Viewing 10 replies - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)
  • Plugin Author Tobias Bäthge

    (@tobiasbg)

    Hi,

    thanks for your post, and sorry for the trouble.

    (1) For this, you will need to use HTML code for the superscript, like

    10<sup>8</sup>

    in the cell.

    (2) No, sorry, TablePress by itself does not offer a LaTeX functionality.

    Regards,
    Tobias

    Thread Starter PhysicsCare

    (@physicscare)

    Hi Tobias,

    Thank you very much for your prompt support. This plugin deserves a 5-star rating. I am going to add that soon and mark it as resolved. I understand, for subscript it would be like 10<sub>8</sub>. Great!

    One more question here. How to get Greek letters like pi or alpha (visually)?

    Thank you in advance!
    Tapas

    Plugin Author Tobias Bäthge

    (@tobiasbg)

    Hi,

    thanks for wanting to rate the plugin, I really appreciate that!

    Yes, <sub> would be the HTML tag for subscript.

    For greek letters, it should be sufficient to either just copy/type those in (e.g. with the “Character Map” program that most operating systems offer), or e.g. with their HTML encodings, e.g. from http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/symbols.html

    Regards,
    Tobias

    Thread Starter PhysicsCare

    (@physicscare)

    Hi Tobias,

    Great help! You deserve a 5-star rating for you help 🙂

    Thanks!

    Thread Starter PhysicsCare

    (@physicscare)

    I meant … I appreciate you for your help and support!

    Have a great day!

    Plugin Author Tobias Bäthge

    (@tobiasbg)

    Hi,

    no problem, you are very welcome! 🙂 Good to hear that this helped!

    Best wishes,
    Tobias

    Thread Starter PhysicsCare

    (@physicscare)

    Hi Tobias,

    Again with another question! Is there any way to get a fraction (visually) in a cell of the table? As we get using \frac{a}{b} in LaTeX so that ‘a’ is vertically below ‘b’. Hope I could place my question clearly.
    Thank you in advance.

    PhysicsCare

    Plugin Author Tobias Bäthge

    (@tobiasbg)

    Hi,

    I see what you mean, but unfortunately, there’s no direct way for that in HTML on the web 🙁 (That’s why one doesn’t really see fractions on the web anywhere.)
    Your best chance probably is to create a small image of the fraction. For simple fractions, you could also take a look at the approach from http://changelog.ca/log/2008/07/01/writing_fractions_in_html

    Regards,
    Tobias

    Thread Starter PhysicsCare

    (@physicscare)

    Thanks a lot for your prompt reply and tips.

    Plugin Author Tobias Bäthge

    (@tobiasbg)

    Hi,

    sure, always happy to help!

    Regards,
    Tobias

Viewing 10 replies - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)

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