Jeremy Angolin’s Psychology and Statistics blog has a nice explanation of how to get started with LaTeX, along with quite a few resources.īut if, for now, you want to stick with Microsoft products, you’ll find the Equation Editor a BIG help.
It does much more than write equations and would be worth learning if you’re doing some heavy-duty statistical writing. Truly the best editor for writing mathematical documents that contain equations is LaTeX.So the black italic Times Roman you get by default doesn’t always look pretty on, say, a Powerpoint slide where all the rest of the text is green Calibri. One limitation is that you can’t edit the font or font color.It looks like a fraction surrounded by parentheses, but without the line in the middle.