mdBook-KaTeX

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mdBook-KaTeX is a preprocessor for mdBook, pre-rendering LaTeX math expressions to HTML at build time.

Pre-rendering uses the katex crate. List of LaTeX functions supported by KaTeX.

Getting Started

First, install mdBook-KaTeX

Then, add the following line to your book.toml file

toml [preprocessor.katex] after = ["links"]

You can now use $ and $$ delimiters for inline and display math expressions within your .md files. If you need a regular dollar symbol, you need to escape delimiters with a backslash \$.

```markdown

Chapter 1

Here is an inline example, $ \pi(\theta) $,

an equation,

$$ \nabla f(x) \in \mathbb{R}^n, $$

and a regular $ symbol. ```

Math expressions will be rendered as HTML when running mdbook build or mdbook serve as usual.

KaTeX options

Most KaTeX options are supported via the katex crate. Specify these options under [preprocessor.katex] in your book.toml:

| Argument | Type | | :- | :- | | output | "html", "mathml", or "htmlAndMathml" | | leqno | boolean | | fleqn | boolean | | throw-on-error | boolean | | error-color | string | | min-rule-thickness | number | | max-size | number | | max-expand | number | | trust | boolean |

There are also extra options to configure the behaviour of the preprocessor:

| Option | Description | | :- | :- | | no-css | Do not inject KaTeX stylesheet link (See Self-host KaTeX CSS and fonts) | | macros | Path to macros file (see Custom macros) | | include-src | Include math expressions source code (See Including math Source) | | block-delimiter | See Custom delimiter | | inline-delimiter | See Custom delimiter |

For example, the default configuration:

```toml [preprocessor.katex] after = ["links"]

KaTeX options.

output = "html" leqno = false fleqn = false throw-on-error = true error-color = "#cc0000" min-rule-thickness = -1.0 max-size = "Infinity" max-expand = 1000 trust = false

Extra options.

no-css = false include-src = false block-delimiter = { left = "$$", right = "$$" } inline-delimiter = { left = "$", right = "$" } ```

Self-host KaTeX CSS and fonts

KaTeX requires a stylesheet and fonts to render correctly.

By default, mdBook-KaTeX injects a KaTeX stylesheet link pointing to a CDN.

If you want to self-host the CSS and fonts instead, you should specify in book.toml:

toml [preprocessor.katex] no-css = true

and manually add the CSS and fonts to your mdBook project before building it.

See mdBook-KaTeX Static CSS Example for an automated example.

Custom macros

Custom LaTeX macros must be defined in a .txt file, according to the following pattern

txt \grad:{\nabla} \R:{\mathbb{R}^{#1 \times #2}}

You need to specify the path of this file in your book.toml as follows

toml [preprocessor.katex] macros = "path/to/macros.txt"

These macros can then be used in your .md files

```markdown

Chapter 1

$$ \grad f(x) \in \R{n}{p} $$ ```

Including math source

This option is added so users can have a convenient way to copy the source code of math expressions when they view the book.

When include-src is set to true, each math block is wrapped within a <data> tag with class="katex-src" with the included math source code being its value attribute.

For example, before being fed into mdBook,

```markdown Define $f(x)$:

$$ f(x)=x^2\ x\in\R $$ ```

is preprocessed into (the content of the katex spans are omitted and represented as )

```markdown Define :

```

The math source code is included in a minimal fashion, and it is up to the users to write custom CSS and JavaScript to make use of it. For more information about adding custom CSS and JavaScript in mdBook, see additional-css and additional-js.

If you need more information about this feature, please check the issues or file a new issue.

Custom delimiter

To change the delimiters for math expressions, set the block-delimiter and inline-delimiter under [preprocessor.katex]. For example, to use \(and \) for inline math and \[ and \] for math block, set

toml [preprocessor.katex] block-delimiter = { left = "\\[", right = "\\]" } inline-delimiter = { left = "\\(", right = "\\)" }

Note that the double backslash above are just used to escape \ in the TOML format.

Caveats

$\backslash$ does not work, but you can use $\setminus$ instead.

Only the x86_64 Linux, Windows GNU, and macOS builds have full functionality, all other builds have compromised capabilities. See #39 for the reasons.