autorender.md 5.0 KB


id: autorender

title: Auto-render Extension

This is an extension to automatically render all of the math inside of text. It searches all of the text nodes within a given element for the given delimiters, ignoring certain tags like <pre>, and renders the math in place.

Usage

This extension isn't part of KaTeX proper, so the script needs to be included (via a <script> tag) in the page along with KaTeX itself. For example, using a CDN:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/katex@0.10.0/dist/katex.min.css" integrity="sha384-9eLZqc9ds8eNjO3TmqPeYcDj8n+Qfa4nuSiGYa6DjLNcv9BtN69ZIulL9+8CqC9Y" crossorigin="anonymous">
<script defer src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/katex@0.10.0/dist/katex.min.js" integrity="sha384-K3vbOmF2BtaVai+Qk37uypf7VrgBubhQreNQe9aGsz9lB63dIFiQVlJbr92dw2Lx" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script defer src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/katex@0.10.0/dist/contrib/auto-render.min.js" integrity="sha384-kmZOZB5ObwgQnS/DuDg6TScgOiWWBiVt0plIRkZCmE6rDZGrEOQeHM5PcHi+nyqe" crossorigin="anonymous"
    onload="renderMathInElement(document.body);"></script>

Above, the defer attribute indicates that the script doesn't need to execute until the page has loaded, speeding up page rendering; and the onload attribute calls renderMathInElement once the auto-render script loads.

Alternatively, you can call the renderMathInElement when (or after) the DOMContentLoaded event fires on the document or in another deferred script. This approach is useful for specifying or computing options, or if you don't want to use a defer or onload attribute. For example:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/katex@0.10.0/dist/katex.min.css" integrity="sha384-9eLZqc9ds8eNjO3TmqPeYcDj8n+Qfa4nuSiGYa6DjLNcv9BtN69ZIulL9+8CqC9Y" crossorigin="anonymous">
<script defer src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/katex@0.10.0/dist/katex.min.js" integrity="sha384-K3vbOmF2BtaVai+Qk37uypf7VrgBubhQreNQe9aGsz9lB63dIFiQVlJbr92dw2Lx" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script defer src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/katex@0.10.0/dist/contrib/auto-render.min.js" integrity="sha384-kmZOZB5ObwgQnS/DuDg6TScgOiWWBiVt0plIRkZCmE6rDZGrEOQeHM5PcHi+nyqe" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script>
    document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() {
        renderMathInElement(document.body, {
            // ...options...
        });
    });
</script>

API

This extension exposes a single function, window.renderMathInElement, with the following API:

function renderMathInElement(elem, options)

elem is an HTML DOM element. The function will recursively search for text nodes inside this element and render the math in them.

options is an optional object argument that can have the same keys as the object passed to katex.render, in addition to two auto-render-specific keys:

  • delimiters: This is a list of delimiters to look for math. Each delimiter has three properties:

    • left: A string which starts the math expression (i.e. the left delimiter).
    • right: A string which ends the math expression (i.e. the right delimiter).
    • display: A boolean of whether the math in the expression should be rendered in display mode or not.

The default value is:

  [
    {left: "$$", right: "$$", display: true},
    {left: "\\(", right: "\\)", display: false},
    {left: "\\[", right: "\\]", display: true}
  ]
  • ignoredTags: This is a list of DOM node types to ignore when recursing through. The default value is ["script", "noscript", "style", "textarea", "pre", "code"].

  • ignoredClasses: This is a list of DOM node class names to ignore when recursing through. By default, this value is not set.

  • errorCallback: A callback method returning a message and an error stack in case of an critical error during rendering. The default uses console.error.

The displayMode property of the options object is ignored, and is instead taken from the display key of the corresponding entry in the delimiters key.

The same options.macros object (which defaults to an empty object {}) is passed into several calls to katex.render, so that consecutive equations can build up shared macros by \gdef.