To get to the point, let's take a look at the concrete steps of word2013 inserting a mathematical formula.
1. Open a document, for example, we open the "two-item theorem" To position the mouse cursor where the formula should be inserted. Insert--"symbol"--"formula", select the appropriate formula to insert. But what if we can't find the formula we need? Then we have to manually insert the new formula we need. The function of the second "insert new formula" in the following figure option is to use the drip! More explicit operations look at the picture
2, the standard form of the formula has been inserted into our document. But that's not necessarily what we need. Don't worry, word 2013 is also on our mind, so our current position is in the formula tool-design, and if the previous formula is the new formula we inserted ourselves, we can do this in the "structure" To select and set the formula we need. Now the formula we've chosen has a ready-made one, and it's the same as selecting the option you want in the structure. For example: What we need now is "(x-√3) ^10", you can modify the standard form to "(x-3) ^10", select "3", and then click the Radical option in the structure group to select Square root. As shown in figure
3, OK. Let's see the effect!