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Why does MyST have optional syntax that is on by default. At least dollarmath is like this, and it feels counter intuitive to me. I'd expect anything that is on by default to be part of "core" MyST syntax.
If nothing else, I think this sentence should be fixed in the docs:
The following syntaxes are optional (disabled by default)
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Yeah - to @chrisjsewell's point this is one reason that we moved dollarmath to the "optional" page in the latest docs refactor (#385 I believe). IMO it is less confusing to have an "optional syntax" that is "on by default" rather than to document an "optional syntax" in the "core syntax" page.
:::{note}
Dollar math is **on by default** even though it is an optional syntax.
This is because of its common use across many markdown editors, and for legacy purposes.
We may revisit whether to consider this as part of "core" syntax in the future.
:::
?
And I guess a related question is: since that syntax is optional, there is no "core syntax" way to define math other than using a {math} directive, right?
Why does MyST have optional syntax that is on by default. At least dollarmath is like this, and it feels counter intuitive to me. I'd expect anything that is on by default to be part of "core" MyST syntax.
If nothing else, I think this sentence should be fixed in the docs:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: