![]() Just weighing up my options before I start. ![]() The only other alternative is LaTex or something similar. Even typing out the various stages of say a simultaneous quadratic is a lengthy business on word equation editor. I've had a look at my first assignment and there's going to be a lot of this type of stuff. ![]() It was mostly for presentation purposes in essays and assignments so the "showing my working" part. But I am afraid 'the best' solution is very individual and you might need to try many varieties yourself. With stylus you will create graphics, not structured math (and even if you use hand-writing recognition, I am not sure you will be satisfied when some serious volume of math needs to be written).Īs you said, maybe the best would be to combine some stylus graphics device with some math-typing software. ![]() I learned to use keyboard (it was painful - it took me some 2 years until it become natural) and now I would not change it for a stylus. I am doing all my math on my laptop using keyboard and mouse/touchpad and for sure I dream to have a stylus on hand whenever I need to make a sketch or outline a function graph.įor the 'textual' part of mathematics, I am not sure you will be satisfied with stylus. I guess that having a stylus is easily the best way to do the graphical part of mathematics in digital form (while pencil-and-paper might still be better in some aspects). But what is your plan actually - do you plan to hand-draw math-problem sketches and graphical analysis or do you plan to actually hand-write some dense math equations?
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