Install the MathType add-on for Google just like you would install any other add-on. From the Add-ons menu, choose Get add-ons. Search for MathType and click INSTALL. Alternatively, go directly to the MathType page in the Google Workspace Marketplace, and click INSTALL. Either way, when you see the Get ready to install pop-up saying MathType needs your permission to run", click CONTINUE. You'll have to sign in with your Google account and grant MathType access to your documents and presentations. After you click Allow on the first pop-up and DONE on the second, MathType will be available for your use.
After installing the add-on the easiest way to start using it is to sign in with the same Google account you used in the purchase process. By doing so, you will automatically be able to use MathType in your Google documents.
If you want to use MathType in Google Docs and Google Slides with a different Google account than the one used in the purchase process, you should have a product key provided to you in the purchase process or by your institution. Follow the instructions in the message that appears when you open the add-on.
When the MathType editor opens, create the equation and click or tap Insert to insert an equation into the document. For additional instruction on how to use the MathType editor, an excellent place to start is with the Introductory Tutorials.
You can copy and paste formulas created with MathType from Google Docs to Google Slides and vice versa. Once you replicate the formula in the new environment, you will be able to edit the formula using MathType.
You can open this window with the combination Ctrl+Shift+X (memory aid: X = XML). It's the same shortcut on Mac as on Windows. You can use this debug window to edit an equation by directly editing the MathML contained in the window, or paste MathML from another document. To submit the changes, click the "Submit Query" button, and you'll see your changes immediately in the MathType editing window.
You can open this window with the combination Ctrl+Shift+L (memory aid: L = LaTeX). It's the same shortcut on Mac as on Windows. You can use this debug window to edit an equation by directly editing the LaTeX contained in the window, or paste LaTeX from another document. To submit the changes, click the "Submit Query" button, and you'll see your changes immediately in the MathType editing window.
Tip 1: Your browser may present a warning that pop-ups are blocked. With pop-ups blocked, it's impossible to use MathML or LaTeX with the MathType 7 add-in as described here. If this happens, it's possible to allow pop-ups from Options:
Printing a Google Docs or Slides page with equations doesn't require any special steps -- just print like any other document. One thing worth noting is that the equations will print at high quality, just like the text. This is a scan of the previous example after printing:
Note that, although we do not give support to them, Word versions between v16.0.11629 and v16.0.13628 may require you to install WebView2to be able to work with MathTypeAdd-in. To install Webview2 go to this page and click ' Download' at the bottom left, and follow the installer instructions.
After installing the add-in the easiest way to start using it is to sign in with the same e-mail account you used in the purchase process. By doing so, you will automatically be able to use MathType in your Word and PowerPoint documents.
If you want to use MathType in Word and PowerPoint with a different e-mail account than the one used in the purchase process, you should have a product key provided to you in the purchase process or by your institution. Follow the instructions in the message that appears when you open the add-in.
When the MathType editor opens, create the equation and click or tap Insert to insert an equation into the document. For additional instruction on using the MathType editor, a good place to start is with the Introductory Tutorials.
When the MathType editor opens, create the equation and click or tap Insert math to insert an equation into the document. For additional instruction on using the MathType editor, a good place to start is with the Introductory Tutorials.
When the MathType editor opens, create the equation and tap Insert to insert it into the document. For additional instruction on using the MathType editor, a good place to start is with the Introductory Tutorials.
Note: These steps also allow you to use MathType to edit "OMML" equations that were created with Word's equation editor. This is important since Microsoft doesn't provide a way to edit OMML equations on the iPad.
This option is available for now on the desktop version of Microsoft Word within Microsoft 365 suite. In order to do so, you need to select the whole equation and then open our Add-In. This feature is planned to be released in the future for Microsoft Word 365 online but it still requires development steps both from Microsoft and us.
Yes, you can. If you are working on a Word document in Microsoft 365 and you want to edit a formula created with MathType 7, now is possible using MathType add-in for Microsoft 365. Visit this page for more information.
Add-In equations in PowerPoint are not accessible due to PowerPoint's technical limitations. The equations written with the Add-in in PowerPoint don't have alt-text, so screen readers can't read them.
I am using mathtype to write math questions and then uploading to moodle. It works well with equation having bar but it does not work with vector. Moodle does not convert the vector equation after I upload to moodle.
I've been using Mathtype and Moodle for years. We just went from an outside hosting service to hosting our own Moodle server. In the transition, for some reason all of my quizzes put my mathtype equations on a line by themselves and automatically returns to a different line for regular text. It will not insert a matytype equation in the middle of a sentence but automatically returns and puts the equation on it's own separate line....
MathType is a interactive equation editor for creating mathematical expressions. It is available on the Windows and Macintosh platform and works with most word processing, presentation and publishing applications.
After Installing MathType, you will be able to use it from within Microsoft Word. The MathType tab is added to the Word ribbon and contains tools for inserting, converting and exporting mathematical expressions. The basic concept is to type the text of your document using Word, and type the math with MathType.
MathType is a popular mathematical and science formula editor with classical and handwriting input modes. You can use it to create math equations or chemical formulas right inside the CKEditor 5 content.
Additionally, MathType offers a special tool designed to help you work with chemical notation. When enabled, ChemType adds a specialized toolbar with the common chemical symbols as well as changes the notation to make it more intuitive to work with chemical formulas.
If you visit a page using MathType with your mobile device, the handwriting interface will appear by default. However, if you visit the same page with a laptop or desktop computer, the classic input will be displayed. The user is always free to change between the two interfaces.
And as noted above, MathType saves MathML, not the equation image. Since MathML is not part of the HTML specification when TinyMCE processes an HTML code, the MathML tags are naturally removed. The extended_valid_elements setting of the TinyMCE API allowed us to easily extend the valid HTML with the MathML specification.
While WIRIS tools have focused for years on the creation of math content, most notably with MathType, we also have recently released ChemType for the creation of chemical formulas. The TinyMCE plugin allows you to activate both MathType and ChemType.
MathType works with Moodle to create equations for your course. You can use MathType's built-in Moodle: TeX filter translator to add mathematical notation directly into Moodle Assignment, Chat, Feedback, Forum, Glossary, Lesson, Quiz, and Wiki modules. Note that you can also add MathType equations to Moodle modules as GIF images. Refer to MathType Help for guidance with images.
In rare cases, you may get an error message to the effect that there is "No translation available for [name of symbol]". The most common instance of this error is after using one of the expanding integral templates, which you can create in MathType by depressing the Shift key as you choose any integral from the Integral templates palette. If you have used expanding integral templates, you'll need to replace them with non-expanding integrals before you translate the equations to LaTeX.
In this example and the next, we'll show how to use MathType with two of the most popular Moodle modules -- quiz and chat. With MathType and the Moodle TeX filter, you can add mathematical expressions both to an assessment question and to its answer choices. To show this capability, we'll write a quiz question for a multiple choice quiz. We assume you're familiar with the quiz module, so the steps here will not be complete instructions in using this module.
If you have an equation in your own course, or if you find an equation in another course that you want to use in a document or presentation outside of Moodle, it's possible to do that by using MathType. Not all filters have this capability though, and not all versions of MathType. If you try these steps and it doesn't work, it's possible that the equation was created with a Moodle filter other than the TeX filter.
I have a partly written physics text book comprising a collection of very large Word documents with hundreds of graphics and hundreds of MathType equations. Having been converted to TeX/LaTeX I just can't go back to working in Word, in fact my study/work laptop is a microsoft free experiment which is also in the process of becoming Adobe free, which is a trickier prospect. I really need to find a conversion solution for those documents.
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