Am 18.04.2017 um 23:24 schrieb Tomas Hajny:
Which Firefox version? SeaMonkey shows it correctly (Mozilla/5.0 (Windows
NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:49.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/49.0 SeaMonkey/2.46)...
OK - found it: I have NoScript installed; if I remove the restrictions
from the site the formulas show up
On 18/04/2017 22:32, Werner Pamler wrote:
v52.0.2 (Win10-64bit, Firefix is 32-bit). Any extensions needed?
Works fine here with Firefox v52.0.2 on Windows 7. No extensions needed,
it just needs javascript.
Try clearing your cache.
Denis
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Werner Pamler wrote:
> Thank you. Works fine in Chrome, but when I open this page in Firefox I
> don't see the formula, only the header "Math" :-(
Do you have Javascript enabled?
Jonas
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Am 18.04.2017 um 23:24 schrieb Tomas Hajny:
On Tue, April 18, 2017 23:16, Werner Pamler wrote:
Am 18.04.2017 um 21:42 schrieb Vincent Snijders:
I installed this extension with the default settings for size. See
http://wiki.lazarus.freepascal.org/SANDBOX#Math.
Thank you. Works fine in Chrome, b
On Tue, April 18, 2017 23:16, Werner Pamler wrote:
> Am 18.04.2017 um 21:42 schrieb Vincent Snijders:
>> I installed this extension with the default settings for size. See
>> http://wiki.lazarus.freepascal.org/SANDBOX#Math.
>
> Thank you. Works fine in Chrome, but when I open this page in Firefox I
Am 18.04.2017 um 21:42 schrieb Vincent Snijders:
I installed this extension with the default settings for size. See
http://wiki.lazarus.freepascal.org/SANDBOX#Math.
Thank you. Works fine in Chrome, but when I open this page in Firefox I
don't see the formula, only the header "Math" :-(
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2017-04-18 11:17 GMT+02:00 Vincent Snijders :
>
>
> 2017-04-17 18:17 GMT+02:00 Denis Kozlov :
>
>> On 15/04/2017 20:43, Vincent Snijders wrote:
>>
>> What math rendering extension do you recommend?
>>
>>
>> I recommend *SimpleMathJax* extension for its simplicity. It uses an
>> external resource (
Am 18.04.2017 um 13:07 schrieb Marco van de Voort:
Note that there is documentation, it is just Dutch and TeX (not latex but
straight tex). Also, for some units the documentation sources are older than
the pascal source.
I know this source, I think you once had posted it in the German forum.
Y
In our previous episode, Werner Pamler said:
> Does anybody know how to write mathematical expressions in the wiki? I
> would like to write an article on fpc's NumLib, but I would only want to
> begin this activity when I know how to enter complex mathematical
> formulas like integrals etc such
2017-04-17 18:17 GMT+02:00 Denis Kozlov :
> On 15/04/2017 20:43, Vincent Snijders wrote:
>
> What math rendering extension do you recommend?
>
>
> I recommend *SimpleMathJax* extension for its simplicity. It uses an
> external resource (mathjax.org) and doesn't require a local rendering
> engine.
On Sun, Apr 16, 2017 at 3:09 AM Werner Pamler
wrote:
> Thanks. Application of #2 is a bit complicated, but the results are very
> nice - see
> http://wiki.lazarus.freepascal.org/NumLib_Documentation#Gamma_function.
>
As an aside, just wanted to say thanks - that documentation looks awesome!
I se
On 15/04/2017 20:43, Vincent Snijders wrote:
What math rendering extension do you recommend?
I recommend *SimpleMathJax* extension for its simplicity. It uses an
external resource (mathjax.org) and doesn't require a local rendering
engine.
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:SimpleMath
On 15/04/2017 20:06, Werner Pamler wrote:
Thanks. Application of #2 is a bit complicated, but the results are
very nice - see
http://wiki.lazarus.freepascal.org/NumLib_Documentation#Gamma_function.
Which resolution would you recommend?
Your current resolution appears good on a desktop. On a h
2017-04-15 18:59 GMT+02:00 Denis Kozlov :
> On 14/04/2017 11:25, Werner Pamler wrote:
>
>> Does anybody know how to write mathematical expressions in the wiki? I
>> would like to write an article on fpc's NumLib, but I would only want to
>> begin this activity when I know how to enter complex math
Am 15.04.2017 um 18:59 schrieb Denis Kozlov:
I think you have 2 options:
1) Write your formulates using the wiki's standard notation
LaTeX, and once a Math extension is installed (if ever),
your formulas will be automatically rendered.
2) Generate visual rendering of your LaTeX formulates yours
On 14/04/2017 11:25, Werner Pamler wrote:
Does anybody know how to write mathematical expressions in the wiki? I
would like to write an article on fpc's NumLib, but I would only want
to begin this activity when I know how to enter complex mathematical
formulas like integrals etc such that they
Il 14/04/2017 22:08, Werner Pamler ha scritto:
It looks to me that something (the math template?) is missing from the
Lazarus/FPC wiki infrastructure. If this is right, is there anybody I
could contact?
Maybe I'm wrong, but I believe that you can either load the template
from the infrastruc
Am 14.04.2017 um 19:33 schrieb Giuliano Colla:
Hope that it helps.
Not really... What I was seeking is a working example for something like
\sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{x^n}{n!}
My naive assumption is that I'd just have to type this phrase into the
wiki text to get this formula in perfect math n
Il 14/04/2017 17:21, Werner Pamler ha scritto:
How do I activate this template?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Template_namespace
and in particular (to fetch the template text)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Template_namespace#Substitution
Hope that it helps.
Giuliano
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Am 14.04.2017 um 14:49 schrieb ListMember:
Apparently, the FPC wiki uses the same software as Wikipedia; if so,
the following links may be useful.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Mathematics#Using_HTML
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Mathematical_symbols
http
Apparently, the FPC wiki uses the same software as Wikipedia; if so, the
following links may be useful.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Mathematics#Using_HTML
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Mathematical_symbols
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mathematical_
Does anybody know how to write mathematical expressions in the wiki? I
would like to write an article on fpc's NumLib, but I would only want to
begin this activity when I know how to enter complex mathematical
formulas like integrals etc such that they are displayed decently.
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