ASCII math

By lieven

To a large extent mathematics has to do with elaborate typography. Many youngsters have been attracted over the centuries to maths because they wanted to understand the meaning of these beautiful pages filled with integrals, partial derivatives and other bizarre hieroglyphs. But now we have come to the point that this obsession for symbols is working against mathematics…
Have you ever wondered why there are so few mathematics-pages on the net compared to computer-science pages (apart from the fact that a lot more exiting things are happening in web-technology these days than in mathematics), why forums dedicated to math-problems never get off the ground (apart from boring housework sites) or why it is so seldom that you discuss serious math with colleagues or students via emails (apart from the fact that more and more mathematicians seem to turn off their sharing mode) ???
One of the reasons might be that our default way of writing and communicating math ( LaTeX) is incompatible with either HTML or email (and for those of you who think that LaTeX2HTML or tth or similar programs offer an alternative, just try to make an attractive looking website with them and prove me wrong).
If we want mathematics to survive and flourish (and whether you like it or not that may depend heavily on its web-visibility) it is high time to develop some ascii-math, that is, a way to write mathematical formulas in plain typewriter symbols. This cannot be totally impossible as programming languages are capable of defining a large number of complicated objects with ascii and for those of you who discard the idea on beauty-reasons, I never found a piece of code in a computer book particularly ugly.
Of course I realise that not too many people will be willing to make this paradigm-shift right now, but can we at least ask of people introducing new symbols to add as an appendix to their paper a suggestion for the transition to ascii-symbols for those who value the net and/or sharing more than they do. Thank you!


Leave a Reply

AWSOM Powered