KaTeX is a fast, easy-to-use JavaScript library for TeX math rendering on the web.
- Fast: KaTeX renders its math synchronously and doesn't need to reflow the page. See how it compares to a competitor in this speed test.
- Print quality: KaTeX’s layout is based on Donald Knuth’s TeX, the gold standard for math typesetting.
- Self contained: KaTeX has no dependencies and can easily be bundled with your website resources.
- Server side rendering: KaTeX produces the same output regardless of browser or environment, so you can pre-render expressions using Node.js and send them as plain HTML.
KaTeX supports all major browsers, including Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Opera, Edge, and IE 9 - IE 11. More information can be found on the list of supported commands and on the wiki.
You can download KaTeX and host it on your server or include the katex.min.js
and katex.min.css
files on your page directly from a CDN:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/katex.min.css" integrity="sha384-TEMocfGvRuD1rIAacqrknm5BQZ7W7uWitoih+jMNFXQIbNl16bO8OZmylH/Vi/Ei" crossorigin="anonymous">
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/katex.min.js" integrity="sha384-jmxIlussZWB7qCuB+PgKG1uLjjxbVVIayPJwi6cG6Zb4YKq0JIw+OMnkkEC7kYCq" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
Call katex.render
with a TeX expression and a DOM element to render into:
katex.render("c = \\pm\\sqrt{a^2 + b^2}", element);
If KaTeX can't parse the expression, it throws a katex.ParseError
error.
To generate HTML on the server or to generate an HTML string of the rendered math, you can use katex.renderToString
:
var html = katex.renderToString("c = \\pm\\sqrt{a^2 + b^2}");
// '<span class="katex">...</span>'
Make sure to include the CSS and font files, but there is no need to include the JavaScript. Like render
, renderToString
throws if it can't parse the expression.
Any HTML generated by KaTeX should be safe from <script>
or other code
injection attacks.
(See maxSize
below for preventing large width/height visual affronts.)
Of course, it is always a good idea to sanitize the HTML, though you will need
a rather generous whitelist (including some of SVG and MathML) to support
all of KaTeX.
If KaTeX encounters an error (invalid or unsupported LaTeX) and throwOnError
hasn't been set to false
, then it will throw an exception of type
katex.ParseError
. The message in this error includes some of the LaTeX
source code, so needs to be escaped if you want to render it to HTML.
In particular, you should convert &
, <
, >
characters to
&
, <
, >
(e.g., using _.escape
)
before including either LaTeX source code or exception messages in your
HTML/DOM. (Failure to escape in this way makes a <script>
injection
attack possible if your LaTeX source is untrusted.)
Alternatively, you can set throwOnError
to false
to use built-in behavior
of rendering the LaTeX source code with hover text stating the error.
You can provide an object of options as the last argument to katex.render
and katex.renderToString
. Available options are:
displayMode
:boolean
. Iftrue
the math will be rendered in display mode, which will put the math in display style (so\int
and\sum
are large, for example), and will center the math on the page on its own line. Iffalse
the math will be rendered in inline mode. (default:false
)throwOnError
:boolean
. Iftrue
(the default), KaTeX will throw aParseError
when it encounters an unsupported command or invalid LaTeX. Iffalse
, KaTeX will render unsupported commands as text, and render invalid LaTeX as its source code with hover text giving the error, in the color given byerrorColor
.errorColor
:string
. A color string given in the format"#XXX"
or"#XXXXXX"
. This option determines the color that unsupported commands and invalid LaTeX are rendered in whenthrowOnError
is set tofalse
. (default:#cc0000
)macros
:object
. A collection of custom macros. Each macro is a property with a name like\name
(written"\\name"
in JavaScript) which maps to a string that describes the expansion of the macro. Single-character keys can also be included in which case the character will be redefined as the given macro (similar to TeX active characters).colorIsTextColor
:boolean
. Iftrue
,\color
will work like LaTeX's\textcolor
, and take two arguments (e.g.,\color{blue}{hello}
), which restores the old behavior of KaTeX (pre-0.8.0). Iffalse
(the default),\color
will work like LaTeX's\color
, and take one argument (e.g.,\color{blue}hello
). In both cases,\textcolor
works as in LaTeX (e.g.,\textcolor{blue}{hello}
).maxSize
:number
. If non-zero, all user-specified sizes, e.g. in\rule{500em}{500em}
, will be capped tomaxSize
ems. Otherwise, users can make elements and spaces arbitrarily large (the default behavior).strict
:boolean
orstring
orfunction
(default:"warn"
). Iffalse
or"ignore
", allow features that make writing LaTeX convenient but are not actually supported by (Xe)LaTeX (similar to MathJax). Iftrue
or"error"
(LaTeX faithfulness mode), throw an error for any such transgressions. If"warn"
(the default), warn about such behavior viaconsole.warn
. Provide a custom functionhandler(errorCode, errorMsg, token)
to customize behavior depending on the type of transgression (summarized by the string codeerrorCode
and detailed inerrorMsg
); this function can also return"ignore"
,"error"
, or"warn"
to use a built-in behavior. A list of such features and theirerrorCode
s:"unicodeTextInMathMode"
: Use of Unicode text characters in math mode."mathVsTextUnits"
: Mismatch of math vs. text commands and units/mode.
For example:
katex.render("c = \\pm\\sqrt{a^2 + b^2}\\in\\RR", element, {
displayMode: true,
macros: {
"\\RR": "\\mathbb{R}"
}
});
Math on the page can be automatically rendered using the auto-render extension. See the Auto-render README for more information.
By default, KaTeX math is rendered in a 1.21× larger font than the surrounding context, which makes super- and subscripts easier to read. You can control this using CSS, for example:
.katex { font-size: 1.1em; }
KaTeX supports all TeX units, including absolute units like cm
and in
.
Absolute units are currently scaled relative to the default TeX font size of
10pt, so that \kern1cm
produces the same results as \kern2.845275em
.
As a result, relative and absolute units are both uniformly scaled relative
to LaTeX with a 10pt font; for example, the rectangle \rule{1cm}{1em}
has
the same aspect ratio in KaTeX as in LaTeX. However, because most browsers
default to a larger font size, this typically means that a 1cm kern in KaTeX
will appear larger than 1cm in browser units.
- Many Markdown preprocessors, such as the one that Jekyll and GitHub Pages use,
have a "smart quotes" feature. This changes
'
to’
which is an issue for math containing primes, e.g.f'
. This can be worked around by defining a single character macro which changes them back, e.g.{"’", "'"}
. - KaTeX follows LaTeX's rendering of
aligned
andmatrix
environments unlike MathJax. When displaying fractions one above another in these vertical layouts there may not be enough space between rows for people who are used to MathJax's rendering. The distance between rows can be adjusted by using\\[0.1em]
instead of the standard line separator distance. - KaTeX does not support the
align
environment because LaTeX doesn't supportalign
in math mode. Thealigned
environment offers the same functionality but in math mode, so use that instead or define a macro that mapsalign
toaligned
. - MathJax defines
\color
to be like\textcolor
by default; set KaTeX'scolorIsTextColor
option totrue
for this behavior. KaTeX's default behavior matches MathJax with itscolor.js
extension enabled. - KaTeX breaks lines with
\\
and\newline
in inline math, but ignores them in display math (matching LaTeX's behavior, but not MathJax's behavior). To allow\\
and\newline
to break lines in display mode, add the following CSS rule:.katex-display > .katex > .katex-html > .newline { display: block !important; }
- ng-katex Angular module to write beautiful math expressions with TeX syntax boosted by KaTeX library
- react-latex React component to render latex strings, based on KaTeX
- react-katex React components that use KaTeX to typeset math expressions
- katex-ruby Provides server-side rendering and integration with popular Ruby web frameworks (Rails, Hanami, and anything that uses Sprockets).
See CONTRIBUTING.md
KaTeX is licensed under the MIT License.