Visual Way To Build Math Equations
There are folks who are able to see maths equations in their head and they are able to simply write down the basic figures they require in order to bring the answer into focus, or the answer itself. Tesla was the radio technology inventor, could perform complex calculus in his head and was awarded a fail grade at school because he simply was not able to work it out any other way; in other words, not on paper.
These days many people have been shown to be visual and they do need to actually see the task on paper or on a computer screen in order to gain a comprehensive grasp of the equation and in order to render the answer in an accurate way. Thanks to the Microsoft Wysiwyg Equation Editor, this is now significantly easier to accomplish.
Wysiwyg Equation Editor has been developed and is included with all MS Office 2007 and higher suites and it has been intended as a WYSIWYG editor (i.e. what you see is what you get) allowing users the possibility of generating calculations in a complete visual way. It’s basically a real-time calculator in addition to being a graphics tool which may, in addition, be applied for a wide range of other applications.
For example, if you are creating an equation, you may move the equation to another application by using the XML markup language which is included in the control. The control may additionally be embedded by using an OLE embedded object feature on supported applications.
This means it is a dynamic editor which can be of use for a wide range of mathematics applications in addition to working with programs for generating a calculation formula of something dependent on this to function, thereby adding functionality to the program that would otherwise have taken more coding to complete it.
An important application that I have seen for this WYSIWYG Equation Editor is in formulation sciences and chemistry. This allows the user to build and save their equations in pretty much the same sort of way you would write them out on a school room chalk board, then turning the board over to save the equation while you work on another one.
With this format you can save your work digitally and import it into programs and even export it to a web page if you like. Essentially it’s an advanced visual calculator with much more functionality.
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