
Loïc Joly wrote:
John Maddock a écrit :
I've played with this some more using the examples from http://www.w3.org/Math/XSL/ : I can get these to display correctly in both IE7 and Firefox provided the file extension is .xml, but for offline viewing in IE7 you have to click though endless security warnings before the content finally appears, Oh and Opera doesn't display the sample pages at all either :-(
So I think for now I'll stick to images...
What about using images, but linking them so that a click on them leads to a MathML file ? That way, the equation is directly visible for casual readers, but readers who have problems reading it and are serious about solving them can display them in the resolution fitting their needs.
Does the OBJECT tag of HTML work in most browsers? That's designed to allow fallback when the browser can't render content, and you want to provide alternate content. You might be able to embed mathml for those browsers that support it, and fall back to images for those which don't. Unfortunately, I've never tried to do it for real, nor would I know how to make it work in Quickbook even if I had :-) But html would be something like: here's an equation: <object data="/url/of/mathml/equation.mathml" type="text/mathml"> <object data="/url/of/math/equation.png" type="image/png"> There's an equation here that can't be rendered. </object> </object> -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Kevin Lynch voice: (617) 353-6025 Physics Department Fax: (617) 353-9393 Boston University office: PRB-361 590 Commonwealth Ave. e-mail: krlynch@bu.edu Boston, MA 02215 USA http://budoe.bu.edu/~krlynch -------------------------------------------------------------------------------