- From: <Irene.Vatton@inrialpes.fr>
- Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1998 09:18:29 +0100
- To: cherry@neta.com
- cc: www-amaya@w3.org
You're right Jim. Amaya implements only the Presentation Tags from MathML.
These limitations are listed in the Math.html page. I agree we must implement
the other part, but I guess it should be great if other authoring tools and
browsers implement this minimum.
In-reply-to: Your message of Thu, 12 Nov 1998 17:59:59 -0700."
<364B848F.306F@neta.com>
> Paul-- I am now using Amaya 1.3b and it does so little MATHML that it is
> worthless for even simple presentations.
> If you want I can list all the MATHML it does not support?
>
> Current limitations
> Amaya implements only the Presentation Tags from MathML, not the Content Markup.
> All presentation elements are available, but only some MathML attributes are
> currently implemented (for instance fontstyle which is available in the Attributes
> menu when a mi element is selected). However, the class, id and style attributes
> are available, with the same semantics as in HTML: you can associate CSS style
> with MathML elements (class and style attributes) and a MathML element can be the
> target of a link (id attribute).
> Only a limited set of entities representing math symbols are recognized by the
> parser, mainly those available in the Symbol font. The current version supports:
> Therefore, SuchThat, DownTee, Or, And, Not, Exists, ForAll, Element, NotElement,
> NotSubset, Subset, SubsetEqual, Superset, SupersetEqual, DoubleLeftArrow,
> DoubleLeftRightArrow, DoubleRightArrow, LeftArrow, LeftRightArrow, RightArrow,
> Congruent, GreaterEqual, le, NotEqual, Proportional, VerticalBar, Union,
> Intersection, PlusMinus, CirclePlus, Sum, Integral, CircleTimes, Product,
> CenterDot, Diamond, PartialD, DoubleDownArrow, DoubleUpArrow, DownArrow, UpArrow,
> ApplyFunction, TripleDot.
>
> Jim FitzSimons
> Mailto:cherry@neta.com
>
Irene.
Received on Friday, 13 November 1998 03:18:38 UTC