What websites allow users to quickly and simply convert mathematical equations into SVG without having to install or run any software?
6 Answers
Troy Henderson's LaTeX Previewer:
- Type: $$ E = mc^2 $$
- Click Download.
- Select SVG.
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1No kerning! Oh noes! – meawoppl Sep 06 '14 at 18:44
You can use CodeCogs LaTeX. It supports .svg format too.
- Enter equation.
- Choose
.svgas format and options. - Download image.
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You can try this one:
https://latex2image.joeraut.com/
It supports converting to PNG, JPG, and SVG. And the scale can be customized.
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You may also compile the LaTeX code into a PDF and then convert that PDF file into an SVG format. The online tool linked here appears to be quite effective for this second step: https://pdftosvg.com/
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1This could work in combination with an online LaTeX compiler like Overleaf or https://texlive.net/run. It is of course more trouble than entering an equation directly on websites like CodeCogs, but it would provide full LaTeX coverage (tables, graphics etc.) which the other answers to this question do not really offer. – Marijn Mar 20 '24 at 12:08
You can use Wikipedia and create an account. Then go to your personal page and go to edit. Put the latex code in tags. Then save it. Then go to your page., right-click on the latex render and select "save image as" or whatever it is depending on your browser. It should be able to save as an svg perfectly!
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This works, but is a risky method, so be careful when you do it:
- Go to any Wikipedia page.
- Go to edit (no account needed).
- Make the appropriate tags
<math> </math>with your code inside. - Click preview (do not save).
- Right-click on the equation.
- Click Save Image As.
You may get an SVG file.
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