Andrei Ambrazevich
My feedback
5 results found
-
660 votes
MathML support was added to InDesign 2025 version.
Work on adding more options in future releases of InDesign has started.
--
Adobe InDesign team
An error occurred while saving the comment -
5 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Andrei Ambrazevich commentedProbably this would help a bit - https://scand.com/products/mathml-kit/. Thought this plugin doesn't mean to edit formulas at least you don't need to convert them to .eps or .pdf to get high quality print.
-
2 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Andrei Ambrazevich commentedOnly 3rd party plugins are available ( Probably this would help a bit - https://scand.com/products/mathml-kit/. Though it doesn't mean to edit formulas at least you don't need to convert them to .eps or .pdf to get high quality print.
-
82 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Andrei Ambrazevich commentedProbably this would help a bit - https://scand.com/products/mathml-kit/. Thought this plugin doesn't mean to edit formulas at least you don't need to convert them to .eps or .pdf to get high quality print.
-
1 vote
An error occurred while saving the comment Andrei Ambrazevich commentedProbably this would help - https://scand.com/products/mathml-kit/. Thought it couldn't edit formulas at least you don't need to convert them to .eps or .pdf to print in high quality.
Well, perhaps the simplest and easy-to-use tool for me (as a designer) was MathML Kit for Adobe CS. If my memory doesn't trick me it's not an Adobe product but a third-party solution. But it felt quite light and useful for me as it helps to automate such operations like import of MathML formulas. Yes, there're some other apps like MathType but they seemed too difficult and bulky for me and obviously I don't need an editor for math expressions. The thing is just to put them in a .indd and get a vector-like quality output. That's it. For everyone's interested you may find the Kit right here - https://scand.com/products/mathml-kit/.