# How do I display a proof tree with HTML,CSS and/or Javascript?

I want to display a proof tree in the style of a natural deduction within a web page. I will get the data from a JSON file.

Whats the best way to display something like this? Is it possible only with css? Or is there a library that can do something like this? Rendering as an image is not possible, because eventually it should be interactive. I should also mention that this tree can get fairly large.

Example:

Update: A better example of what the end result should look like:

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The easiest solution would be mathjax which is a latex javascript renderer. And there are quite a few other similar rendering options out there.

Alternatively you could also look at MathML, which is the w3c standard for writing mathematical equations. Sadly, right now, the support for it is quite lacking as can be seen here, but long term it's going to be a great solution. Additionally the previously mentioned MathJax can be used as a MathML shim in browsers that do not support MathML yet.

The only concern with the MathJax shim is going to be that when you make it interactive it's going to interact differently with your code in browsers which do and do not support MathML, but despite that I would personally advice MathML except if you're already bound into LaTeX.

Based on your update I am not sure whether that can be expressed in MathML or LaTeX and I fear the only thing you could do is draw it on a canvas or set it up in a SVG if you need the interactivity later on. But I can warn you already know that that's not going to be a simple thing to do if you aren't used to it.

1. Use MathML as input
2. Use HTML/CSS as output
4. Include id's in your MathML markup (literally <mo id="someid"> for example)
5. Use for example jQuery to bind to the id after MathJax has finished (i.e. \$("#someid").on("mousemove",function(){...}))

A fully working demo can be found here, move over the equal sign to trigger an alert.

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I tested MathML with MathJax. At first it looked good, but I don't see a way to make it interactive (tooltips, links, etc.). –  schlicht May 2 '13 at 10:12
Edited the answer with an explanation how interactivity can be added to MathJax output. Once you figure it out it's fairly simple (though it took awhile to figure out). –  David Mulder May 2 '13 at 11:01
The demo works only in chrome for me(and only sometimes), maybe a problem with the synchronisation between your code and MathJax? I shall try MathJax once more. I also have a working demo with tables, but its with tables. Thanks! –  schlicht May 2 '13 at 12:46
@schlicht Mathjax can render LaTeX \begin{array} \end{array} arrays, and with some carefully placed \hlines, some reasonable looking proof trees can be rendered. It's also possible to use \frac and some math font size commands (e.g., \displaystyle) to keep the text from automatically shrinking. The biggest problem, however, seems to be that MathJax doesn't support the vertical alignment that the array environments provide, so you get stuck with things being a bit higher than they should be. –  Joshua Taylor Jun 13 '13 at 2:10
@schlicht For instance, try the MathJax code $$\frac{\frac{\displaystyle \frac{P \land Q}{P} \qquad \frac{P \land Q}{Q}}{\displaystyle Q \land P} \qquad Q \land P \to R}{R}$$ in the demo editor at mathjax.org/demos . For another example using the \frac technique, I have a proof tree in this answer on math.stackexchange –  Joshua Taylor Jun 13 '13 at 2:17

So after much fiddling with css, I used tables to get a satisfactory result. Since the layout is indeed part of the semantics, I think its acceptable in this case.

A small example would look like this:

<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<tr><td class="conc">conclusion</td></tr>
</table>

And the css:

td {
text-align:center;
height: 1em;
vertical-align:bottom;
}
td.conc {
border-top: solid 1px;
}
div.rulename {
margin-top:-2em;
}

Bigger demo

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