View Full Version : How to write out formulas in MIcrosoft Word
physicszman
Oct27-03, 01:16 AM
Hello,
I was just curious as to how I can write formulas out in Microsoft Word. I am doing a lab report and want to make it look more professional by makeing the equations and calculations appear xactly like the ones in the book. If anyone has any advice it would be much appreaciated.
Thanks.
Greg Bernhardt
Oct27-03, 01:30 AM
A google search found this:
http://www.ele.uri.edu/Courses/ele343/tutorials/word.equations/wordequations.html
physicszman
Oct27-03, 02:08 AM
Fantastic!! Thanks alot!!!
Purushotham
Apr4-09, 11:27 AM
Fantastic!! Thanks alot!!!
Dude
Could you tell me how to differential equations in microsoft word.
link post in the above reply is not available now.
Just Google it. Word has a built-in equation editor.
zlatan24
Jun28-09, 11:33 AM
One day I work with my word files and after that I saved them and went to bed,on next morning they were corrupted,and accidentally in inet I found nice tool-recover .docx files (http://www.recoverytoolbox.com/docx_recover.html),which solves problem with word files,it helped me many times,besides that it is free as far as I know,utiltiy has many admissibilities,it can help you and recover your damaged files in Microsoft Word format,will results in a preview window, that shows recovered text,recovering .docx documents and recovery docx became so easy, as never before, recover corrupt docx files right now, this reliable solution will save many hours of your precious time for manual recover damaged docx file.
Integral
Jun28-09, 02:37 PM
select:
insert-> object -> Microsoft equation editor
You will need to scroll down a list to get to the Equation editor
JazzFusion
Jun28-09, 02:41 PM
MS Word for Windows 7.0 has a built-in equation editor that is much better than its earlier versions. At the top menu bar select 'insert', then on the r.h. side select 'Equation'. You have to play with it a bit to find everything (like where the vector notation is, and how to enter derivatives, etc). Once you experiment a bit, it comes fairly intuitively.
vBulletin® v3.7.6, Copyright ©2000-2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.