These are the ramblings of Matthijs Kooijman, concerning the software he hacks on, hobbies he has and occasionally his personal life.
Most content on this site is licensed under the WTFPL, version 2 (details).
Questions? Praise? Blame? Feel free to contact me.
My old blog (pre-2006) is also still available.
See also my Mastodon page.
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(...), Arduino, AVR, BaRef, Blosxom, Book, Busy, C++, Charity, Debian, Electronics, Examination, Firefox, Flash, Framework, FreeBSD, Gnome, Hardware, Inter-Actief, IRC, JTAG, LARP, Layout, Linux, Madness, Mail, Math, MS-1013, Mutt, Nerd, Notebook, Optimization, Personal, Plugins, Protocol, QEMU, Random, Rant, Repair, S270, Sailing, Samba, Sanquin, Script, Sleep, Software, SSH, Study, Supermicro, Symbols, Tika, Travel, Trivia, USB, Windows, Work, X201, Xanthe, XBee
For this blog, I wanted to include some nicely-formatted formulas. An easy way to do so, is to use MathJax, a javascript-based math processor where you can write formulas using (among others) the often-used Tex math syntax.
However, I use Markdown to write my blogposts and including formulas directly in the text can be problematic because Markdown might interpret part of my math expressions as Markdown and transform them before MathJax has had a chance to look at them. In this post, I present a customized MathJax configuration that solves this problem in a reasonable elegant way.