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I'm using a MathML editor built into our Learning Management System (LMS) and noticed something peculiar. When I enter floating point numbers, it wraps the decimal point with an <mo> tag.

For example, I would expect 1.2 to output as:

<mn>1.2</mn>

However, the editor outputs:

<mn>1</mn>
<mo>.</mo>
<mn>2</mn>

I'm curious if anyone can confirm that both of these outputs are either equal or not equal so that I know whether or not to request a fix.

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  • It might help to clarify what you mean with "equal". Obviously they're not the same markup. Are you asking about rendering? Some form of semantics? Something else? Dec 10, 2015 at 7:38
  • @PeterKrautzberger Purely semantic. The intent is to create accessible course content. Ultimately, the question is whether the two are equivalent when parsed by screen-reading software.
    – MCTaylor17
    Dec 10, 2015 at 22:14

2 Answers 2

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There are a couple of aspects, I think.

Will they visually render the same?

No. Most renderers will add space around the period because the MathML operator dictionary specifies . as an infix operator.

What's the preferred way of writing 1.2 in MathML.

Yes. <mn>1.2</mn>. See the mn examples in the spec.

Are they semantically the same?

That's probably a matter of opinion. I would argue that they're not. With the smallest bit of context (e.g., lang=en somewhere), it's quite clear what <mn>1.2</mn> means, while <mn>1</mn><mo>.</mo><mn>2</mn> is more generic (especially, since it's going against the spec's suggestions).

Will AT render them the same for non-visual users?

No. For example MathPlayer (what JAWS, NVDA, Dolphin use) will voice <mn>1.2</mn> as "one point two" and <mn>1</mn><mo>.</mo><mn>2</mn> as "one dot two". ChromeVox will voice the latter as "one period two".

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  • Thank you for your answer. It perfectly addressed my concerns. I will let our LMS vendor know their MathML editor is generating inaccurate and potentially misleading markup.
    – MCTaylor17
    Dec 11, 2015 at 19:32
  • As Dani points out, generating good MathML can be very tricky for editing tools, so maybe a more constructive feedback will help. It might just be a question of improving some internal heuristics. Dec 11, 2015 at 19:38
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Since the <mo> markup is presentation MathML, I dare say that both notations are equivalent. In addition, any editor might have a difficult time to decide whether expressions like 3.5, 3·5, 3'5 are decimal numbers or something else without any glue about the culture and intention of the user.

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