About the use of Formula Editor in many books and magazines are introduced, but in the daily use of the process, there are a number of problems often appear, such as: input mathematical formula and then the distance, can not change the color of the formula, printing often garbled, and so on. To address the various issues mentioned above, let's look at specific solutions.
First, solve the problem of line spacing after inserting formula
When you enter a mathematical formula using the Equation Editor in a Word document, you find that the line spacing is significantly larger, as if the formula were to open up the row and the other lines, and use the command to change the line spacing. There are two ways to fix it:
1. Click the math formula you want to modify, and when the cursor becomes a "double arrow," Drag to shrink it. This method is suitable for use when only a very small number of mathematical formulas are used. And the drag accuracy is not high.
2. Click the "File" Drop-down menu and click on the "Page Setup" item. In the grid item in the document grid, check the no grid item (Figure 1). This is a good way to solve the problem of different line spacing. Strongly recommend this solution to everyone.
The color of the transformation formula
When you enter a mathematical formula in a Word document, you generally do not need to change the color, black and white. However, when you enter some mathematical formulas in a PowerPoint slide, the black color formula is not visible when you encounter a darker background, but if you change the background it is sometimes out of tune with the previous background. In this situation, you can try the following methods:
1. Modify the math formula color in PowerPoint
Because the formula editor enters a mathematical formula that appears as a picture in the document. So we can modify it like a picture. In PowerPoint, execute the view → toolbar → picture command, expand the Picture toolbar. Select the formula for which you want to transform the color, and then click the Recolor Picture button to open the Recolor Picture dialog box. Set a color for the formula, and be sure to return it (Figure 2).
Note: The formula that is recolor here, if copied and pasted directly into other software (such as word), restores the original black and white.