1) Ask AI for a structured solution in LaTeX
Ask for clear steps and LaTeX formulas (inline $...$, display $$...$$). This makes the conversion deterministic.
2) Paste into a .docx and keep the layout simple
Use headings like “Exercise 1”, “Solution”, “Final answer”. Avoid complex formatting until after conversion.
3) Convert the document (LaTeX → OMML)
Upload the file to Equations to Word and convert it.
4) Final polish inside Word
- Adjust fonts and spacing.
- Add page numbers and a cover page.
- Double-check symbols (especially subscripts/superscripts and matrices).
5) What to do if an equation doesn’t convert
- Simplify the LaTeX (remove custom commands/macros).
- Split long equations into smaller pieces.
- Confirm your delimiters are correct.
👉 Try the converter now: Equations to Word.
A student-friendly workflow
If you use AI to generate steps for exercises, you want a clean DOCX you can submit: readable text plus editable equations you can adjust if needed.
Tip: For a complete workflow, see the LaTeX → OMML guide.
Steps
- Ask the AI to output LaTeX with consistent delimiters and avoid custom macros.
- Copy the solution into a DOCX draft.
- Convert with Equations to Word to get editable equations.
- Review results and correct any notation before submission.
FAQ
Can I convert only part of the document?
Yes. As long as the LaTeX segments are in the file, the converter can replace them with native equations.