2 comments

  • bobajeff 1 hour ago
    I watched the video. I think I've been wanting something like this recently but there's not really a name for this sort of thing that I know of.

    Relatedly, I've been working on a step-by-step solver/calculator but I just use sympy (via pyodide) + mathlive. But I'm starting to see the limitations of running Python in the browser and am starting to look at js libraries now.

    • dicroce 51 minutes ago
      The underlying math engine is written in typescript and is open source:

      https://github.com/dicroce/wyrm_math

      Probably it's most important feature for applications like this is that the id's of elements in the equations are stable (meaning, if an X has an id of 123 and a transformation moves it to the other side of the equals sign, it still has id 123... this allows you animate between states if you wish).