Add Math to your Markdown
KaTeX is a faster alternative to MathJax. This plugin makes it easy to support your markdown.
Need convincing?
- Check out the comparative benchmark: KaTeX vs MathJax
- Try it in your browser: markdown-it-katex demo
- Switch to Jest
- Typescript
- Set up CI/CD
- Publish NPM package
- Bundler
- precommit hooks
- Code improvements?
- More test coverage?
Install it and add it to your config (Vuepress):
module.exports = {
head: [
[
'link',
{
rel: 'stylesheet',
href: 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/katex.min.css',
},
],
],
markdown: {
extendMarkdown: md => {
md.set({ breaks: true });
md.use(require('markdown-it-katexx'), { throwOnError: false, errorColor: ' #cc0000' });
},
},
};
Install markdown-it
npm install markdown-it
Install the plugin
npm install markdown-it-katexx
Use it in your javascript:
var md = require('markdown-it')(),
mk = require('markdown-it-katexx');
md.use(mk);
// double backslash is required for javascript strings, but not html input
var result = md.render('# Math Rulez! \n $\\sqrt{3x-1}+(1+x)^2$');
Include the KaTeX stylesheet in your html.
If you're using the default markdown-it parser, I also recommend the github stylesheet:
KaTeX
options can be supplied with the second argument to use.
md.use(mk, { throwOnError: false, errorColor: ' #cc0000' });
Surround your LaTeX with a single $
on each side for inline rendering.
$\sqrt{3x-1}+(1+x)^2$
Use two ($$
) for block rendering. This mode uses bigger symbols and centers the result.
$$\begin{array}{c}
\nabla \times \vec{\mathbf{B}} -\, \frac1c\, \frac{\partial\vec{\mathbf{E}}}{\partial t} &
= \frac{4\pi}{c}\vec{\mathbf{j}} \nabla \cdot \vec{\mathbf{E}} & = 4 \pi \rho \\
\nabla \times \vec{\mathbf{E}}\, +\, \frac1c\, \frac{\partial\vec{\mathbf{B}}}{\partial t} & = \vec{\mathbf{0}} \\
\nabla \cdot \vec{\mathbf{B}} & = 0
\end{array}$$
Math parsing in markdown is designed to agree with the conventions set by pandoc:
Anything between two $ characters will be treated as TeX math. The opening $ must have a non-space
character immediately to its right, while the closing $ must have a non-space character immediately
to its left, and must not be followed immediately by a digit. Thus, $20,000 and $30,000 won’t parse
as math. If for some reason you need to enclose text in literal $ characters, backslash-escape them
and they won’t be treated as math delimiters.
KaTeX is based on TeX and LaTeX. Support for both is growing. Here's a list of currently supported functions:
This repo is a fork of waylonflinn/markdown-it-katex, initially forked to solve my own issues with the library, but then decided to work a bit on improving the library in general.