by Han and Jay. Current development is proudly supported by Desmos, whose awesome graphing calculator makes extensive use of Mathquill.
Please note that this is a beta version, so bugs and unimplemented features are all over the place.
(Note: Requires jQuery 1.4.3+. Google CDN-hosted copy recommended.)
To use MathQuill on your website, grab the latest tarball from the downloads page, and serve
- the stylesheet
- the fonts in the
font/
directory relative tomathquill.css
(or change your copy ofmathquill.css
to include from the right directory) - the script (unminified)
then on your webpages include the stylesheet
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/path/to/mathquill.css">`
and after jQuery, the script
<script src="/path/to/mathquill.min.js"></script>
Then wherever you'd like to embed LaTeX math to be rendered in HTML:
<span class="mathquill-embedded-latex">\frac{d}{dx}\sqrt{x}</span>
or have an editable math textbox:
<span class="mathquill-editable">f(x)=?</span>
Note that for dynamically created elements that weren't in the HTML DOM on document ready, you will need to call our jQuery plugin after inserting into the visible HTML DOM:
$('<span>x^2</span>').appendTo('body').mathquill()
or .mathquill('editable')
MathQuill has to perform calculations based on computed CSS values. If you mathquill-ify an element before inserting into the visible HTML DOM, then once it is visible MathQuill will need to recalculate:
$('<span>\sqrt{2}</span>').mathquill().appendTo('body').mathquill('redraw')
Any element that has been MathQuill-ified can be reverted:
$('.mathquill-embedded-latex').mathquill('revert');
Manipulating the HTML DOM inside editable math textboxes can break MathQuill. Currently, MathQuill only supports a limited scripting API:
-
To access the LaTeX contents of a mathquill-ified element:
$('<span>x^{-1}</span>').mathquill().mathquill('latex') === 'x^{-1}'
-
To render some LaTeX in a mathquill-ified element:
$('<span/>').mathquill().appendTo('body').mathquill('latex','a_n x^n')
-
To write some LaTeX at the current cursor position:
someMathQuillifiedElement.mathquill('write','\\frac{d}{dx}')
-
To insert a LaTeX command at the current cursor position or with the current selection:
someMathQuillifiedElement.mathquill('cmd','\\sqrt')
A Note On Changing Colors:
To change the foreground color, don't just set the color
, also set
the border-color
, because the cursor, fraction bar, and square root
overline are all borders, not text. (Example below.)
Due to technical limitations of IE8, if you support it, and want to give
a MathQuill editable a background color other than white, and support
square roots, parentheses, square brackets, or curly braces, you will
need to, in addition to of course setting the background color on the
editable itself, set it on elements with class matrixed
, and then set
a Chroma filter on elements with class matrixed-container
.
For example, to style as white-on-black instead of black-on-white:
#my-math-input {
color: white;
border-color: white;
background: black;
}
#my-math-input .matrixed {
background: black;
}
#my-math-input .matrixed-container {
filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Chroma(color='black');
}
(This is because almost all math rendered by MathQuill has a transparent background, so for them it's sufficient to set the background color on the editable itself. The exception is, IE8 doesn't support CSS transforms, so MathQuill uses a matrix filter to stretch parens etc, which anti-aliases wrongly without an opaque background, so MathQuill defaults to white.)
To hack on MathQuill, you're gonna want to build and test the source files
you edit. In addition to make
, MathQuill uses some build tools written on
[Node][http://nodejs.org/#download], so you will need to install that before
running make
. (Once it's installed, make
automatically does npm install
,
installing the necessary build tools.)
make
buildsbuild/mathquill.{css,js,min.js}
make dev
won't try to minify MathQuill (which can be take nonzero time)make test
also doesn't minify MathQuill, but it also buildsmathquill.test.js
, which is used intest/unit.html
All the CSS is in mathquill.css
. Most of it's pretty straightforward, the
choice of font isn't settled, and fractions are somewhat arcane, see the Wiki
pages "Fonts" and
"Fractions".
All the JavaScript that you actually want to read is in src/
, build/
is
created when you run make
just to contain a cat'ed and minified version of
all that.
(Just skim the logic, but do read the starred comments, definitions and method signatures.)
In comments and internal documentation, ::
means .prototype.
.
intro.js
defines some simple sugar for the idiomatic JS classes used
throughout MathQuill, plus some globals and opening boilerplate.
- Classes are defined using Pjs, and the variable
_
is used by convention as the prototype.
tree.js
defines the abstract classes for the JS objects that make up the edit tree.
-
A
Node
is a node in the tree. -
A
Fragment
is a range of siblings in the tree. This is used, for example, for selections. -
The edit tree has two kinds of nodes: commands and blocks
- blocks, like the root block, can contain any number of commands
- commands, like
x
,1
,+
,\frac
,\sqrt
(clearly siblings in the tree) contain a fixed number of blocks- symbols like
x
,y
,1
,2
,+
,-
are commands with 0 blocks
- symbols like
-
All edit tree nodes are instances of
MathElement
- blocks are instances of
MathBlock
- commands are instances of
MathCommand
- symbols are instances of
Symbol
- symbols are instances of
- blocks are instances of
cursor.js
defines the "singleton" classes for the visible blinking
cursor and highlighted selection.
- The methods on
Cursor
pretty much do what they say on the tin. They're how the tree is supposed to traversed and modified.
rootelements.js
defines the edit tree root elements, and a function
createRoot()
that attaches event handlers to the jQuery-wrapped HTML elements:
- Some root elements can actually be in others, so rather than attaching
handlers in the constructor,
createRoot()
is called on the actual root element. Except\editable{}
s need text input event handlers that aren't attached to the static math containing them...it's a little messy. - Event delegation is used in 2 ways:
- in the HTML DOM, the root
span
element of each MathQuill thing is delegated all the events in it's own MathQuill thing- keyboard events usually end up triggering their analogue in the edit tree on the cursor, which then bubble upwards
- in the edit tree, the root MathElement is delegated most of these
virtual keyboard events
- for example,
RootMathBlock::keydown()
- some special commands do intercept these events, though
- for example,
- in the HTML DOM, the root
textarea.js
handles all the HTML DOM events necessary to emulate a textarea, using
a hidden textarea.
symbols.js
defines classes for all the symbols like &
and \partial
, and
adds the constructors to CharCmds
or LatexCmds
as used by Cursor::write()
.
commands.js
defines classes for all the commands like \frac
and /
, and
adds the constructors to CharCmds
or LatexCmds
.
publicapi.js
defines the public jQuery::mathquill()
method and on document
ready, finds and mathquill-ifies .mathquill-editable
and so on elements.
outro.js
is just closing boilerplate to match that in intro.js
.