# Render Math Equations in iOS [duplicate]

I was wondering if there is an easy way to implement the rendering of math equations into an iOS app. It doesn't have to be interactive. All it should do is display the equation in traditional ways so when the user is dealing with complex equations it makes it easier to follow.

ex. 2^(2/(6^(1/2))) gives:

Wolfram Alpha does this along with other apps that I have seen. It doesn't have to deal with variables either.

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Have a look at this: stackoverflow.com/questions/2907045/… –  Tom Irving Apr 14 '13 at 17:59
@Tom, SirKaydian wants an easy way, and drawing formulae with Quartz2D is, as Brad answers, "not a trivial undertaking".. –  foundry Apr 14 '13 at 18:49
@RichardJ.RossIII, I wouldn't regard this as a duplicate, your linked question was asked in 2010 and self-answered in 2011, before the advent of MathML on iOS5 –  foundry Apr 14 '13 at 18:51

## marked as duplicate by Richard J. Ross III, 0x7fffffff♦, Monolo, Anoop Vaidya, Cole JohnsonApr 16 '13 at 0:03

A UIWebView can display mathML since iOS5. Your example:

<math title="2^(2/(sqrt(6))" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML">
<mstyle mathcolor="blue" fontfamily="sanserif" displaystyle="true">
<msup>
<mn>2</mn>
<mrow>
<mfrac>
<mn>2</mn>
<mrow>
<msqrt>
<mrow>
<mn>6</mn>
</mrow>
</msqrt>
</mrow>
</mfrac>
</mrow>
</msup>
</mstyle>
[/itex]


This will render in a UIWebView on iOS.

There are javascript libraries that can convert for you - eg mathjax can accept ASCIIMath input such as this example 2^(2/(sqrt(6))

There is a good discussion of these issues here Tradeoff between LaTex, MathML, and XHTMLMathML in an iOS app?

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But there's a step missing here - you will now need a library to convert a 'simple' equation from 2^(2/(6^(1/2))) to it's MathML equivalent. –  Richard J. Ross III Apr 14 '13 at 18:19
@RichardJ.RossIII I only changed 6^(1/2) to sqrt(6)- the former will render "correctly" putting "0.5" into 6's superscript. That's a human authoring decision as much as anything (and maybe mathjax would render that with a sqrt symbol anyway, i didn't try)... –  foundry Apr 14 '13 at 18:22