You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to commits@openoffice.apache.org by sm...@apache.org on 2013/10/19 06:17:07 UTC
svn commit: r1533691 - /openoffice/ooo-site/trunk/content/product/math.mdtext
Author: smansour
Date: Sat Oct 19 04:17:06 2013
New Revision: 1533691
URL: http://svn.apache.org/r1533691
Log:
Reviewed and changed language
Modified:
openoffice/ooo-site/trunk/content/product/math.mdtext
Modified: openoffice/ooo-site/trunk/content/product/math.mdtext
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/openoffice/ooo-site/trunk/content/product/math.mdtext?rev=1533691&r1=1533690&r2=1533691&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- openoffice/ooo-site/trunk/content/product/math.mdtext (original)
+++ openoffice/ooo-site/trunk/content/product/math.mdtext Sat Oct 19 04:17:06 2013
@@ -18,16 +18,16 @@ Notice: Licensed to the Apache Softwa
[![Screendump of Apache OpenOffice Math](/product/pix/math.png)](/product/pix/math-big.png "Click for bigger version") # {.rfloatimg}
-*Create equations and formulae for your documents*
+*Simple to create equations and formulae for your documents!*
-**Math** is Apache OpenOffice's component for mathematical equations. It is most
+Math is Apache OpenOffice's component for mathematical equations. It is most
commonly used as an equation editor for text documents, but it can also be used
-with other types of documents or stand-alone. When used inside **Writer**, the
+with other types of documents or stand-alone. When used inside Writer, the
equation is treated as an object inside the text document. Similarly, one can
also insert these into other Apache OpenOffice programs like [Calc][1] and
[Impress][2].
-Using **Math**, there are three main ways of entering a formula:
+Using Math, there are three main ways of entering a formula:
- Type markup in the equation editor.
- Right-click on the equation editor and select the symbol from the context menu.