# Using MathJax with Jekyll

I have a Jekyll blog and I want to use MathJax with it, in the sense that I want to be able to type something like

$$\sum_{n=1}^\infty 1/n^2 = \frac{\pi^2}{6}$$


in my markdown files, and have the correct LaTeX expression generated with MathJax, in a similar way to how it is done at math.stackexchange.

What is the easiest way to do this? Currently I have the file jsmath.js (GitHub gist) in my directory, and I thought I could have a simple file named mathjs in my _includes directory with the line

<script src="path/to/jsmath.js></script>


and include that in each post via

{% include mathjs %}


but this doesn't seem to work - when I run jekyll --server the page is generated, but none of the content is visible.

Am I going about this the right way? Is there a better way to use MathJax with Jekyll?

• Just for reference, I wrote a small tutorial about using MathJax with Jekyll. Works pretty well for me. cwoebker.com/posts/latex-math-magic Nov 23, 2012 at 16:23
• @cwoebker You should make it an answer (copying some parts from your blog). Jun 23, 2013 at 23:29
• There you go:) you are welcome. Its only a bare minimum answer for reference, hope its enough. Jun 26, 2013 at 9:03
• Here is the simplest explanation I found: christopherpoole.github.io/using-mathjax-on-github-pages Jun 3, 2015 at 13:00
• @JohnRos, that link is dead; try alan97.github.io/random/mathjax -- 2 minute read, 2017. Jun 19, 2017 at 14:54

Certainly you can use mathjax with Jekyll. To get this working make sure that

1. If you're writing your post in markdown, your markdown interpreter isn't hammering your mathjax input. The best way to protect it I have found is to always put display math in <div> elements and inline math in <span> elements, which most markdown interpreters will leave alone.
2. Is the javascript line displaying correctly in the html source? I find it easier and faster to point to the mathjax CDN rather than provide my own copy. Try using the line

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML"></script>

(Those configuration options allow you to use more tex notation to start your math environment, such as , etc).

Perhaps there is some issue with your jsmath.js script; the CDN version will be faster and probably more reliable. (I have the javascript load in my footer on every page, but of course your strategy with include makes sense if you don't want to load the javascript when you don't need it.)

We could help more if you give us a link to your blog? You can see some examples on my blog (has link to Jekyll setup on github too if that helps).

• Thanks - I'll try this out and let you know how it goes. Jun 19, 2012 at 16:08
• any luck with the mathjax CDN? Jun 28, 2012 at 16:20
• I only just got around to doing this(!) but it works great - thanks! Sep 12, 2012 at 7:33
• @cboettig I have put your code in /_layout/post. However, it seems does not work. Could you please have a look at it? tengpeng.github.com/2012/11/10/recognize-vague-words.html Nov 10, 2012 at 13:32
• your equations are displaying correctly for me on that page. Perhaps your browser is blocking the javascript for you (or you have already fixed this). Nov 14, 2012 at 19:11

If you have sufficient control over the publishing process (e.g. you are running Jekyll yourself), an easy solution is to switch the markdown parser to one that supports TeX. For example, using kramdown:

gem install kramdown


Change the markdown line in _config.yml to

markdown: kramdown


<script type="text/javascript" src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML"></script>


to _layouts/default.html. Now you can simply mark any mathematics in your posts with . • For me, this is not enough. Some equations get messed up. For example, \begin{align} m_a(t) = \begin{cases} 0, \quad 0 < t < t_a \\ m_a^0 e^{-t/T_{1b}} \text{(pulsed)}, \quad t_a< t< \tau + \Delta t \\ m_a^0 e^{-t_a/T_{1b}} \text{(continuous)} \\ 0, \quad t> t_a + \tau \end{cases} \end{align} – nos Jun 3, 2016 at 16:19 • Newer versions of Jekyll don't have a _layouts directory. In this case, where should we put the <script> tag? Nov 7, 2016 at 1:16 • Note from the future: cdn.mathjax.org is nearing its end-of-life, check mathjax.org/cdn-shutting-down for migration tips. Apr 12, 2017 at 8:40 • Added the last line suggested to my _layouts/default.html file, after the first <head>something</head> block. As @PeterKrautzberger pointed out, I changed the src reference to src="https://cdn.rawgit.com/mathjax/MathJax/2.7.1/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML". It works! May 15, 2017 at 12:34 • @IanGoodfellow you can override default theme by copying over the _layouts folder into your app directory. Find the path to the theme's source files with the command bundle show minima. And add <script> to the html files in _layouts directory in your project directory. Sep 24, 2017 at 15:32 If you are using kramdown as your markdown flavor, it's easy. Kramdown has built-in support for mathjax. 1. Add this before the </head> tag in your default layout. <script type="text/javascript" async src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/mathjax/2.7.1/MathJax.js? config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML"></script>  2. Set this to true at _config.yml, after the markdown: kramdown line. mathjax: true  3. Done. For renedering Mathjax • inline, use $$...$$, • block, use $...$. The only thing to look out for is the escaping of the backslash when using markdown, so the delimiters become \$$... \$$ and \$... \$ for inline and block maths respectively. 4. Here is an example of MathJax inline rendering \$$1/x^{2} \$$, and here is a block rendering: \$\frac{1}{n^{2}} \$. I use this on my blog. • Can you add a link to your blog? I want to see how exactly you set this up :) May 18, 2020 at 3:20 • @RylanSchaeffer Sure. sohambhattacharyya.github.io May 18, 2020 at 10:24 • I found that in current Jekyll versions in combination with github-pages, the lines markdown: kramdown and mathjax: true are not necessary. Furthermore, to use the latest MathJax version 3, the code from the official MathJax documentation included in the layout header works just fine. Sep 25, 2020 at 7:18 I wrote a blog post about setting up MathJax a while back: Latex Math Magic In essence you have to stop the Markdown from messing with the MathJax. I ended up using code blocks, which worked fine for me. So either using at least 4 spaces before you write something or using the acute symbol: ; Unfortunately MathJax is skipping <code> tags by default since it doesn’t want to convert code that it shouldn’t. So somewhere in your main layout file you have to add a little javascript code: MathJax.Hub.Config({ tex2jax: { skipTags: ['script', 'noscript', 'style', 'textarea', 'pre'] } });  Additionally we have to tell MathJax to ignore non-latex code-blocks or normal code blocks: MathJax.Hub.Queue(function() { var all = MathJax.Hub.getAllJax(), i; for(i=0; i < all.length; i += 1) { all[i].SourceElement().parentNode.className += ' has-jax'; } });  At his point all our latex code blocks are going to have the has-jax string in their class name. Therefore we can apply some simple styling in our css sheets to give it our own styling. code.has-jax {font: inherit; font-size: 100%; background: inherit; border: inherit;}  Might not be the best approach but it worked for my blog for the past years and I never encountered any further problem with it. • I think I did everything what you've suggested, but it doesn't work: example that doesn't work Dec 10, 2013 at 19:11 • Dec 10, 2013 at 19:16 You may try my static blog generator: Jekyde. Jekyde is similar to Jekyll, but it takes care of LaTeX in Markdown file well. You only need to put your formulas inside ... and...$$. Also Jekyde contains a markdown editor in browser with LaTeX preview. Jekyll uses kramdown as a default markdown converter from 2.0+. And It doesn't support the mathjax and so on, I think the below can help you. jekyll-spaceship - 🚀 A Jekyll plugin to provide powerful supports for table, mathjax, plantuml, youtube, vimeo, dailymotion, etc. https://github.com/jeffreytse/jekyll-spaceship Put your math expression within ... \LaTeX{}  \Pi   a * b = c ^ b    2^{\frac{n-1}{3}}    \int\_a^b f(x)\,dx.   Code above would be parsed as: ## Some notes before trying either of the following options Option 0 will increase build times even with --incremental and really option 1 should likely be used in most instances, however, this along with the extra space taken up maybe worth the costs if you're deploying on a network with clients that may not have access to CDNs. Both options have been tested on a private server with kramdown as the markdown interpreter and mathjax: true set within the project's _config.yml file; see Step 2 of Soham Bhattacharyya's answer and their preface, and upto Caramdir's first two code blocks for the how-to for those bits. ## Option 0 download and copy the unpacked source to project-name 1. Download the source cd ~ mkdir -p git/hub && cd git/hub git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/mathjax/MathJax.git  1. Make a directory path in your project's and copy files from MathJax/unpacked to this path cd ~ mkdir -p git/lan/project-name/assets/JS_3rd_Party/MathJax cp -r git/hub/MathJax/unpacked/* git/lan/project-name/assets/JS_3rd_Party/MathJax/  1. Add the source to git tracking cd git/lan/project-name/ git add assets/JS_3rd_Party/MathJax git commit -m 'Added MathJax.js unpacked source to git tracking'  1. Write an include file tee ./_includes/MathJax.html 1>/dev/null <<EOF {%- if jekyll.environment == 'production' and site.mathjax == true -%} <script type="text/javascript" src="{{'/assets/javascripts/JS_3rd_Party/latest.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML' | relative_url}}"></script> {%- elsif jekyll.environment != 'production' and site.mathjax == true -%} <script type="text/javascript" src="{{'/assets/javascripts/JS_3rd_Party/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML' | relative_url}}"></script> {%- endif -%} EOF  Private server builds will use MathJax.js where as production environment (GitHub) will use latest.js using the above Liquid if...elsif...endif statement. 1. Write a post to test it tee ./_posts/(date +'%Y-%d-%m')-math-tests.markdown 1>/dev/null <<EOF --- layout: post title: "Math Tests" date: (date +'%Y-%d-%m %H:%M:%S %z') categories: math --- {%- include MathJax.html -%} <span> for x,y,z \in \{1, 2,\dots 9\} </span> <span>$$
\sum_{i=1}^n X_n

</span>
EOF


I've not tried it without <span>s because cboettig's suggestion seems to totally do the trick. Additionally that extra new-line within spans are no mistake, without'em there where still issues with rendered output.

1. Add these latest files to git tracking
git add _posts/$(date +'%Y-%d-')math-tests.markdown git add _includes/MathJax.html  1. Build locally, or push and build on a remote server bundle exec jekyll build --destination /tmp/www/project-name --config _config.yml --incremental  ## Option 1 copy just latest.js to use a CDN (Content Delivery Network) 1. See Option 0 step 1. 2. Make a directory path for third party JavaScripts and copy MathJax/unpacked/latest.js there cd ~ mkdir -p git/lan/project-name/assets/JS_3rd_Party/MathJax cp git/hub/MathJax/unpacked/latest.js git/lan/project-name/assets/JS_3rd_Party/MathJax/  1. Write an include file cd git/lan/project-name tee ./_includes/MathJax.html 1>/dev/null <<EOF <script type="text/javascript" src="{{'/assets/javascripts/JS_3rd_Party/latest.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML' | relative_url}}"></script> EOF  1. See Option 0 Step 5. 2. Add these three files to git tracking git add _includes/MathJax.html git add _posts/$(date +'%Y-%d-')math-tests.markdown
git commit -m 'Added MathJax.html, latest.js, and a test post to git tracking'

1. See Option 0 Step 7. for building locally

## For either of the options

If deploying on a private server you may also need to define baseurl within your project's _config.yml file, especially if emulating the username.tld/project-name URL scheme that GitHub uses on your private server.

If deploying to both a private server and GitHub it may be better to use a separate config file and when building issue --config _config.yml,_config_baseurl.yml, eg...

# Write the special config file
tee ./_config_baseurl.yml 1>/dev/null <<EOF
baseurl: "project-name"
EOF

# Build with extra config
bundle exec jekyll build --destination /tmp/www/project-name --config _config.yml,_config_baseurl.yml --incremental


For me adding this to my default _layout or head _include works (in combination with a front matter _page or _post variable):

---
mathjax: yes
---

    <!-- mathjax -->
{% if page.mathjax %}
<script type="text/javascript" async src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/mathjax/2.7.3/MathJax.js?config=TeX-MML-AM_CHTML">
MathJax.Hub.Config({
tex2jax: {
inlineMath: [["$", "$"], ["\$$", "\$$"]],
processEscapes: true
}
});
</script>
{% endif %}


working example

For those using the Jekyll Chirpy, you simply need to add math : true` to the front matter of your post.

For website performance reasons, the mathematical feature won’t be loaded by default.

Source

At the time of this post, Jekyll Chirpy uses MathJax 3.2.