formula editors across many platforms and compatibility criteria (including compatibility with TeX), consider viewing the Wikipedia entry on formula editors.
edited Aug 8 '11 at 19:23
answered Aug 8 '11 at 18:29
Werner
434k619531639
434k619531639
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
add a comment |
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
Thanks for all the pointers! I actually have OpenOffice, but I can't use it in this case... editing a document collaboratively with MS-heads and the slightly different interpretation of formatting causes... issues. :)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
1
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
@badroit: I just found MyTeXPoint and added it to my answer. It mentions "partial compatibility" with TeXPoint.
– Werner
Aug 8 '11 at 19:25
add a comment |
up vote
67
down vote
You should be able to cut and paste mathematics from your web browser to Word (or any of the Micorsoft Office suite). Unfortunately at present you have to make a small edit but any text editor will do for that.
Given
x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}
Make a small html file that looks like
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<title>tex texample</title>
</head>
<body>
$$x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}$$
</body>
</html>
View that in a web browser and select "show MathML as/MathML Code" from the right menu:
Select the MathML text from the popup window.
Normally you can paste MathML in to word but for various reasons you need to give Word a hint in this case, so first paste it into a text editor and add the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the start:
Then cut out the edited text and paste it into Word (any version since 2007).
Note the result is a fully editable Word Math Zone, using scalable fonts, not an image.
I used MathJax in a web browser for the initial TeX to MathML conversion as it is the easiest to set up, there are other alternatives. Also, to make it simple, I described the process in terms of cutting and pasting, which works well for one or two expressions but clearly not if you are converting thousands, however the process can be automated in various ways.
8
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
4
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
67
down vote
You should be able to cut and paste mathematics from your web browser to Word (or any of the Micorsoft Office suite). Unfortunately at present you have to make a small edit but any text editor will do for that.
Given
x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}
Make a small html file that looks like
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<title>tex texample</title>
</head>
<body>
$$x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}$$
</body>
</html>
View that in a web browser and select "show MathML as/MathML Code" from the right menu:
Select the MathML text from the popup window.
Normally you can paste MathML in to word but for various reasons you need to give Word a hint in this case, so first paste it into a text editor and add the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the start:
Then cut out the edited text and paste it into Word (any version since 2007).
Note the result is a fully editable Word Math Zone, using scalable fonts, not an image.
I used MathJax in a web browser for the initial TeX to MathML conversion as it is the easiest to set up, there are other alternatives. Also, to make it simple, I described the process in terms of cutting and pasting, which works well for one or two expressions but clearly not if you are converting thousands, however the process can be automated in various ways.
8
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
4
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
67
down vote
up vote
67
down vote
You should be able to cut and paste mathematics from your web browser to Word (or any of the Micorsoft Office suite). Unfortunately at present you have to make a small edit but any text editor will do for that.
Given
x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}
Make a small html file that looks like
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<title>tex texample</title>
</head>
<body>
$$x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}$$
</body>
</html>
View that in a web browser and select "show MathML as/MathML Code" from the right menu:
Select the MathML text from the popup window.
Normally you can paste MathML in to word but for various reasons you need to give Word a hint in this case, so first paste it into a text editor and add the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the start:
Then cut out the edited text and paste it into Word (any version since 2007).
Note the result is a fully editable Word Math Zone, using scalable fonts, not an image.
I used MathJax in a web browser for the initial TeX to MathML conversion as it is the easiest to set up, there are other alternatives. Also, to make it simple, I described the process in terms of cutting and pasting, which works well for one or two expressions but clearly not if you are converting thousands, however the process can be automated in various ways.
You should be able to cut and paste mathematics from your web browser to Word (or any of the Micorsoft Office suite). Unfortunately at present you have to make a small edit but any text editor will do for that.
Given
x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}
Make a small html file that looks like
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<title>tex texample</title>
</head>
<body>
$$x=frac{-bpmsqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}$$
</body>
</html>
View that in a web browser and select "show MathML as/MathML Code" from the right menu:
Select the MathML text from the popup window.
Normally you can paste MathML in to word but for various reasons you need to give Word a hint in this case, so first paste it into a text editor and add the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the start:
Then cut out the edited text and paste it into Word (any version since 2007).
Note the result is a fully editable Word Math Zone, using scalable fonts, not an image.
I used MathJax in a web browser for the initial TeX to MathML conversion as it is the easiest to set up, there are other alternatives. Also, to make it simple, I described the process in terms of cutting and pasting, which works well for one or two expressions but clearly not if you are converting thousands, however the process can be automated in various ways.
edited May 19 '13 at 12:33
answered May 19 '13 at 12:26
David Carlisle
480k3811121847
480k3811121847
8
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
4
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
|
show 5 more comments
8
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
4
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
8
8
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
Then, here is the one click solution: github.com/idf/LaTex2Word-Equation
– Daniel
Apr 16 '15 at 15:43
4
4
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
And here is the one-click solution for Firefox:addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/mathml-copy
– ROLO
Nov 25 '15 at 12:19
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
This solution should work for most cases. I tried with $$c_{!_Y}(x,z)$$, using both one-click and the detailed method by David. For David's method, the version observed in the web browser is correct. However, in both the cases, final version in MS word has an extra subscript which is empty. If I try a simplified version, $$c_{Y}(x,z)$$, it works. So, for complex examples, it may not give expected results. Anyway, the solution is very helpful, thanks!
– Ruchir
Oct 6 '16 at 2:30
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@Ruchir given the nature of the tex input in that case it's not surprising that you do not get reasonable output, I can think of no cases where that tex markup is reasonable input.
– David Carlisle
Oct 6 '16 at 6:52
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
@DavidCarlisle that kind of tex code is used when you want to adjust the size of the subscript. Without the extra '!_' the Y being in upper case would be of almost the same size as the c (which is in lower case). But yeah, such code is very rare.
– Ruchir
Oct 12 '16 at 4:33
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
22
down vote
For the Mac, there is the wonderful LaTexiT
application which allows you to quickly generate latex fragments and export them in a variety of formats, including PDF. You can store fragments in libraries, so keeping equations organized isn't too hard. This isn't quite the same as editing them directly from within the Word document, but it's pretty close.
I use this regularly for including LaTeX into Powerpoint (if I'm not using Beamer) and InDesign (which I use for posters.)
I don't know if there's an equivalent program for Windows.
add a comment |
up vote
22
down vote
For the Mac, there is the wonderful LaTexiT
application which allows you to quickly generate latex fragments and export them in a variety of formats, including PDF. You can store fragments in libraries, so keeping equations organized isn't too hard. This isn't quite the same as editing them directly from within the Word document, but it's pretty close.
I use this regularly for including LaTeX into Powerpoint (if I'm not using Beamer) and InDesign (which I use for posters.)
I don't know if there's an equivalent program for Windows.
add a comment |
up vote
22
down vote
up vote
22
down vote
For the Mac, there is the wonderful LaTexiT
application which allows you to quickly generate latex fragments and export them in a variety of formats, including PDF. You can store fragments in libraries, so keeping equations organized isn't too hard. This isn't quite the same as editing them directly from within the Word document, but it's pretty close.
I use this regularly for including LaTeX into Powerpoint (if I'm not using Beamer) and InDesign (which I use for posters.)
I don't know if there's an equivalent program for Windows.
For the Mac, there is the wonderful LaTexiT
application which allows you to quickly generate latex fragments and export them in a variety of formats, including PDF. You can store fragments in libraries, so keeping equations organized isn't too hard. This isn't quite the same as editing them directly from within the Word document, but it's pretty close.
I use this regularly for including LaTeX into Powerpoint (if I'm not using Beamer) and InDesign (which I use for posters.)
I don't know if there's an equivalent program for Windows.
answered Aug 8 '11 at 18:08
Alan Munn
158k27423696
158k27423696
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
16
down vote
For me MathJax has been the way to go as per David Carlisle's suggestion. The one addition I would make is that Microsoft Word by default brings across the formatting of the page displaying the MathML code. I don't think the addition of <?xml version="1.0"?>
was doing anything for me except making me go via an editor that doesn't have any formatting to copy.
Instead I have found it quicker to simply copy and paste the MathML from the "show MathML as/MathML Code" window then tap Ctrl then T (or alternately click the relevant buttons in the small menu that appears at the bottom right of the text you've pasted). This tells Word to only pay attention to the text itself at which point it realises that this is the code for a formula and displays it correctly. This is also quicker than going via a text editor.
Sorry for not making this a comment to David Carlisle's answer, apparently I lack the reputation to do so.
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
1
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
add a comment |
up vote
16
down vote
For me MathJax has been the way to go as per David Carlisle's suggestion. The one addition I would make is that Microsoft Word by default brings across the formatting of the page displaying the MathML code. I don't think the addition of <?xml version="1.0"?>
was doing anything for me except making me go via an editor that doesn't have any formatting to copy.
Instead I have found it quicker to simply copy and paste the MathML from the "show MathML as/MathML Code" window then tap Ctrl then T (or alternately click the relevant buttons in the small menu that appears at the bottom right of the text you've pasted). This tells Word to only pay attention to the text itself at which point it realises that this is the code for a formula and displays it correctly. This is also quicker than going via a text editor.
Sorry for not making this a comment to David Carlisle's answer, apparently I lack the reputation to do so.
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
1
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
add a comment |
up vote
16
down vote
up vote
16
down vote
For me MathJax has been the way to go as per David Carlisle's suggestion. The one addition I would make is that Microsoft Word by default brings across the formatting of the page displaying the MathML code. I don't think the addition of <?xml version="1.0"?>
was doing anything for me except making me go via an editor that doesn't have any formatting to copy.
Instead I have found it quicker to simply copy and paste the MathML from the "show MathML as/MathML Code" window then tap Ctrl then T (or alternately click the relevant buttons in the small menu that appears at the bottom right of the text you've pasted). This tells Word to only pay attention to the text itself at which point it realises that this is the code for a formula and displays it correctly. This is also quicker than going via a text editor.
Sorry for not making this a comment to David Carlisle's answer, apparently I lack the reputation to do so.
For me MathJax has been the way to go as per David Carlisle's suggestion. The one addition I would make is that Microsoft Word by default brings across the formatting of the page displaying the MathML code. I don't think the addition of <?xml version="1.0"?>
was doing anything for me except making me go via an editor that doesn't have any formatting to copy.
Instead I have found it quicker to simply copy and paste the MathML from the "show MathML as/MathML Code" window then tap Ctrl then T (or alternately click the relevant buttons in the small menu that appears at the bottom right of the text you've pasted). This tells Word to only pay attention to the text itself at which point it realises that this is the code for a formula and displays it correctly. This is also quicker than going via a text editor.
Sorry for not making this a comment to David Carlisle's answer, apparently I lack the reputation to do so.
answered Jul 6 '14 at 12:29
InsertUser
16112
16112
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
1
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
add a comment |
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
1
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
is this the same as pasting using shift and control v ?
– baxx
Oct 14 '16 at 21:31
1
1
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
Just saw this answer, that was the way it was supposed to work, but between me and a mozilla helper and some emails to contacts in microsoft we couldn't make it work, but you were answering a year later, so perhaps something got fixed when we tried it initially if you did the "no formatting paste" it just pasted in the xml markup verbatim, but perhaps they fixed something....
– David Carlisle
Jan 13 '17 at 10:51
add a comment |
up vote
15
down vote
I found a fairly new opensource project that might help you. It's called LaTeX in Word. According to description:
Latex in Word provides macros for Microsoft Word that allow the use of
LaTeX input to create equations images in both inline and display
modes without having to install any software on the local computer.
All of the LaTeX processing happens on a remotes server. All the user
needs is Microsoft Word!
If you really get ambitious, you can set up your own server for even
faster equation editing. It requires a little work, but it's not too
hard.
Similar macros for other word processors will hopefully be added in
the future.
Get started today by downloading the example Word document from our
SourceForge project page. It's easy!
It's available in the project area at SourceForge. I think it's worth a shot.
BONUS: Some screenshots! =P
Seems to be a very interesting approach.
1
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
1
@Alan: indeed.=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set ofVBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if thedocm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official).=)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
1
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
1
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
15
down vote
I found a fairly new opensource project that might help you. It's called LaTeX in Word. According to description:
Latex in Word provides macros for Microsoft Word that allow the use of
LaTeX input to create equations images in both inline and display
modes without having to install any software on the local computer.
All of the LaTeX processing happens on a remotes server. All the user
needs is Microsoft Word!
If you really get ambitious, you can set up your own server for even
faster equation editing. It requires a little work, but it's not too
hard.
Similar macros for other word processors will hopefully be added in
the future.
Get started today by downloading the example Word document from our
SourceForge project page. It's easy!
It's available in the project area at SourceForge. I think it's worth a shot.
BONUS: Some screenshots! =P
Seems to be a very interesting approach.
1
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
1
@Alan: indeed.=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set ofVBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if thedocm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official).=)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
1
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
1
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
15
down vote
up vote
15
down vote
I found a fairly new opensource project that might help you. It's called LaTeX in Word. According to description:
Latex in Word provides macros for Microsoft Word that allow the use of
LaTeX input to create equations images in both inline and display
modes without having to install any software on the local computer.
All of the LaTeX processing happens on a remotes server. All the user
needs is Microsoft Word!
If you really get ambitious, you can set up your own server for even
faster equation editing. It requires a little work, but it's not too
hard.
Similar macros for other word processors will hopefully be added in
the future.
Get started today by downloading the example Word document from our
SourceForge project page. It's easy!
It's available in the project area at SourceForge. I think it's worth a shot.
BONUS: Some screenshots! =P
Seems to be a very interesting approach.
I found a fairly new opensource project that might help you. It's called LaTeX in Word. According to description:
Latex in Word provides macros for Microsoft Word that allow the use of
LaTeX input to create equations images in both inline and display
modes without having to install any software on the local computer.
All of the LaTeX processing happens on a remotes server. All the user
needs is Microsoft Word!
If you really get ambitious, you can set up your own server for even
faster equation editing. It requires a little work, but it's not too
hard.
Similar macros for other word processors will hopefully be added in
the future.
Get started today by downloading the example Word document from our
SourceForge project page. It's easy!
It's available in the project area at SourceForge. I think it's worth a shot.
BONUS: Some screenshots! =P
Seems to be a very interesting approach.
edited Aug 8 '11 at 18:31
answered Aug 8 '11 at 18:21
Paulo Cereda
32.9k8123206
32.9k8123206
1
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
1
@Alan: indeed.=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set ofVBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if thedocm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official).=)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
1
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
1
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
|
show 1 more comment
1
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
1
@Alan: indeed.=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set ofVBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if thedocm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official).=)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
1
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
1
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
1
1
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
It would be nice if there was some actual documentation. It doesn't even say that it's Windows only, as far as I can see. Isn't Word 2007 quite old now?
– Alan Munn
Aug 8 '11 at 18:51
1
1
@Alan: indeed.
=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set of VBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if the docm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official). =)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
@Alan: indeed.
=)
Lack of documentation is a major issue. This project seems to be implemented as a set of VBA
macros, so I suppose the 2007 version might work with Office 2010 as well. I can't tell if the docm
file is also fully OpenOffice compliant (if so, there's a slight chance of a possible multiplatform support, but not official). =)
On a sidenote, my dad is stuck with Word 2003. Yikes!– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:00
1
1
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
Looks nice... precisely what I need... except for the server part. The people who don't like LaTeX would also not like me sending content from the doc to external parties. They really are no fun. (In general, requiring a server to build LaTeX fragments seems a bit weird... why not just hook up to a local Miktex or similar installation?)
– badroit
Aug 8 '11 at 19:19
1
1
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.
=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
@badroit: Seconded! The server part would scare any potential user.
=P
– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 19:22
1
1
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
@badroit - Then try sourceforge.net/projects/texsword . It uses local MikeTex installation + handles equation numbering nicely.
– Adam Ryczkowski
Feb 27 '14 at 22:47
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
9
down vote
There's is a form on my website where you can write LaTeX formulas and paste the generated MathML code directly into Word:
http://engenharialivre.com/latex-para-word/
It's in Portuguese (because I'm Brazilian), but I believe that you won't find any dificulties to use it.
Thanks to the author of this answer, I had the idea.
Here is a demonstration (click on the GIF in order to get a better view):
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
There's is a form on my website where you can write LaTeX formulas and paste the generated MathML code directly into Word:
http://engenharialivre.com/latex-para-word/
It's in Portuguese (because I'm Brazilian), but I believe that you won't find any dificulties to use it.
Thanks to the author of this answer, I had the idea.
Here is a demonstration (click on the GIF in order to get a better view):
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
up vote
9
down vote
There's is a form on my website where you can write LaTeX formulas and paste the generated MathML code directly into Word:
http://engenharialivre.com/latex-para-word/
It's in Portuguese (because I'm Brazilian), but I believe that you won't find any dificulties to use it.
Thanks to the author of this answer, I had the idea.
Here is a demonstration (click on the GIF in order to get a better view):
There's is a form on my website where you can write LaTeX formulas and paste the generated MathML code directly into Word:
http://engenharialivre.com/latex-para-word/
It's in Portuguese (because I'm Brazilian), but I believe that you won't find any dificulties to use it.
Thanks to the author of this answer, I had the idea.
Here is a demonstration (click on the GIF in order to get a better view):
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:35
Community♦
1
1
answered Aug 31 '15 at 14:55
Douglas de Moura
9315
9315
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
add a comment |
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@Jesse This does provide an answer to the question, and it works quite well in my very limited testing. To Douglas, nice work and I hope this catches on! If possible, could you make a Windows program for "offline" usage?
– darthbith
Aug 31 '15 at 18:37
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith -- thanks for the double check, i just did. And agreed.
– Jesse
Sep 1 '15 at 1:34
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
@darthbith I've just made the page able to be cached on your browser, so you will be able to use it offline (please reload the page). Please test and inform if you find any bug.
– Douglas de Moura
Sep 1 '15 at 19:48
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
Does this work for powerpoint ?
– Nizar
Nov 26 '17 at 21:03
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
I've created LatexToWordEquation based on answers.
It is a Word AddIn.
The source code I've pushed to Github. Link here
If you prefer you can download the installer directly from here.
Note: This is an active download link that will immediately download the file when you click on it.
How to do it
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
I've created LatexToWordEquation based on answers.
It is a Word AddIn.
The source code I've pushed to Github. Link here
If you prefer you can download the installer directly from here.
Note: This is an active download link that will immediately download the file when you click on it.
How to do it
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
up vote
9
down vote
I've created LatexToWordEquation based on answers.
It is a Word AddIn.
The source code I've pushed to Github. Link here
If you prefer you can download the installer directly from here.
Note: This is an active download link that will immediately download the file when you click on it.
How to do it
I've created LatexToWordEquation based on answers.
It is a Word AddIn.
The source code I've pushed to Github. Link here
If you prefer you can download the installer directly from here.
Note: This is an active download link that will immediately download the file when you click on it.
How to do it
edited Nov 28 '15 at 2:01
answered Nov 28 '15 at 1:39
Alexandre Giordanelli
9112
9112
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
add a comment |
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
How to install in MS Word 2007, Window 7
– Say OL
Jun 20 '16 at 4:34
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
doesn't work...
– CoderInNetwork
Dec 26 '16 at 15:39
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
Resurrecting this old question, it is now fully supported in Word. So no need for external tools or workarounds.
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
Resurrecting this old question, it is now fully supported in Word. So no need for external tools or workarounds.
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
Resurrecting this old question, it is now fully supported in Word. So no need for external tools or workarounds.
Resurrecting this old question, it is now fully supported in Word. So no need for external tools or workarounds.
answered Jul 31 '17 at 8:47
Gaius
16113
16113
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
add a comment |
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
This should be all the way on the top, I guess for 90% of the cases this will do the job good enough.
– aXeL-HH
Feb 2 at 10:10
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
Caveat: only in word from office365!
– user3240588
Aug 13 at 16:04
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
The above suggestion are really good. But there are similar options like latex built in latest version of MS Word right from 2007 version. I don't know about previous of office. Here is a video (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbTE-xLDPxtBP-TE2fS1MysSqFCkHh1N3 )which gives details of most of the common features.
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
2
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
The above suggestion are really good. But there are similar options like latex built in latest version of MS Word right from 2007 version. I don't know about previous of office. Here is a video (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbTE-xLDPxtBP-TE2fS1MysSqFCkHh1N3 )which gives details of most of the common features.
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
2
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
The above suggestion are really good. But there are similar options like latex built in latest version of MS Word right from 2007 version. I don't know about previous of office. Here is a video (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbTE-xLDPxtBP-TE2fS1MysSqFCkHh1N3 )which gives details of most of the common features.
The above suggestion are really good. But there are similar options like latex built in latest version of MS Word right from 2007 version. I don't know about previous of office. Here is a video (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbTE-xLDPxtBP-TE2fS1MysSqFCkHh1N3 )which gives details of most of the common features.
answered Sep 23 '14 at 16:36
Anike G
411
411
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
2
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
add a comment |
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
2
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
Can we define macros in Equation Editor?
– Symbol 1
Sep 23 '14 at 16:42
2
2
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
You can't compare the possibilities of mathematics in LaTeX with MS Word. MS Word just can't do what LaTeX can ...
– Kurt
Sep 23 '14 at 16:51
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I'm not sure that this is right for you, but the opportunity it is always a good idea?
Look at the program AnEasyCalc.
It allows you to quickly gain formula in RTF format and receive the expression of latex. With this you can use RTF or LaTeX string in RTF editors.
The first takes advantage of text representation, but looks like a palliative. The second looks fine, but is inserted as a picture.
The main thing is freedom of choice, as always. Good luck)
All details in help and home page.
1
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
1
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I'm not sure that this is right for you, but the opportunity it is always a good idea?
Look at the program AnEasyCalc.
It allows you to quickly gain formula in RTF format and receive the expression of latex. With this you can use RTF or LaTeX string in RTF editors.
The first takes advantage of text representation, but looks like a palliative. The second looks fine, but is inserted as a picture.
The main thing is freedom of choice, as always. Good luck)
All details in help and home page.
1
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
1
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
I'm not sure that this is right for you, but the opportunity it is always a good idea?
Look at the program AnEasyCalc.
It allows you to quickly gain formula in RTF format and receive the expression of latex. With this you can use RTF or LaTeX string in RTF editors.
The first takes advantage of text representation, but looks like a palliative. The second looks fine, but is inserted as a picture.
The main thing is freedom of choice, as always. Good luck)
All details in help and home page.
I'm not sure that this is right for you, but the opportunity it is always a good idea?
Look at the program AnEasyCalc.
It allows you to quickly gain formula in RTF format and receive the expression of latex. With this you can use RTF or LaTeX string in RTF editors.
The first takes advantage of text representation, but looks like a palliative. The second looks fine, but is inserted as a picture.
The main thing is freedom of choice, as always. Good luck)
All details in help and home page.
edited Jul 22 '15 at 21:19
cfr
156k7183377
156k7183377
answered Jun 8 '15 at 19:47
Igor
312
312
1
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
1
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
add a comment |
1
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
1
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
1
1
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
Welcome to TeX.SX! You should elaborate on your answer, showing an example and providing screen shot(s)
– Christian Hupfer
Jun 8 '15 at 20:21
1
1
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
I edited this to tidy up slightly but there are places I can't guess the meaning, especially the first sentence. If this is your programme, you should include a disclaimer. I'm not sure how this is meant to answer the question, either.
– cfr
Jul 22 '15 at 21:20
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
The formula image can be pasted to Word document as an image. The main work is to build the latex string. I suggest getting two views of the formula: RTF and LaTeX. The formula in the upper large field - RTF string. It can be copied into a Word duk and will look as well. She dialed manually as it is done in a text editor. A string
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 21:48
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
I apologize so much... I have not yet got used to the local editor. The end of previous comment to be something like : ... It can be copied into a Word doc and will look as well as it looks now. It have to be typed manually as it is may be done in any RTF text editor. A latex string located within tags [LATEX][/LATEX] is generated by the program automaticaly. I understand that my post is related to the topic very approximate. If the moderators consider it inappropriate, it can be removed. In this case, I apologize again.
– Igor
Jul 22 '15 at 22:35
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I have made good experiences with latex2rtf - a freeware that converts latex source into an rtf-file with all equations nicely typeset. Opening this rtf-file in word works nicely.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
I have made good experiences with latex2rtf - a freeware that converts latex source into an rtf-file with all equations nicely typeset. Opening this rtf-file in word works nicely.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
I have made good experiences with latex2rtf - a freeware that converts latex source into an rtf-file with all equations nicely typeset. Opening this rtf-file in word works nicely.
I have made good experiences with latex2rtf - a freeware that converts latex source into an rtf-file with all equations nicely typeset. Opening this rtf-file in word works nicely.
answered Feb 23 '16 at 21:19
bmf
311
311
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
One neat solution is:
Convert your TeX formula to MathML code using, for example, the website www.mathtowebonline.com (put your formula between
$
signs ... e.g.$sigma = frac{e^2nu _f^2}{2}$
);Copy the MathML code into Word and watch the magic happen!
1
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such asamsmath
,amssymb
, andmathtools
?
– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
One neat solution is:
Convert your TeX formula to MathML code using, for example, the website www.mathtowebonline.com (put your formula between
$
signs ... e.g.$sigma = frac{e^2nu _f^2}{2}$
);Copy the MathML code into Word and watch the magic happen!
1
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such asamsmath
,amssymb
, andmathtools
?
– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
One neat solution is:
Convert your TeX formula to MathML code using, for example, the website www.mathtowebonline.com (put your formula between
$
signs ... e.g.$sigma = frac{e^2nu _f^2}{2}$
);Copy the MathML code into Word and watch the magic happen!
One neat solution is:
Convert your TeX formula to MathML code using, for example, the website www.mathtowebonline.com (put your formula between
$
signs ... e.g.$sigma = frac{e^2nu _f^2}{2}$
);Copy the MathML code into Word and watch the magic happen!
edited Apr 20 '17 at 7:42
Werner
434k619531639
434k619531639
answered Apr 20 '17 at 7:23
Ashkan372
311
311
1
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such asamsmath
,amssymb
, andmathtools
?
– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
add a comment |
1
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such asamsmath
,amssymb
, andmathtools
?
– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
1
1
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such as
amsmath
, amssymb
, and mathtools
?– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Welcome to TeX.SE. Can mathtowebonline.com handle math-related macros defined in packages such as
amsmath
, amssymb
, and mathtools
?– Mico
Apr 20 '17 at 7:28
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
Thanks for pointing that out Mico. I just tried an amsmath example, and the formula conversion works. However the numbering and labeling is inserted in the equation box along the formula, instead of being seperate. Maybe there is a workaround for that as well.
– Ashkan372
Apr 20 '17 at 7:52
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Adding on Douglas de Moura and
David Carlisle's responses,
I have found a way to do it on MS Word 2007 without requiring internet.
The steps are as follows:
1) The source files of "MathJax" needs to be downloaded from here:
http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/installation.html
2) From the MathJax file folder, go to the "test" folder.
3) Create an .html file with the following code:
<html>
<head>
<title>MathJax TeX Test Page</title>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2010-2017 The MathJax Consortium -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
tex2jax: {inlineMath: [["$","$"],["\(","\)"]]}
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS_HTML-full"></script>
</head>
<body>
<p>
$$x = frac{1}{2}$$
</p>
</body>
</html>
where the stuff in $$ is the desired Latex code.
Note that this is just reverse-engineered from one of MathJax's sample html codes.
4) Open the created html file in browser, i.e.: Chrome.
5) Right click on equation -> "Show Math As" -> "MathML Code".
6) Copy and paste result to notepad,
adding the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the beginning of the MathML code;
for my case, I've got this:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="block">
<mi>x</mi>
<mo>=</mo>
<mfrac>
<mn>1</mn>
<mn>2</mn>
</mfrac>
</math>
7) Then on MS Word 2007, open equation editor (ALT and = keys together), then copy and paste the above result.
So in the end, it is possible to start out with Latex code and end up with an MS Word 2007-compatible equations, all without relying on an internet connection.
EDIT (2018, JAN. 26)
As per cengique's answer here, there is also a method for converting the Word 2007 format to the Word 2003's Equation 3.0 format using the free Libreoffice Writer program.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Adding on Douglas de Moura and
David Carlisle's responses,
I have found a way to do it on MS Word 2007 without requiring internet.
The steps are as follows:
1) The source files of "MathJax" needs to be downloaded from here:
http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/installation.html
2) From the MathJax file folder, go to the "test" folder.
3) Create an .html file with the following code:
<html>
<head>
<title>MathJax TeX Test Page</title>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2010-2017 The MathJax Consortium -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
tex2jax: {inlineMath: [["$","$"],["\(","\)"]]}
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS_HTML-full"></script>
</head>
<body>
<p>
$$x = frac{1}{2}$$
</p>
</body>
</html>
where the stuff in $$ is the desired Latex code.
Note that this is just reverse-engineered from one of MathJax's sample html codes.
4) Open the created html file in browser, i.e.: Chrome.
5) Right click on equation -> "Show Math As" -> "MathML Code".
6) Copy and paste result to notepad,
adding the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the beginning of the MathML code;
for my case, I've got this:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="block">
<mi>x</mi>
<mo>=</mo>
<mfrac>
<mn>1</mn>
<mn>2</mn>
</mfrac>
</math>
7) Then on MS Word 2007, open equation editor (ALT and = keys together), then copy and paste the above result.
So in the end, it is possible to start out with Latex code and end up with an MS Word 2007-compatible equations, all without relying on an internet connection.
EDIT (2018, JAN. 26)
As per cengique's answer here, there is also a method for converting the Word 2007 format to the Word 2003's Equation 3.0 format using the free Libreoffice Writer program.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Adding on Douglas de Moura and
David Carlisle's responses,
I have found a way to do it on MS Word 2007 without requiring internet.
The steps are as follows:
1) The source files of "MathJax" needs to be downloaded from here:
http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/installation.html
2) From the MathJax file folder, go to the "test" folder.
3) Create an .html file with the following code:
<html>
<head>
<title>MathJax TeX Test Page</title>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2010-2017 The MathJax Consortium -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
tex2jax: {inlineMath: [["$","$"],["\(","\)"]]}
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS_HTML-full"></script>
</head>
<body>
<p>
$$x = frac{1}{2}$$
</p>
</body>
</html>
where the stuff in $$ is the desired Latex code.
Note that this is just reverse-engineered from one of MathJax's sample html codes.
4) Open the created html file in browser, i.e.: Chrome.
5) Right click on equation -> "Show Math As" -> "MathML Code".
6) Copy and paste result to notepad,
adding the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the beginning of the MathML code;
for my case, I've got this:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="block">
<mi>x</mi>
<mo>=</mo>
<mfrac>
<mn>1</mn>
<mn>2</mn>
</mfrac>
</math>
7) Then on MS Word 2007, open equation editor (ALT and = keys together), then copy and paste the above result.
So in the end, it is possible to start out with Latex code and end up with an MS Word 2007-compatible equations, all without relying on an internet connection.
EDIT (2018, JAN. 26)
As per cengique's answer here, there is also a method for converting the Word 2007 format to the Word 2003's Equation 3.0 format using the free Libreoffice Writer program.
Adding on Douglas de Moura and
David Carlisle's responses,
I have found a way to do it on MS Word 2007 without requiring internet.
The steps are as follows:
1) The source files of "MathJax" needs to be downloaded from here:
http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/installation.html
2) From the MathJax file folder, go to the "test" folder.
3) Create an .html file with the following code:
<html>
<head>
<title>MathJax TeX Test Page</title>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2010-2017 The MathJax Consortium -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
tex2jax: {inlineMath: [["$","$"],["\(","\)"]]}
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS_HTML-full"></script>
</head>
<body>
<p>
$$x = frac{1}{2}$$
</p>
</body>
</html>
where the stuff in $$ is the desired Latex code.
Note that this is just reverse-engineered from one of MathJax's sample html codes.
4) Open the created html file in browser, i.e.: Chrome.
5) Right click on equation -> "Show Math As" -> "MathML Code".
6) Copy and paste result to notepad,
adding the line
<?xml version="1.0"?>
to the beginning of the MathML code;
for my case, I've got this:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="block">
<mi>x</mi>
<mo>=</mo>
<mfrac>
<mn>1</mn>
<mn>2</mn>
</mfrac>
</math>
7) Then on MS Word 2007, open equation editor (ALT and = keys together), then copy and paste the above result.
So in the end, it is possible to start out with Latex code and end up with an MS Word 2007-compatible equations, all without relying on an internet connection.
EDIT (2018, JAN. 26)
As per cengique's answer here, there is also a method for converting the Word 2007 format to the Word 2003's Equation 3.0 format using the free Libreoffice Writer program.
edited Jan 27 at 1:59
answered Jan 19 at 2:56
plu
334
334
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Use the LaTeX2Word-Equation Chrome Extension. It allows you to select a raw LaTeX equation, copy it, and paste directly into Word.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Use the LaTeX2Word-Equation Chrome Extension. It allows you to select a raw LaTeX equation, copy it, and paste directly into Word.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
Use the LaTeX2Word-Equation Chrome Extension. It allows you to select a raw LaTeX equation, copy it, and paste directly into Word.
Use the LaTeX2Word-Equation Chrome Extension. It allows you to select a raw LaTeX equation, copy it, and paste directly into Word.
answered Apr 20 '17 at 8:18
Peter
1496
1496
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Isn't this what Pandoc is for?
I just checked, and it supports
pandoc file.tex -s -o file.docx
I don't have MS Word on my machine, but I uploaded the document to google docs and it looks usable. If necessary, you can manually make cosmetic adjustments from this point (although I doubt the Philistines would care). If you haven't checked it out, I really recommend it. It allows me to live in the world of markdown and latex, but still be able to produce docx formatted files when necessary. All with a single command!
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Isn't this what Pandoc is for?
I just checked, and it supports
pandoc file.tex -s -o file.docx
I don't have MS Word on my machine, but I uploaded the document to google docs and it looks usable. If necessary, you can manually make cosmetic adjustments from this point (although I doubt the Philistines would care). If you haven't checked it out, I really recommend it. It allows me to live in the world of markdown and latex, but still be able to produce docx formatted files when necessary. All with a single command!
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
Isn't this what Pandoc is for?
I just checked, and it supports
pandoc file.tex -s -o file.docx
I don't have MS Word on my machine, but I uploaded the document to google docs and it looks usable. If necessary, you can manually make cosmetic adjustments from this point (although I doubt the Philistines would care). If you haven't checked it out, I really recommend it. It allows me to live in the world of markdown and latex, but still be able to produce docx formatted files when necessary. All with a single command!
Isn't this what Pandoc is for?
I just checked, and it supports
pandoc file.tex -s -o file.docx
I don't have MS Word on my machine, but I uploaded the document to google docs and it looks usable. If necessary, you can manually make cosmetic adjustments from this point (although I doubt the Philistines would care). If you haven't checked it out, I really recommend it. It allows me to live in the world of markdown and latex, but still be able to produce docx formatted files when necessary. All with a single command!
answered May 13 '17 at 23:40
nur0n0
211
211
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I have been using KlatexFormula on Windows for several years. It can be found at SourceForge. It uses MiKTeX on Windows systems and can export a wide range of formats including PNG, PDF, and SVG which can be inserted in any program.
In your case, I would copy the LaTeX code from your source, paste it into KLatexFormula then save the equation to your preferred image format (I would also save a version in the native format for any future editing).
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I have been using KlatexFormula on Windows for several years. It can be found at SourceForge. It uses MiKTeX on Windows systems and can export a wide range of formats including PNG, PDF, and SVG which can be inserted in any program.
In your case, I would copy the LaTeX code from your source, paste it into KLatexFormula then save the equation to your preferred image format (I would also save a version in the native format for any future editing).
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I have been using KlatexFormula on Windows for several years. It can be found at SourceForge. It uses MiKTeX on Windows systems and can export a wide range of formats including PNG, PDF, and SVG which can be inserted in any program.
In your case, I would copy the LaTeX code from your source, paste it into KLatexFormula then save the equation to your preferred image format (I would also save a version in the native format for any future editing).
New contributor
I have been using KlatexFormula on Windows for several years. It can be found at SourceForge. It uses MiKTeX on Windows systems and can export a wide range of formats including PNG, PDF, and SVG which can be inserted in any program.
In your case, I would copy the LaTeX code from your source, paste it into KLatexFormula then save the equation to your preferred image format (I would also save a version in the native format for any future editing).
New contributor
New contributor
answered 1 hour ago
Joseph Hallstrom
11
11
New contributor
New contributor
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1
I'm not sure, but Pandoc might help you. It doesn't support MSOffice format out of the box, but I know it can export to RTF or ODT, so you could use OpenOffice/LibreOffice to save them to the proper
doc/docx
format.– Paulo Cereda
Aug 8 '11 at 17:52
2
Word 2007 has better math typesetting than LaTeX, so there's no need to embed anything. Press Alt+= and have fun.
– Philipp
Aug 8 '11 at 20:27
17
@Philipp: "better than TeX" is a very blatant assertion, it has some nice features but nothing ground breaking and it has its share of problems too.
– Khaled Hosny
Aug 9 '11 at 1:28
1
@Khaled, a few reasons: (1) I already have the equations in TeX from an existing document, (2) I can do new equations the way I like them much quicker in TeX than Word, (3) I'm don't want to invest time figuring out Word's way of doing things for a (hopefully) once-off job. ;)
– badroit
Aug 9 '11 at 23:01
3
See also superuser.com/q/340650/35237
– Tobias Kienzler
Oct 22 '12 at 13:32