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Dec 12, 2021 at 21:44 comment added Jules Manson it's a great idea but nearly all who can program in almost any language like mathematica or is studying higher math already have the analytic skills to get up and going within 10 minutes even from an overwhelming tutorial like the one here. despite this i still think one is needed for the "liberal arts" majors. just kidding. o_~
Feb 21, 2021 at 6:53 history edited Calvin Khor
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Feb 19, 2021 at 17:50 answer added Mark Bennet timeline score: 3
Feb 19, 2021 at 17:45 comment added Verónica R. M. @MarkBennet That would be helpful me thinks. Actually I find it somehow strange that a MathJax link is not mentioned in the Tour. Because essentially one uses it all the time.
Feb 16, 2021 at 18:11 comment added Mark Bennet Could we have a more prominent link to a tutorial from the Tour and from the Help page - maybe a help section on formatting?
Feb 9, 2021 at 17:48 comment added Verónica R. M. For single commands I think Detexify would fix it. Perhaps an example could help more. I did one taking the continuity definition. "Suppose you have... you want to write... then by following the pyramid... "
Feb 8, 2021 at 5:57 comment added Sarvesh Ravichandran Iyer @Sigma Yes, that part I do agree with. Somebody should take responsibility and come up with a tutorial. I don't know where allesia(OP of this question) has gone, but I agree with her, and we have to make it work in a simpler fashion. Or, as Xander says, clean up the Mathjax Tutorial page, make it more of a tutorial than a question-and-answer type page.
Feb 7, 2021 at 22:57 comment added Sigma I like this idea very much. Most new users can benefit greatly from knowing the mathjax for just a few basic things, like integrals, vectors, limits, and infinity.
Feb 4, 2021 at 17:40 comment added PM 2Ring The "MathJax basic tutorial and quick reference" is rather intimidating, IMHO, and slow to load. I feel a bit uncomfortable when I link it for new members (both here & on Physics), hoping that it doesn't scare them off. It would be great to have something that's more newbie-friendly.
Feb 3, 2021 at 19:16 comment added amWhy @allesia, yes a good number of freshman undergrads, though not the majority of them, begin with calculus I, II, or III, and, a few are even ready for DE or linear algebra as first year undergrads.
Feb 3, 2021 at 18:41 comment added user486983 @MartinSleziak Now that I'm recalling, the first course is not calculus, or is it for some people? If not, then 10. neither
Feb 3, 2021 at 18:33 comment added user486983 @MartinSleziak Hi Martin. Kinda closer to your answer here meta.mathoverflow.net/a/3764 althought with less characters. For example I think one doesn't study matrices in the first math course. And 12,13 and 8 could not be included
Feb 3, 2021 at 16:55 comment added Anindya Prithvi The basics you are referring to is the question part of ` MathJax basic tutorial and quick reference` ... Although it looks overwhelming at first, it doesn't have anything "advanced" just at the beginning. Only when the user starts to scroll down, they are presented with tables/thermodynamic squares/etc. If you plan to reduce the size of the question itself, I think that wouldn't be an optimum approach. One thing that can be done is write the formatted text and ask the user to right click and check/copy the syntax.
Feb 3, 2021 at 7:34 comment added Martin Sleziak There is some intro into MathJax on MO: How does one type mathematical formulas on this site? It is considerable shorter than the MathJax tutorial. If I check the comment template, it also links to basic help on mathjax notation, main meta site math tutorial and equation editing how-to. Is some of those closer to what you would like to see?
Feb 3, 2021 at 5:02 history became hot meta post
Feb 3, 2021 at 1:30 comment added user486983 or also, kinda to split it. I don't have much time rn to point out examples but I've seen many many adavanced math symbols that you definitely don't see in the first year courses
Feb 3, 2021 at 1:29 comment added Xander Henderson Mod Often, the best thing to do around here is to just do it, and then see if it is positively received. Personally, I would like to the the "MathJax Tutorial" question turned into an actual question, with an index in the question, and links to the answers. If one of those answers were a guide for absolute beginners, coolio. Cleaning up the tutorial might be a more worthwhile project than creating something new.
Feb 3, 2021 at 1:27 comment added amWhy I think that's a good idea, but perhaps this can be done in the MathJax basic tutorial, where we might want to order the "answers" to be presented in "most basic help for immediate use" ... to "more specific cases, special circumstances." But I agree with the emphasis on starting with the basics; some of which could vastly improve users capacity and willingness to try mathjax, and likely improve the outcome in terms of how their posts are received. Great idea!
Feb 3, 2021 at 1:12 history asked user486983 CC BY-SA 4.0