/react-katex

Display math in TeX with KaTeX and ReactJS

Primary LanguageJavaScript

react-katex

Build Status Code Climate Coverage Status

Display math expressions with KaTeX and React

Installation

  $ npm install react-katex
  # or
  $ yarn add react-katex

Usage

import 'katex/dist/katex.min.css';
import { InlineMath, BlockMath } from 'react-katex';

InlineMath

Display math in the middle of the text.

  var InlineMath = ReactKaTeX.InlineMath;

  ReactDOM.render(<InlineMath math="\\int_0^\\infty x^2 dx"/>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

  // or

  ReactDOM.render(<InlineMath>\int_0^\infty x^2 dx</InlineMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

It will be rendered like this:

Inline math

BlockMath

Display math in a separated block, with larger font and symbols.

  var BlockMath = ReactKaTeX.BlockMath;

  ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath math="\\int_0^\\infty x^2 dx"/>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

  // or

  ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath>\int_0^\infty x^2 dx</BlockMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

It will be rendered like this:

Block math

Note:
Don't forget to import KaTeX CSS file.

import 'katex/dist/katex.min.css';

Error handling

Default error message

By default the error rendering is handled by KaTeX. You can optionally pass errorColor (defaults to #cc0000) as a prop:

var BlockMath = ReactKaTeX.BlockMath;

ReactDOM.render(
  <BlockMath
    math={'\\int_0^\\infty x^2 dx \\inta'}
    errorColor={'#cc0000'}
  />, document.getElementById('math'));

This will be rendered like so:

KaTeX error

Custom error message

It's possible to handle parse errors using the prop renderError. This prop must be a function that receives the error object and returns what should be rendered when parsing fails:

var BlockMath = ReactKaTeX.BlockMath;
  
ReactDOM.render(
  <BlockMath
    math="\\int_{"
    renderError={(error) => {
      return <b>Fail: {error.name}</b>
    }}
  />,
  document.getElementById('math'));

// The code above will render '<b>Fail: ParseError</b>' because it's the value returned from `renderError`.

This will render <b>Fail: ParseError</b>:

renderError

Escaping expressions

In addition to using the math property, you can also quote as a child allowing the use of { } in your expression.

ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath>{"\\frac{\\text{m}}{\\text{s}^2}"}</BlockMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

Or Multiline

ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath>{`\\frac{\\text{m}}
{\\text{s}^2}`}</BlockMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

However, it can be annoying to escape backslashes. This can be circumvented with the String.raw tag on a template literal when using ES6.

ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath>{String.raw`\frac{\text{m}}{\text{s}^2}`}</BlockMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

Backticks must be escaped with a backslash but would be passed to KaTeX as \`. A tag can be created to replace \` with `

const latex = (...a) => String.raw(...a).replace("\\`","`")
ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath>{latex`\``}</BlockMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));

You can even do variable substitution

const top = "m";
const bottom = "s";
ReactDOM.render(<BlockMath>{String.raw`\frac{\text{${top}}}{\text{${bottom}}^2}`}</BlockMath>,
                document.getElementById('math'));