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(myst-content/math)=
Jupyter Book uses MathJax for typesetting math in your HTML book build. This allows you to have LaTeX-style mathematics in your online content. This page shows you a few ways to control this.
:::{seealso} For more information about equation numbering, see the MathJax equation numbering documentation. :::
:::{tip}
By default MathJax version 2 is currently used. If you are using a lot of math, you may want to try using version 3, which claims to improve load speeds by 60 - 80%:
sphinx:
config:
mathjax_path: https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/mathjax@3/es5/tex-mml-chtml.js
See the Sphinx documentation for details.
:::
To insert in-line math use the $
symbol within a Markdown cell.
For example, the text $this_{is}^{inline}$
will produce:
+++
You can also include math blocks for separate equations. This allows you to focus attention
on more complex or longer equations, as well as link to them in your pages. To use a block
equation, wrap the equation in either $$
or \begin
statements.
For example,
$$
\int_0^\infty \frac{x^3}{e^x-1}\,dx = \frac{\pi^4}{15}
$$
results in:
+++
(math:latex)=
You can enable parsing LaTeX-style math blocks with the amsmath
MyST extension. Enable it by adding the following to _config.yml
parse:
myst_enable_extensions:
# don't forget to list any other extensions you want enabled,
# including those that are enabled by default!
- amsmath
Once enabled, you can define math blocks like so:
\begin{gather*}
a_1=b_1+c_1\\
a_2=b_2+c_2-d_2+e_2
\end{gather*}
\begin{align}
a_{11}& =b_{11}&
a_{12}& =b_{12}\\
a_{21}& =b_{21}&
a_{22}& =b_{22}+c_{22}
\end{align}
which results in:
\begin{gather*} a_1=b_1+c_1\ a_2=b_2+c_2-d_2+e_2 \end{gather*}
\begin{align} a_{11}& =b_{11}& a_{12}& =b_{12}\ a_{21}& =b_{21}& a_{22}& =b_{22}+c_{22} \end{align}
:::{seealso} The MyST guides to dollar math syntax, LaTeX math syntax, and how MyST-Parser works with MathJax.
For advanced use, also see how to define MathJax TeX Macros. :::
+++
If you'd like to number equations so that you can refer to them later, use the math directive. It looks like this:
```{math}
:label: my_label
my_math
```
For example, the following code:
```{math}
:label: my_label
w_{t+1} = (1 + r_{t+1}) s(w_t) + y_{t+1}
```
will generate
:label: my_label
w_{t+1} = (1 + r_{t+1}) s(w_t) + y_{t+1}
Alternatively you can use the dollar math syntax with a prefixed label:
$$
w_{t+1} = (1 + r_{t+1}) s(w_t) + y_{t+1}
$$ (my_other_label)
which generates
$$ w_{t+1} = (1 + r_{t+1}) s(w_t) + y_{t+1} $$ (my_other_label)
:::{note}
Labels cannot start with an integer, or they won't be able to be referenced and
will throw a warning message if referenced. For example, :label: 1
and :label: 1eq
cannot
be referenced.
:::
If you have created an equation with a label, you can link to it from within your text (and across pages!).
You can refer to the equation using the label that you've provided by using
the {eq}
role. For example:
- A link to an equation directive: {eq}`my_label`
- A link to a dollar math block: {eq}`my_other_label`
results in
- A link to an equation directive: {eq}
my_label
- A link to a dollar math block: {eq}
my_other_label
:::{note}
\labels
inside LaTeX environment are not currently identified, and so cannot be referenced.
We hope to implement this in a future update (see executablebooks/MyST-Parser#202)!
:::