> Mouse positioning of the cursor, cut and paste, multiple fonts, font
> resizing, multiple equations on one "sheet" of paper, 2D plotting, 3D
> plotting, tabbed panes, etc.  Moving on to DragMath's capabilities:
> load and save to disk, multi-language support, export to LaTeX,
> MathML, Maple, and Maxima along with the ability to add additional
> export formats (like Sage) by editing an XML-based configuration file.

Ted is absolutely correct, and these are definitely some of the things
that are in the plans.  (Other than the plotting, which is not part of
an equation editor in my opinion.)

Since the editor holds a completely parsed version of the mathematics
internally, it would not be hard to have it export any of the formats
discussed above, and that is certainly in the plans.  Right now you
can get a LaTeX version of the equation by double-clicking the
equation to get a small window containing the LaTeX, but it may
contain some non-standard TeX, like the mark used for the flashing
insertion point.  Certainly a better method is needed.

As I have said, it is just a prototype, not a finished product.

Davide
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