[K12OSN] Writing Math Equations
Paul VanGundy
vangundypw at sau14.k12.nh.us
Thu Jan 26 19:12:37 UTC 2006
All,
For Macs try NeoOffice. In short, it's OpenOffice.org for Macs. Here's the
link http://www.neooffice.org/
-Paul
--
Paul VanGundy
Information Technology Director
Epping High School
Epping Middle School
P: 603.679.5472
F: 603.679.2966
vangundypw at sau14.k12.nh.us
Registered Linux User #398783
-----Original Message-----
From: k12osn-bounces at redhat.com [mailto:k12osn-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf
Of Bob McCaa
Sent: Thursday, January 26, 2006 1:44 PM
To: Support list for opensource software in schools.
Subject: Re: [K12OSN] Writing Math Equations
Can you run Open Office.org2 on OsX?
If so what about OO2's Math?
On Thu, 2006-01-26 at 13:14 -0500, Gentgeen wrote:
> On Thu, 26 Jan 2006 09:41:42 -0800
> Huck <dhuckaby at paasda.org> wrote:
>
> > Latex
> >
> >
> > David Trask wrote:
> > > I have a teacher who wants to be able to write math equations that
> > > set up properly...just like in a textbook...in other words
> > > fractions show up as one number over another number instead of
> > > using forward or back slashes. Anyone know of a way to accomplish
> > > this? Font, program...web site? She's using Mac OS X, but we're
> > > open to anything.
> > >
> > > David N. Trask
> > > Technology Teacher/Director
> > > Vassalboro Community School
> > > dtrask at vcsvikings.org
> > > (207)923-3100
> > >
> > >
>
>
> Latex is ideal, but probably not exactly "user friendly". Depending on
> your user of course.
>
> What you end up using is really based on what you need as a final
> product. If your talking about just righting up the occasional test,
> then OpenOffice and the Equation editor will do just fine. (I
> understand that AbiWord also has plug-in, but not familiar with it) In
> OpenOffice, just go to "Insert - Object - Formula"
>
> Now if you are writing a book, the benefits of Latex would out weigh
> the time it takes to learn.
>
> If you want something for a website, well that might be a bit harder.
> You can do a kind of "Latex to PostScript to GIF file" kind of
> conversion, or some other crazy thing to get the math stuff into a
> graphics file. There is also MathML (http://www.w3.org/Math/), but I
> am not at all familiar with it, and not all browser's can handle it by
> default.
>
> Being primarily a math teacher, I have looked into this 100 times over
> the years. I tend towards using OpenOffice most of the time. But due
> to necessary, I have found myself slowly learning Latex.
>
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