I am mainly searching for resources online for studying mathematics, however I am a visually impaired student taking a Calculus course in comunity college. I notice that most resources are in PDF format, and not everything seems to be in HTML format (I have found quite a few). I am aware of MathPix, but even that has limits on how many pages and snips can be done. So, I thought to ask here. Is there a converter that will take a PDF with math content and turn it into an HTML document (or a set of HTML documents) with correctly formatted mathematics for a screen reader user to navigate without the limitations of MathPix's education plan? I am specifically looking for free conversion, if possible.
2026-03-28 08:38:22.1774687102
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PDF to HTML conversion with accessible mathematics?
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Not the official text for your course, but perhaps useful: Active Calculus is different from most existing calculus texts in at least the following ways: the text is freely readable online in HTML format ...
Reading mathematics from pdf:
https://www.perkins.org/resource/how-read-math-expressions-screen-reader-windows-computer/
https://www.abdn.ac.uk/it/documents/Reading_PDFs_with_NVDA.pdf
Since most of the PDF's are generated from LaTeX an alternative to converting the PDF's to HTML can be to ask the writer if (s)he can produce HTML for you, or send you the source so that you can do it.
A tool for producing HTML from LaTeX: https://tug.org/tex4ht/