So to be crystal, are the files TeX-fonts-n.zip listed here
http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsMath/download/jsMath-fonts.html
public domain?
Yes, that is how I understand it. Certainly I am not planing to
restrict them in any way myself, and I am happy to give you special
permission
If I understand things correctly, the fonts up at
http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/jsMath/download/jsMath-fonts.html are
based on the Bakoma fonts, and the license quoted above is the Bakoma
fonts license. If you look at the original Bakoma fonts link at the
jsMath fonts page, you'll see
You might look into the Stix font project. http://www.stixfonts.org
Axiom uses the stix fonts in the firefox help browser.
Mathematica also allows their fonts to be used (but not
distributed with the system).
I do plan to support the STIX fonts in jsMath, but haven't had the
time to make the
Just out of curiosity do you know of _any_ javascript equations editors
that are actually pretty good / finished / better than your
currentjsmath-based one?
No. I find the state of affairs with on-line equation editors to be
pretty sad at the moment. It's definitely something that needs to
Mouse positioning of the cursor, cut and paste, multiple fonts, font
resizing, multiple equations on one sheet of paper, 2D plotting, 3D
plotting, tabbed panes, etc. Moving on to DragMath's capabilities:
load and save to disk, multi-language support, export to LaTeX,
MathML, Maple, and
This definately has some little issues that I don't like (for example, typing
in, which you might want to be the product i*n),
Yes, there are definitely some interface issues that need to be
considered. For the moment, you can use spaces to disambiguate
situations like this. For example i n