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Latex editor/compiler for Windows and Powerpoint
Alternatives to Overleaf (i.e. instant TeX compiling without sign in)TeX daemon for WindowsMath Input Panel in Windows 7 and LaTeX writingEasiest way for installing and using pdfLaTeX on WindowsIs there a LaTeX editor for Windows with an equivalent to RefTeX ?Stand-alone LaTeX -compiler for Windows i.e. without installation? Some USB -stick?Autocompile LaTeX doc when updated in Windows (via dropbox, in this case)Good LaTeX editor and compiler for beginnersNeed help reformatting PowerPoint slide containing latex codeConvert beamer presentation to (non-editable) powerpointLatex from Command Line Windows
I am using Windows in my daily work. Would you like to recommend on Latex editor/compiler for Windows. Sometimes, I need to add a lot of math formula for the PPT files, what are the best way to use Latex along with Powerpoint? Thanks.
windows powerpoint
add a comment |
I am using Windows in my daily work. Would you like to recommend on Latex editor/compiler for Windows. Sometimes, I need to add a lot of math formula for the PPT files, what are the best way to use Latex along with Powerpoint? Thanks.
windows powerpoint
2
Welcome to TeX.SX! If you need a lot of math formula, use beamer and any TeX editor you like instead of Powerpoint and you will be much happier ;)
– TeXnician
May 6 at 18:50
MS Office's native equation editor has improved over the years. So using that for math formulas in your PPT would suffice most of the time. It would also give you better alignment than pasting pictures of TeX generated formulas.
– Herr K.
May 6 at 23:16
add a comment |
I am using Windows in my daily work. Would you like to recommend on Latex editor/compiler for Windows. Sometimes, I need to add a lot of math formula for the PPT files, what are the best way to use Latex along with Powerpoint? Thanks.
windows powerpoint
I am using Windows in my daily work. Would you like to recommend on Latex editor/compiler for Windows. Sometimes, I need to add a lot of math formula for the PPT files, what are the best way to use Latex along with Powerpoint? Thanks.
windows powerpoint
windows powerpoint
asked May 6 at 18:46
user297850user297850
1111
1111
2
Welcome to TeX.SX! If you need a lot of math formula, use beamer and any TeX editor you like instead of Powerpoint and you will be much happier ;)
– TeXnician
May 6 at 18:50
MS Office's native equation editor has improved over the years. So using that for math formulas in your PPT would suffice most of the time. It would also give you better alignment than pasting pictures of TeX generated formulas.
– Herr K.
May 6 at 23:16
add a comment |
2
Welcome to TeX.SX! If you need a lot of math formula, use beamer and any TeX editor you like instead of Powerpoint and you will be much happier ;)
– TeXnician
May 6 at 18:50
MS Office's native equation editor has improved over the years. So using that for math formulas in your PPT would suffice most of the time. It would also give you better alignment than pasting pictures of TeX generated formulas.
– Herr K.
May 6 at 23:16
2
2
Welcome to TeX.SX! If you need a lot of math formula, use beamer and any TeX editor you like instead of Powerpoint and you will be much happier ;)
– TeXnician
May 6 at 18:50
Welcome to TeX.SX! If you need a lot of math formula, use beamer and any TeX editor you like instead of Powerpoint and you will be much happier ;)
– TeXnician
May 6 at 18:50
MS Office's native equation editor has improved over the years. So using that for math formulas in your PPT would suffice most of the time. It would also give you better alignment than pasting pictures of TeX generated formulas.
– Herr K.
May 6 at 23:16
MS Office's native equation editor has improved over the years. So using that for math formulas in your PPT would suffice most of the time. It would also give you better alignment than pasting pictures of TeX generated formulas.
– Herr K.
May 6 at 23:16
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Welcome to TeX.SX! As @TeXnician suggested, you can use beamer to create presentations. If you prefer to use Microsoft Powerpoint (or something similar) as you main environment, then I highly suggest codecogs. It allows you to insert LaTeX formulas and export them as PDF, GIF, PNG, and even SVG format. SVG is the best that suits you in my opinion because you can scale the image in Powerpoint and it won't get pixelated. Another perk is that allows you to insert symbols with a click of a mouse :). You don't memorize the commands/symbol names, one click and it is there for you.
1
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
add a comment |
Personally I can recommend this type of program that is very useful and that I often use in my Power Point slides. It's called KLatexFormula and you can find a the link https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/.
It is free and it is very easy to use and to generate images with LaTeX code (from the classic PNG to SVG). Here into this page you can see the screenshots: https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/screenshots.
The program is very convenient mainly for two reasons: the first is the symbol panel because you may not remember how to write the code of a certain symbol (a Greek letter, a mathematical operator, etc. ...) in the language of LaTeX. The second is the library of formulas, where there are already examples of formulas and diagrams, and where you can integrate your formulas so that you can easily copy them in the future.
Another of the advantages of KLaTeXFormula is the very simple and intuitive interface that provides a help system that explains the various functions for less practical users of the LaTeX world. The program requires a LaTeX distribution to be installed and possibly Inkscape if you want to export your formula as a SVG image.
add a comment |
You need a TeX-distribution:
TeX Live
or
- MiKTeX
And for PowerPoint integration:
- IguanaTex
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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oldest
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
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oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Welcome to TeX.SX! As @TeXnician suggested, you can use beamer to create presentations. If you prefer to use Microsoft Powerpoint (or something similar) as you main environment, then I highly suggest codecogs. It allows you to insert LaTeX formulas and export them as PDF, GIF, PNG, and even SVG format. SVG is the best that suits you in my opinion because you can scale the image in Powerpoint and it won't get pixelated. Another perk is that allows you to insert symbols with a click of a mouse :). You don't memorize the commands/symbol names, one click and it is there for you.
1
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
add a comment |
Welcome to TeX.SX! As @TeXnician suggested, you can use beamer to create presentations. If you prefer to use Microsoft Powerpoint (or something similar) as you main environment, then I highly suggest codecogs. It allows you to insert LaTeX formulas and export them as PDF, GIF, PNG, and even SVG format. SVG is the best that suits you in my opinion because you can scale the image in Powerpoint and it won't get pixelated. Another perk is that allows you to insert symbols with a click of a mouse :). You don't memorize the commands/symbol names, one click and it is there for you.
1
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
add a comment |
Welcome to TeX.SX! As @TeXnician suggested, you can use beamer to create presentations. If you prefer to use Microsoft Powerpoint (or something similar) as you main environment, then I highly suggest codecogs. It allows you to insert LaTeX formulas and export them as PDF, GIF, PNG, and even SVG format. SVG is the best that suits you in my opinion because you can scale the image in Powerpoint and it won't get pixelated. Another perk is that allows you to insert symbols with a click of a mouse :). You don't memorize the commands/symbol names, one click and it is there for you.
Welcome to TeX.SX! As @TeXnician suggested, you can use beamer to create presentations. If you prefer to use Microsoft Powerpoint (or something similar) as you main environment, then I highly suggest codecogs. It allows you to insert LaTeX formulas and export them as PDF, GIF, PNG, and even SVG format. SVG is the best that suits you in my opinion because you can scale the image in Powerpoint and it won't get pixelated. Another perk is that allows you to insert symbols with a click of a mouse :). You don't memorize the commands/symbol names, one click and it is there for you.
edited May 6 at 19:15
answered May 6 at 19:09
M. Al JumailyM. Al Jumaily
1,1061210
1,1061210
1
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
add a comment |
1
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
1
1
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
I would highly recommend the insert SVG format and here is a Microsoft link for 365 support.office.com/en-us/article/… alternatives to codecogs are here tex.stackexchange.com/questions/488049/…
– KJO
May 6 at 19:27
add a comment |
Personally I can recommend this type of program that is very useful and that I often use in my Power Point slides. It's called KLatexFormula and you can find a the link https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/.
It is free and it is very easy to use and to generate images with LaTeX code (from the classic PNG to SVG). Here into this page you can see the screenshots: https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/screenshots.
The program is very convenient mainly for two reasons: the first is the symbol panel because you may not remember how to write the code of a certain symbol (a Greek letter, a mathematical operator, etc. ...) in the language of LaTeX. The second is the library of formulas, where there are already examples of formulas and diagrams, and where you can integrate your formulas so that you can easily copy them in the future.
Another of the advantages of KLaTeXFormula is the very simple and intuitive interface that provides a help system that explains the various functions for less practical users of the LaTeX world. The program requires a LaTeX distribution to be installed and possibly Inkscape if you want to export your formula as a SVG image.
add a comment |
Personally I can recommend this type of program that is very useful and that I often use in my Power Point slides. It's called KLatexFormula and you can find a the link https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/.
It is free and it is very easy to use and to generate images with LaTeX code (from the classic PNG to SVG). Here into this page you can see the screenshots: https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/screenshots.
The program is very convenient mainly for two reasons: the first is the symbol panel because you may not remember how to write the code of a certain symbol (a Greek letter, a mathematical operator, etc. ...) in the language of LaTeX. The second is the library of formulas, where there are already examples of formulas and diagrams, and where you can integrate your formulas so that you can easily copy them in the future.
Another of the advantages of KLaTeXFormula is the very simple and intuitive interface that provides a help system that explains the various functions for less practical users of the LaTeX world. The program requires a LaTeX distribution to be installed and possibly Inkscape if you want to export your formula as a SVG image.
add a comment |
Personally I can recommend this type of program that is very useful and that I often use in my Power Point slides. It's called KLatexFormula and you can find a the link https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/.
It is free and it is very easy to use and to generate images with LaTeX code (from the classic PNG to SVG). Here into this page you can see the screenshots: https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/screenshots.
The program is very convenient mainly for two reasons: the first is the symbol panel because you may not remember how to write the code of a certain symbol (a Greek letter, a mathematical operator, etc. ...) in the language of LaTeX. The second is the library of formulas, where there are already examples of formulas and diagrams, and where you can integrate your formulas so that you can easily copy them in the future.
Another of the advantages of KLaTeXFormula is the very simple and intuitive interface that provides a help system that explains the various functions for less practical users of the LaTeX world. The program requires a LaTeX distribution to be installed and possibly Inkscape if you want to export your formula as a SVG image.
Personally I can recommend this type of program that is very useful and that I often use in my Power Point slides. It's called KLatexFormula and you can find a the link https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/.
It is free and it is very easy to use and to generate images with LaTeX code (from the classic PNG to SVG). Here into this page you can see the screenshots: https://klatexformula.sourceforge.io/screenshots.
The program is very convenient mainly for two reasons: the first is the symbol panel because you may not remember how to write the code of a certain symbol (a Greek letter, a mathematical operator, etc. ...) in the language of LaTeX. The second is the library of formulas, where there are already examples of formulas and diagrams, and where you can integrate your formulas so that you can easily copy them in the future.
Another of the advantages of KLaTeXFormula is the very simple and intuitive interface that provides a help system that explains the various functions for less practical users of the LaTeX world. The program requires a LaTeX distribution to be installed and possibly Inkscape if you want to export your formula as a SVG image.
edited May 7 at 21:33
answered May 6 at 23:03
SebastianoSebastiano
12.3k42467
12.3k42467
add a comment |
add a comment |
You need a TeX-distribution:
TeX Live
or
- MiKTeX
And for PowerPoint integration:
- IguanaTex
add a comment |
You need a TeX-distribution:
TeX Live
or
- MiKTeX
And for PowerPoint integration:
- IguanaTex
add a comment |
You need a TeX-distribution:
TeX Live
or
- MiKTeX
And for PowerPoint integration:
- IguanaTex
You need a TeX-distribution:
TeX Live
or
- MiKTeX
And for PowerPoint integration:
- IguanaTex
answered May 6 at 19:03
DG'DG'
11.3k22148
11.3k22148
add a comment |
add a comment |
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2
Welcome to TeX.SX! If you need a lot of math formula, use beamer and any TeX editor you like instead of Powerpoint and you will be much happier ;)
– TeXnician
May 6 at 18:50
MS Office's native equation editor has improved over the years. So using that for math formulas in your PPT would suffice most of the time. It would also give you better alignment than pasting pictures of TeX generated formulas.
– Herr K.
May 6 at 23:16