![]() I'm getting the best display using PNG conversion though still more sluggish, and less pretty, than MathJax.Īgain, thanks for the feedback, it has been invaluable. ![]() Was a pain getting theTeX-filter to work on a CentOS 6 server as the Yum packaged TexLive did not include mchem. Now works for me with either MathJax or TeX filters. ![]() Then immediately delete the \chemistry folder from \lib\editor\atto\plugins of your Moodle (if your Moodle has not done this automatically). Should now be fixed in latest release candidate, though you still have to copy the flask icons to the core /pix/e/ folder of your Moodle.īest to uninstall the the previous version of the Chemistry editor from Administration > Site Adminstration > Plugins > Text editors > Atto HTML editor > Atto toolbar settings > Atto plugins One of the issues was that I hadn't sorted the icon path after all. I appear to have broken the editor with my recent updates. Have placed the problematic $ symbols (which allow italic characters in chemistry mode) outside curly brackets as this works better for TeX.Īpologies, that was probably my fault. Oops! got timed out editing the last part of the above post. If this works for folks, I'll release it as a stable version. This new version is available as release candidate 2 from GitHub: It is no longer necessary to move the flask icon image files to core. However, I doubt I have fixed this for all filter-browser combinations. ![]() I have tweaked styles.css so that the element symbol buttons are aligned in a periodic table layout for both TeX and MathJax (Chrome, Firefox and Opera tested). Have placed the problematic $ symbols (which allow italic characters in chemistry mode) outside curly brackets as this works better for TeX I have removed the problematic unicode symbols for degree and standard state ('plimsoll mark' or 'london underground sign') and replaced these with superscripted \circ and \ominus.Īlso, replaced \omicron (which is not supported in all TeX versions) with italic o. ![]() With default settings for latex, dvips, convert and mimetex binaries, PNG convert output format and 120 resolution. I have adapted the Atto Equation editor plugin to work with the chemistry TeX syntax of the mhchem extension in MathJax. ![]()
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