Here's the presentation: http://www.milowski.com/www/webkit/mathml/maa2010/
You can move through the slides with either the buttons or Alt + Arrow Key. You'll need a MathML enabled browser to view the example slides. I'll be demoing a version of WebKit with my MathML code. It does a reasonable job on the examples but not perfect. A couple of notes on the slides titled "Status" and "Why Native Support?": * I'm trying to get across to mainly Mathematicians how the development process works for WebKit and why it will take awhile for this to show up in WebKit (and in their browsers). * While I expect things to pick up in pace as I understand the "right way" to do things, the current process, for me, is very slow. That's not a complaint but just a reality. I have to learn how to do some complicated layouts in a rendering tree and the reviews necessary go through a small number of people. * There are other attempts to render MathML using Javascript based renders. While these are very good ideas, they aren't what I'm trying to do with native support and so I need to differentiate my efforts. The phrase "the only way for webkit" is my assumption that such complicated javascript based renderers would never be acceptable on the mobile platform and, as such, aren't a viable approach for WebKit to handle MathML. * Don't take anything the wrong way, ... I'm very pleased with the support I've received from the WebKit community. There are plenty of talking points you won't get from these slides. Feel free to ask me questions. :) -- --Alex Milowski "The excellence of grammar as a guide is proportional to the paucity of the inflexions, i.e. to the degree of analysis effected by the language considered." Bertrand Russell in a footnote of Principles of Mathematics _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list webkit-dev@lists.webkit.org http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev