Put that in your HTML files and elements like
<code>\frac{\pi}{6}</code> will be rendered as beautiful LaTeX formulæ
using the Google Charts API. The goo.gl script is the minimised
version of jQuery 1.4.3 on Google APIs.
Combined with Markdown and using a Wikipedia short base URI:
<base href="http://enwp.org/">
This can be really beautiful as you can do things like:
The [Leibniz formula](Leibniz_formula_for_pi) for [π](π) is `1 \,-\,
\frac{1}{3} \,+\, \frac{1}{5} \,-\, \frac{1}{7} \,+\, \frac{1}{9}
\,-\, \cdots \;=\; \frac{\pi}{4}`
But there is one problem, in that Markdown sucks. When you put a
<base> or <style> element in at the top of a Markdown document,
Markdown gets confused and thinks that they need to be wrapped in a
<p> block. This happens even if you wrap the whole thing in a <head>
element.
Another slight annoyance is that you have to use <code> elements again
in tables, because Markdown has no native support for tables.
Apart from that, this is a pretty nice combination, and it degrades
gracefully if script isn't supported.