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With \text{...}
There is no maths allowed in \text
-environments just plain text.
$\inf\{\mu(V)\mid V\supset B \;\text{and}\; V \;\text{is open}\}$
Why not something like $a \text{ and } b$
?
EDIT: ok, so spaces aren’t recognised inside \text
, then, unlike LaTeX.
EDIT2: trying $a \text{\ and\ } b$
—
I suppose if sombody knowledgeable in the relevant software would spare an hour, they could easily improve on this Instiki behaviour. Anyone interested in lending a hand should contact Richard Williamson for info on how to get started.
if somebody can point me to the precise file and method
Richard Williamson can do that. Could you contact him by email?
Re #11: I wrote him an email and added you as a CC.
Hi Dmitri,
Thanks for the email, and apologies for the slow reply. To fix this properly, you would need to edit itex2MML, it is nothing to do with Instiki directly. I don’t think we have ever tweaked itex2MML, so probably we are using the same source as here. If you make a patch and compile the binary for Linux, I am happy to push that binary to the nLab platform.
If you prefer, you could try to edit the nLab renderer instead. I have done that in a very limited way here in the tex_post_parser method, but it is a hack really. If you would like to get into editing itex2MML, I suggest that you fork it and add it to the nLab repository and also add support llbracket, esh, and so on in itex2MML rather than doing what I have in the renderer there.
I seriously suggest we consider switching from “iTeX” to MathJax.
We have certainly considered this in the past. The problem, as I have mentioned numerous times on the nForum, is that MathJax is fundamentally client side. It can be run server side, but one loses crucial client side information like the font the browser is using, the font size, etc. If we rely on client side rendering, there will be a performance hit, and also (even though I use a browser myself (qutebrowser) where MathJax is used) the user experience is not as good, with the shifts in the page rendering as MathJax kicks in; it is much better I think for us render to MathML server-side and allow the browser to render it when it is capable of it. If you know any alternative to itex2MML, or are willing to write your own, I am happy to consider it.
Or if you wish to experiment with using MathJax client side without using itex2MML, we can certainly try that on small pages if others agree. I don’t think we can do that on large pages, but, as I have again mentioned before, we could consider writing a bit of Javascript to split the page up in some way so that much of it loads invisibly, rather than using MathJax to load the entire page at once as currently. If you wish to try that, please go ahead: you can just take the HTML source for a very large page like this one and play about with adding some Javascript to it to achieve this,
An alternative is to take the approach used for rendering Tikz diagrams, and render all mathematics actually in LaTeX, convert the pdfs to svgs, and use those. This has the advantage of ensuring that LaTeX is the same as normal. But it has a lot of disadvantages as well.
Yes, let’s not use SVGs.
Chromium is slowly getting MathML support back, so that once that becomes live, Chrome and Edge (and others) will be doing proper MathML, rather than the MathJax replacement.
Use weak inequalities for definitions of inner, outer regular Borel measures. This seems necessary to allow Dirac measures to be Radon: {x} has no strict subsets containing x; Universe{x} has no strict supersets not containing x.
(Low confidence, anyone who knows what they’re doing please gainsay.)
I’ve certainly seen this notational distinction, although I’m not remotely interested in tracking down and citing examples. The notation is certainly unambiguous and I believe anyone wanting to switch to that should not be opposed.
I’m hardly fussed about this issue, although I’m not sure that’s the much more common convention. (It might be; I don’t have statistics.) My own opinion, FWIW, is that locally changing on a single page isn’t a big deal and doesn’t mandate changes on other pages, and there is nothing to panic about. But go ahead and revert if you are bothered by this.
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