mdmath allows to use Visual Studio Code as a markdown editor capable of typesetting and rendering TeX math.K, In fact it now reuses the built in markdown viewer. KaTeX works inside as a fast math renderer.
You can install the extension directly from Visual Studio Code Marketplace.
-
Different themes for HTML export are supported now. Users can choose
- default
- minimal
- publication (LaTeX style)
theme in user settings.
-
about LaTeX style publication theme:
- view HTML publication.
- view PDF publication
- Download PDF paper
-
Commutative diagrams are working now.
-
Insert Table Of Content command available. Inject ToC at cursor location via
Insert Table of Content
from Command Palette (Ctrl+K T). -
User notification on HTML export can be suppressed via boolean user setting
Silent
(default:false
). -
Enforce inline math
$...$
pair being enclosed by space characters as a guard against misinterpretation of single$
's in normal markdown via user settingOuterspace
(default:false
for backward compatibility).
Simplify the process of authoring and live previewing markdown documents containing math formulas. This extension is a comfortable tool for scientists, engineers and students with markdown as their first choice document format.
- Inline math
- Display math (Pandoc compatible)
- Formula numbering
- Inline math with tables
- Works offline.
- Integrated in native markdown viewer. So after installing the extension, TeX math is properly displayed in the markdown preview window.
- Based on markdown-it plugin markdown-it-texmath.
- Using vscode's Markdown Extension API.
- Editor view and Preview are synchronized while scrolling.
- Copy resulting HTML code to the system clipboard.
- Due to markdown-it-texmath's support of different formula delimiters, these are also available and user configurable with mdmath:
'dollars'
(default)- inline:
$...$
- display:
$$...$$
- display + equation number:
$$...$$ (1)
- inline:
'brackets'
- inline:
\(...\)
- display:
\[...\]
- display + equation number:
\[...\] (1)
- inline:
'gitlab'
- inline:
$`...`$
- display:
```math ... ```
- display + equation number:
```math ... ``` (1)
- inline:
'julia'
- inline:
$...$
or``...``
- display:
```math ... ```
- display + equation number:
```math ... ``` (1)
- inline:
'kramdown'
- inline:
$$...$$
- display:
$$...$$
- display + equation number:
$$...$$ (1)
- inline:
Press F1 key inside of Visual Studio Code and type extension
. Choose Extensions: Install Extension
and then select the Markdown+Math
extension from the list.
cd $HOME/.vscode/extensions
git clone https://github.com/goessner/mdmath.git
cd mdmath
npm install
cd %USERPROFILE%\.vscode\extensions
git clone https://github.com/goessner/mdmath.git
cd mdmath
npm install
- Launch VS Code, create or open a markdown file (
.md
). - Open a preview window.
- Typeset in your markdown source window and see the preview window live updating.
- Press Ctrl+K , or run the command
Save Markdown+Math to HTML
to save the corresponding HTML source to the file system. - Press Ctrl+K . or run the command
Clip Markdown+Math to HTML
to copy the corresponding HTML source to the underlying systems clipboard. - Press Ctrl+K T or run the command
Insert Table of Content
to insert a generated Table of Content at cursor location.
"mdmath.delimiters": "dollars",
"mdmath.macros": {},
"mdmath.macroFile": "",
"mdmath.savePath": "./${file.name}.html",
"mdmath.autosave": false,
"mdmath.style": "",
"mdmath.theme": "default",
"mdmath.silent": false,
"mdmath.outerspace": false
markdown-it
: The markdown renderer also used in VS Code.katex
: This is where credits for fast rendering TeX math in HTML go to.
-
How to define my own CSS file for HTML export ?
- Define it by the user setting
mdmath.style
as an absolute URL. So for an example you might choosemdmath.style: "file://c:/mystyle/mystyle.css"
with windows.
- Define it by the user setting
-
How to define and use macros ?
- Define them in user settings. For example ...
"mdmath.macros": { "\\RR": "\\mathbb{R}", "\\vek": "{\\begin{pmatrix}#1\\\\#2\\end{pmatrix}}" }
- Use them in your markdown document. For example ...
Vectors in $\RR^2$ have a shape of $$\vek{x}{y}$$
- BTW: KaTeX now supports
\R
natively, so macro\RR
makes sense only for demonstration reasons.
-
Macros not working?
- Be sure to have at least version 2.7.4 installed.
- Be sure to have closed and opened VSCode again after having changed settings.
- Due to possible macro collision with extension Markdown All In One disable
"markdown.extension.math.enabled": false,
there.
-
How to define macros in a user macro file?
- Create a JSON file containing the macros and define its path in user settings. For example ...
"mdmath.macroFile": "c:/myfiles/mymacros.json"
- Define the macros the same way as in the user settings.
- User macro definition file has priority over user defined macro settings, which are ignored then.
-
Are there global predefined macros ?
- No. Macros are user defined with user settings
mdmath.macros
. So they are available in all user specific markdown documents.
- No. Macros are user defined with user settings
-
Can I write the HTML source to a file ?
- Yes. Use the
Markdown: Save Markdown+Math to Html
command or the key binding Ctrl+K,. - The Html file is written to the folder where the markdown file resides in. This is the default.
- You can change the destination folder by specifying a relative path to your working directory with the help of the user setting
mdmath.savePath
. So for an example you might choosemdmath.savePath: "./html/${file.name}.html"
.
- Yes. Use the
-
Can I synchronously let the HTML source file update ?
- Yes. Simply set the user setting
mdmath.autosave: true
for this (default isfalse
). - Now, whenever you save your markdown file, the corresponding Html file is also saved.
- The destination folder
mdmath.savePath
is used for this. - Be sure to have closed and opened VSCode again after having changed settings.
- Yes. Simply set the user setting
-
Formula highlighting is broken ?
- It is implemented only for
$
delimiters at present. $
characters in markdown text are sometimes confused with math delimiters. Enclose them by backticks (`) then.- Formula highlighting is possible only for formulas on a single line. It breaks with every newline character.
- Math highlighting is completely different from LaTeX math parsing.
- It is implemented only for
-
Which functions does KaTeX support ?
- See them listed at KaTeX Supported Functions and KaTeX Support Table.
-
What if I need to use the currency symbol
$
also in my markup ?- It should be safe to use it. If in doubt escape it.
-
What are the restrictions with inline formulas ?
- Whitespace after opening
$
and before closing$
is not allowed. - Numeric character before opening
$
and after closing$
is not allowed. - At least one character (whitespace ?) is required between two consecutive inline formulas.
- Line break inside is not allowed.
- Whitespace after opening
-
What are the restrictions with display formulas ?
- Not allowed inline of text.
- Not allowed inside of tables. Use inline math there instead.
- Blank lines before and behind required.
- Restrictions for inline formulas do not apply.
-
Can I use math markup in blockquotes ?
- We can use inline and display formulas in blockquote sections.
- Multilevel blockquote sections work as expected.
-
Can I use math markup in code blocks ?
- No, math markup in code blocks is shown - as expected - as markup. This is consistent now, but in contrast to
mdmath
versions prior to 2.0.
- No, math markup in code blocks is shown - as expected - as markup. This is consistent now, but in contrast to
-
Can I access the HTML source of the markdown file ?
- Yes. Use the
Markdown: Clip Markdown+Math to Html
command or the key binding Ctrl+K.. - The markdown preview window has to be opened once for this in order to function properly.
- You need to have the markdown source window activated here (not the preview window!).
- Please note, that the resulting HTML source references 'CDN'-located remote css files. Change those references to local URL's if necessary.
- Yes. Use the
-
Is PDF output supported ?
- Not directly. In order to create
*.pdf
output from your Markdown you can create a*.html
document first and print it then using aPDF
printer or use Pandoc. - See Compiling Markdown into HTML.
- Not directly. In order to create
-
Can I use custom CSS styles for the preview window ?
- Yes. Set
mdmath.style
in user settings to the location of your custom CSS file. Its path must be relative to this extension root.
- Yes. Set
-
Can we store Latex macros with mdmath ?
- Yes, there is a new section
mdmath.globalMacros
inpackage.json
. Try to expand it with your own macros.
- Yes, there is a new section
The following folks helped to make mdmath
even better.
- rjmigliori: Found naming collision with Markdown All In One regarding macros.
- elviswolcott: Implemented the feature of directly saving HTML to the file system including
autosave
ability. - colinfang: helped with implementing macros for mdmath 2.3.5.
- lincr: Helped with fixing problems with
mdmath.clipToHtml
under Ubuntu. - TonySFU: Helped with fixing encoding problems with Chinese language under macOS when using
mdmath.clipToHtml
. - floatdrop: Verifying that clipboardy is a better alternative to
copy-paste
by implementing. - zhanglix: Helped with fixing the
newline
bug withgitlab
delimiters.
See changelog.md
Markdown+Math for VS Code is licensed under the MIT License