If you use a limited number of fractions over and over again, the AutoCorrect approach is nice and easy. (How to do this has been covered in other issues of WordTips.) Simply make sure that the AutoCorrect entry is saved as formatted text, and you will be able to use your new fraction quickly and easily. Once you have created your fraction, the easiest way to use it is to define it as an AutoCorrect entry. You will need to look around and find the one you like the best. There are several good options for this "improved slash," depending on the font you are using. The reason you may want to do this is that the slash used in the single-character fonts built into Word (you remember-those created when you type the characters "1/2") uses a slash that is at a different angle than the slash shown when you simply type a slash. Click on OK to close the Font dialog box.įinally, if you decide to replace the slash in your fraction, you will need to pick one using the Symbol dialog box.You will need to pick a value based on trail and error for the font you are using.) Thus, if you were using 10-point text, you would raise the position by 4 points. Change the By setting (beside the Position pull-down list) to a value equal to approximately 40% of your base point size.Change the Position pull-down list to Raised.The Character Spacing tab of the Font dialog box. Using this approach, the numerator would (of course) need to be raised a bit. For instance, if your text is 10-point, you would use 5-point if it is 11-point, you would use 5.5-point. A good rule of thumb is to simply make the font size 50% of whatever type size your normal text is.
(It is just simpler that way.) You can, if you so desire, just adjust the point size of the font used for the numerator and denominator. First of all, you don't have to use superscript and subscript, if you don't want to. There are a couple of things to point out about these seemingly simple steps. Replace the slash with a different "slash-type" symbol, if desired.Select the denominator (the part to the right of the slash) and format it as subscript.Select the numerator (the part to the left of the slash) and format it as superscript.
Many of the formatting settings depend on which font you are using, but you can use the following steps as guidance for how to proceed: One way around this conundrum is to fiddle with the font characteristics of the numbers in your fraction so that the fraction appears as desired. Most fonts, however, don't have such characters for other less-common fractions. This is because Word replaces those characters with actual single-character font representations of those fractions. The same is true for other common fractions, such as 1/4 and 3/4. Captain Obvious to the rescue.You may have noticed that if you type 1/2 in a Word document, the characters are converted automatically to a very nicely formatted fraction.
What’s next is to simply use one of these tools to create the equation, and download it as an image accordingly – Finally, insert this image into your HTML file. Just do a search for “latex online editor”, “Math equation online”, or “latex to image”, and there will be plenty.
If all else fails, we can always go back to the old school “write on a piece of paper, take a photo, post online”. METHOD 3) IMAGE EQUATIONS 3A) ONLINE EQUATION EDITORS I personally prefer this over the “less human” Tex and LaTeX – As you can see, this is a lot more similar to HTML and easier to understand. This is another example of the Mathjax library, but using the MathML “language”. METHOD 2) MATH LIBRARY 2A) MATH EQUATIONS WITH TEX Yep… This is kind of a painful way to do it, but it works. The middle layer is the formula c = cn.smol layers are empty with a white space. The middle layer ∑ is the summation (sigma) symbol.smol layers are used to specify the upper and lower limits respectively. If we want to have “advanced equations” such as summation… Things are going to get a little rough. * (C) BIG FONT SIZE FOR SYMBOL ITSELF */Īs you might have seen from the above, those are only simple equations. * (B) SMALL FONT SIZE FOR SUPER & SUB SCRIPT */