When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Help:Displaying a formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Displaying_a_formula

    The use of LaTeX in a piped link or in a section heading does not appear in blue in the linked text or the table of content. Moreover, links to section headings containing LaTeX formulas do not always work as expected. Finally, having many LaTeX formulas may significantly increase the processing time of a page.

  3. Wikipedia:Rendering math - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Rendering_math

    Does not distinguish a formula from the running text. The default sans-serif may render certain characters indistinguishable, such as 1, I and l. In articles mixing raw wiki with <math> formulae, the appearance of the same variable in the two types of formula does not match (serif vs sans-serif). {} ('texhtml' class)

  4. Mathematical markup language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_markup_language

    A mathematical markup language is a computer notation for representing mathematical formulae, based on mathematical notation.Specialized markup languages are necessary because computers normally deal with linear text and more limited character sets (although increasing support for Unicode is obsoleting very simple uses).

  5. Five-point stencil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five-point_stencil

    An illustration of the five-point stencil in one and two dimensions (top, and bottom, respectively). In numerical analysis, given a square grid in one or two dimensions, the five-point stencil of a point in the grid is a stencil made up of the point itself together with its four "neighbors".

  6. Help talk:Displaying a formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help_talk:Displaying_a_formula

    There is at least one OCR tool that can convert a handwritten formula to Latex and other formats. Mathpix allows 10 snips a month free. I don't know enough to edit the body of the Help page (I've not yet used Mathpix so don't know how good it is, and how compatible with Wikipedia, and don't know what else is out there), but I think there should be a Tools section with this sort of information.

  7. Fourier sine and cosine series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourier_sine_and_cosine_series

    An Elementary Treatise on Fourier's Series: And Spherical, Cylindrical, and Ellipsoidal Harmonics, with Applications to Problems in Mathematical Physics (2 ed.). Ginn. p. 30. Carslaw, Horatio Scott (1921). "Chapter 7: Fourier's Series". Introduction to the Theory of Fourier's Series and Integrals, Volume 1 (2 ed.). Macmillan and Company. p. 196.

  8. Generalized hypergeometric function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized_hypergeometric...

    In mathematics, a generalized hypergeometric series is a power series in which the ratio of successive coefficients indexed by n is a rational function of n. The series, if convergent, defines a generalized hypergeometric function , which may then be defined over a wider domain of the argument by analytic continuation .

  9. Appell series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appell_series

    In mathematics, Appell series are a set of four hypergeometric series F 1, F 2, F 3, F 4 of two variables that were introduced by Paul Appell () and that generalize Gauss's hypergeometric series 2 F 1 of one variable.