CI: Consolidate CircleCI commands for readability

This way there are only 3 "commands" (really, entire scripts) that
CircleCI runs, each which begins with a descriptive comment.

This commit also reduces the number of backgrounded commands, and most
backgrounded commands start with a word in the comment that describes it
well, so the 'stdout_*.txt' and 'stderr_*.txt' log outputs auto-captured
by CircleCI will have more readable names and we don't need those *.log
files.

Recommend -w to view diff.
1 file changed
tree: 1809745be36adc63b6a436c83194b3e05e766911
  1. docs/
  2. script/
  3. src/
  4. test/
  5. .gitattributes
  6. .gitignore
  7. BUILDING
  8. CHANGELOG.md
  9. circle.yml
  10. Makefile
  11. mkdocs.yml
  12. package.json
  13. README.md
README.md

MathQuill

by Han, Jeanine, and Mary (maintainers@mathquill.com)

MathQuill is a web formula editor designed to make typing math easy and beautiful.

The MathQuill project is supported by its partners. We hold ourselves to a compassionate Code of Conduct.

MathQuill is resuming active development and we‘re committed to getting things running smoothly. Find a dusty corner? Let us know in Slack. (Prefer IRC? We’re #mathquill on Freenode.)

Getting Started

MathQuill has a simple interface. This brief example creates a MathQuill element and renders, then reads a given input:

var htmlElement = document.getElementById('some_id');
var config = {
  handlers: { edit: function(){ ... } },
  restrictMismatchedBrackets: true
};
var mathField = MQ.MathField(htmlElement, config);

mathField.latex('2^{\\frac{3}{2}}'); // Renders the given LaTeX in the MathQuill field
mathField.latex(); // => '2^{\\frac{3}{2}}'

Check out our Getting Started Guide for setup instructions and basic MathQuill usage.

Docs

Most documentation for MathQuill is located on ReadTheDocs.

Some older documentation still exists on the Wiki.

Open-Source License

The Source Code Form of MathQuill is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0: http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/

The quick-and-dirty is you can do whatever if modifications to MathQuill are in public GitHub forks. (Other ways to publicize modifications are also fine, as are private use modifications. See also: MPL 2.0 FAQ)