This may belong in Meta. Please don't say Software Recommendations. I have yet to receive a meaningful recommendation from that group due to a paucity of other users.
I work with kids whose handwriting is their own worst enemy. (Typically junior and senior high school. Most already are 10-20 wpm typists)
I'd like to find a way for them to enter algebra that is keyboard centric (not endlessly dragging and dropping, and nudging symbols) but is more or less WYSIWYG. Unusual symbols may end up be drag and drop, but I would like to be able to, say, derive the quadratic formula without having to recourse to drag and drop.
The editor should make it easy to edit. I've run into a couple that were 'write only' systems where you couldn't change something. Much like doing math with a quill pen and india ink.
It needs to be close to as fast as writing by hand for someone who is a touch typist. It should support cut and paste for bring down parts of an equation that are unchanged.
The closest I've come is FrameMaker, which used ^ to start a superscript _ to start a subscript, and space bounced you out one level.I don't remember the rest. I no longer have FM so it's moot.
An example of an awful system is the Microsoft equation editor, at least as of 15 years ago.
I would expect such a system to use LaTex under the hood, but it doesn't have to. A fringe benefit would be the LaTex of the current equation showing up in a sub window, and being able to edit in either.
The symbol set doesn't have to be vast. Being able to readily handle 2 levels of nested brackets, Equations with fractions.
I'd like to have a way for them to work out problems that don't proceed linearly down the page. E.g. a way to do polynomial long division.
Small matrices. First course in calculus.
In essence I'm looking for something that does for math what markdown does for writing html.
Anyone know of such a system?
Moderators: I couln't find a tag Latex or interactive math editor. Adjust tags. This likely means this is in the wrong SE. Please advise.
A couple solutions come to mind, depending the age of the kids. Some hand writing software now does some degree of optional smoothing and clean up as you write with the pen. Microsoft's One-Note worked really well for me writing lecture notes. You can swap between typing or writing with a pen or finger and you can optionally have it smooth out or guess what text you intend.
Another option is to use wiki products, just like this. They have very simple interfaces for math. Example: read this on the screen $f(x)=x^2$, or $\int x^2 dx = \frac{x^3}{3}$ then hit "edit" and see what it was I actually typed. The viewer cleaned it up.
The engine behind that is MathJax. It would be my strongest suggestion.