Inline equations support
Thank you for developing such a great software!
I’m a student researcher who commonly use XMind for arranging my ideas and algorithm details. However, there is a problem that I can only insert equation blocks but cannot insert inline mathematical equations which is generally used in writing definitions and theorems. It is the only concern when I paid for the service. And it is also the concern of the members in my lab who try to use XMind. I believe more researcher would like to pay for your service if there is a support for it.
Therefore, I’m curious that do you have any plan to support rendering inline equations?
And of course, as others' mentioned, markdown support is really appreciated.
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This feature is highly valuable to me. I bought the license only for the latex support. But as soon as I started using it, I found i can't input the inline latex. I have to put the definition descriptions inside the equation block, which is impossible for long descriptions. Within the inline definition support, the latex support is incomplete.
Beside all other major notion taking apps are supporting inline latex, such as Notion and Obsidian, etc.
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Same here. I bought the license only for the latex support, only to find out that it didn't handle inline integration of the latex expressions, too bad.
I'm a data scientist student, and I would have liked to be able to take memos with xmind, a phrase like this for instance:
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Regularization:
- keep all the features, but reduce magnitude/values of parameters ${\theta_j}$
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I would love to see the ${\theta_j}$ snippet converted and integrated inline with my text.
Like this:

So yes, please consider adding this feature. Thank you.
Ps: the wrapping dollars are the google colab way of wrapping a latex expression (I believe)
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You CAN typeset inline math actually in xmind (version 24) with a twist. To typeset math in an equation cell in xmind, xmind relies on MathJax. MathJax basically tries to mimic the LaTeX AMSMath module. Part of AMSMath is the command \text{}.
The twist is this: instead of typesetting inline math in your text, you can typeset inline regular text in your math.
For example, typing the text below in an equation cell in xmind will work:
\text{You can typeset inline text such as this } \frac{a}{b} \text{ in your math equation cell.}
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