Extension:Math/fr

L'extension Math fournit une gestion pour l'affichage de formules mathématiques. Un tour d'horizon de ce qui peut actuellement être fait avec cette extension est disponible dans la documentation de Wikipédia anglophone.

Plus d'informations, sur comment installer et configurer cette extension, y compris pour des versions plus anciennes, peuvent être trouvées à.

Afficher des maths
L'extension Math essaye de produire un affichage MathMl, avec une sortie en images SVG ou PNG. Selon les capacités de l'appareil utilisé, le type de sortie est choisie. Les mathématiques de bases peuvent être affichées sur n'importe quel navigateur. Néanmoins, pour un rendu optimal, des configurations supplémentaires seront nécessaires :


 * Pour les navigateurs Firefox ou GeckO, l'installation de Native MathML extension et de math fonts est nécessaire. Accessibility support is provided by NVDA, VoiceOver or Orca. En plus, NVDA nécessite le plugin MathPlayer pour pouvoir lire des mathématiques.
 * Pour les navigateurs Safari ou d'autres navigateurs de type WebKit, il est conseillé d'installer les polices mathématiques et d'active le rendu MathML natif avec inserting some CSS rules en utilisant une feuille de style dans les préférences du navigateur.

Accessibility support is provided by the VoiceOver screen reader but not by Orca yet.


 * For Chrome you must insert some CSS rules into the custom style sheet of your browser preference in order to get accessibility support via ChromeVox or visual rendering via the MathJax plugin.
 * In some versions of Internet Explorer, it is possible to use MathPlayer as an assistive technology.

Installation
You should additionally go to the page Special:MathStatus to see whether all of the components of the Math extension now work. For any problems you see, the best option is to create a task on https://phabricator.wikimedia.org

Unfortunately, there is no well tested guide on installing and  to work with the Math extension, but there is at least a working draft. please contribute.

In addition, there is a Guide for Installing and Setting up Mediawiki with Restbase and Mathoid in MW1.28.

Math output modes
The setting $wgMathValidModes holds an array with the names of output modes that can be used for rendering. If multiple modes are enabled, logged-in users can set a personal preference in the appearance pane of their user preferences page.

You can also use the $wgDefaultUserOptions setting to set which of these modes should be the default, e.g.:

Mathoid
Mode: 'mathml' (pre-July 2015: MW_MATH_MATHML)

For MW 1.23 and higher, you can use a Mathoid server that uses MathJax to convert texvc input on the server side to MathML+SVG rendering. This is the most recommended option; Mathoid is the rendering mode that will be used on Wikipedia in the future.

To use Mathoid, the following settings are recommended:

See Mathoid for instructions on how to run your own Mathoid server. Note that as of March 2017 this is likely to also require a RESTbase server/installation (see ).

LaTeX
Mode: 'png' (pre-July 2015: MW_MATH_PNG)

This is the mode that requires the most setup work, since at least the texvc utility has to be installed for it to work, and ideally texvccheck as well. See Installing texvc for how to install both of these.

LaTeXML
Mode: 'latexml' (pre-July 2015: MW_MATH_LATEXML)

Uses the LaTeXML utility. The rendering is done via an online service (set with $wgLaTeXMLUrl, which has a default value).

No rendering
Mode: 'source', (pre-July 2015: MW_MATH_SOURCE)

This mode will forward the Latex input without rendering, presenting it in a element, surrounded by $ :formula $.

Make sure to set $wgMathFullRestbaseURL to 'always' (see below) if you only want the raw latex formula, else an error will appear due to the failed check for PNG depictions.

MathJax
Mode: MW_MATH_MATHJAX

This mode uses the MathJax application for client-side rendering. It is now deprecated, and requires MediaWiki 1.25 or lower in order to run. See Client-side rendering with MathJax for how to use it.

Tips and tricks

 * You can use the Firefox MathML copy addon to copy formulae to other applications such as Microsoft Word (video), or Google docs with the g(Math) plugin (video)

Error reporting
If something is wrong with the math extension you can report that at Phabricator. In addition you should check how your problem relates to the automated unit tests that are generated from the page CoverageTest.