# Javascript Mathjax

I use mathjax on a website, and I'm building a little javascript web app. Mathjax is configured so that when text is surrounded with dollar signs, like $10^2$, it is converted to a math format. This works if I insert the text in html. ie:

<div id=mathDiv">$10^2$</div>


displays 10 with a superscript 2. However, if I insert this text via javascript, I don't get a 10 with a superscript 2:

document.getElementById(mathDiv).innerHTML = "$10^2$";


returns the text $10^2$

I know this is a simple javascript-string misunderstanding on my part, but I can't figure out how to get the $10^2$ inserted via javascript to be parsed by mathjax rather than just interpreted as a string. I am not using the jQuery framework at the moment.

-
Because you don't specify to mathjax to interpret this calcul. Therefore, you see the html result. I don't know this library, so I can't help you, but try to find some mathjax methods like update() –  sdespont Dec 18 '13 at 8:12
Thanks sdespont. That solved it! –  AJBradley Dec 18 '13 at 21:37
You should answer your question and accept it if that is truly the solution. –  DrCord Dec 18 '13 at 21:43

MathJax.Hub.Typeset();