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Showing results for tags 'equation editor'.
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This is a long shot, but I’ve really no idea where to begin, but it seems do-able? I am looking for an equation that makes equirectangular images look like a panorama. A friend showed me a Photoshop plug in that could transform an equirectangular image to Mercator projection. And if I trim the top and bottom off it’s a great way to create panoramas of people. I’ve added some examples below. First I double the image height, then apply some form of equation, that stretches more as it goes out from the center. Its not a simple doubling of size, it needs to have a slow growth from the middle put to look “normal” again. Sorry to just ask out of the blue, but I’ve had a look at equation examples on these forums, and then googled maths equations and can’t even figure out where to start!
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I'm still using InDesign for science texts because Affinity Publisher doesn't yet have endnotes and such books have hundreds of them. One of the downsides of ID is that it doesn't have an equation editor and does a poor job of importing equations from Word. I know,. Some others and I just spent two days wresting with the troubles that creates. Only afterward did I realize that Affinity Photo should be great for creating equations, even complex, multilevel ones with specialized characters. It's easy if a bit niggling. Just create a text box for each element and insert the needed character from the Text-Glyph Browser into that box. Photo even ships with multiple STIX fonts, which should offer everything that you need. You can then resize and move that element around to get it just right. For ID, you'll need to export it as a graphic and then place it. With Affinity Publisher you can simply incorporate that equation into your document, tweaking it as necessary. That is all the more reason to work with Publisher when you can. Now if Publisher just did endnotes, my life would be complete.
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- equation editor
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