can I number equations on the right and inline with equations?

G

Guest

I can't find a way to number equations in Microsoft Word 2007 the standard
scientific way: on the right of the equation and inline with it (e.g. the way
Mathtype numbers equations). If it is not possible, than they seemingly nice
equation tool is useless for scientists that write scientific papers and one
has to use Mathtype.
 
R

Robert M. Franz (RMF)

Hi aperlin
I can't find a way to number equations in Microsoft Word 2007 the standard
scientific way: on the right of the equation and inline with it (e.g. the way
Mathtype numbers equations). If it is not possible, than they seemingly nice
equation tool is useless for scientists that write scientific papers and one
has to use Mathtype.

I think you have to do in 2007 as in all other versions before: insert a
borderless 1x2 table, make the right column narrow enough, insert the
equation in the left cell and the caption in the right.

And then save the whole thing as a BuildingBlock (as an AutoText in
earlier versions).

HTH
Robert
 
G

Guest

Robert M. Franz (RMF) said:
Hi aperlin


I think you have to do in 2007 as in all other versions before: insert a
borderless 1x2 table, make the right column narrow enough, insert the
equation in the left cell and the caption in the right.

And then save the whole thing as a BuildingBlock (as an AutoText in
earlier versions).

HTH
Robert
--
/"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | MS
\ / | MVP
X Against HTML | for
/ \ in e-mail & news | Word
 
G

Guest

Robert M. Franz (RMF) said:
Hi aperlin


I think you have to do in 2007 as in all other versions before: insert a
borderless 1x2 table, make the right column narrow enough, insert the
equation in the left cell and the caption in the right.

And then save the whole thing as a BuildingBlock (as an AutoText in
earlier versions).

HTH
Robert
--
/"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | MS
\ / | MVP
X Against HTML | for
/ \ in e-mail & news | Word

Thanks a lot! That lets one to number and reference equations properly!
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top