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Affinity Photo as an great equation editor

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    • #1188012
      Inkling
      Member

      I just spent two days dealing the the horrors of trying to get complex math equations from Word into ID. Lots of glitches meant we ended up doing everything by hand.

      After it was all over it came to me that Affinity Photo would make a perfect equation editor. Yes, it is a bit niggily. You have to enter each element by hand as a text box and place it just right. But unlike dedicated equations editors, the process is quite intuitive—just put it where it goes and make it the right size. Then you can export it any format you like for placing within InDesign. And best of all the prices is reasonable—$50 for the Mac and Windows version and $20 for the iPad one. It even ships with a full set of STIX fonts with a host of math and science characters. And for that same price you’re getting an excellent photo editor. Here’s the specs.

      https://affinity.serif.com/en-gb/photo/

      Maybe, just maybe, I won’t have to face those horrors again.

      –Mike Perry

    • #14324042
      David Blatner
      Keymaster

      Affinity Photo?! Isn’t that primarily a pixel editor? If you want to build equations by hand, why not use Adobe Illustrator?

      Of course, if you have a ton of equations, you’d be better of using a tool like MathTools from movemen.com

    • #14324036
      Inkling
      Member

      Yeah! I have reached the famous David Blatner, ID guru extraordanire, precisely the person I wanted to tell about my discovery.

      Affinity Photo is almost as feature-rich as Adobe’s Photoshop, which means it is far more than a pixel editor. Like Photoshop, you can place text that is resizable and movable (not just pixels) any place you want on the screen. To use either as a equation editor, you simply place that text in a blank document of the appropriate size. You can change the characters. You can resize them. You can reposition them just right. Everything is intuitive. Just create and place. No new app to learn.

      You could do the same with Photoshop and that would make round-trip editing easier, but Affinity Photo comes with something that, although I have tried, I’ve yet to get Adobe to include in its font offerings much less ship with its products. That’s the STIX font set, an entire dozen of them. That includes the often bizarre characters you need for math and science.

      And I’m not sure about the ‘ton of equations” bit either. If you had a long series of just equations that might be true. But equations typically come interspersed with writing. That means fiddling with the mechanics of exporting and importing a specialized files from an equation editor. Using Affinity Photo or Photoshop takes advantage of an existing ability to import them. They’s simply graphics, something that ID handles quite easily.

      I opted for Affinity Photo over Adobe’s Photoshop because I have CC’s ID-only plan and see no reason to pay Adobe #120+ a year for an app I only occasionally use when I can buy Affinity Photo outright for $50. And Illustrator isn’t under consideration because I’m one of those who avoids it whenever possible, not to mention that using it would cost me an additional $360 a year.

      The good news about Afflinity is that Adobe has grown too comfortable with its older products, particularly ID. Affinity is forcing it to become competitive both in features and (we can all hope) in price. For instance, Adobe’s $20 single-app plans need to become duo-plans, ID plus another of a user’s choice. Typically that would be Photoshop. Then the temptation to substitute Affinity Photo would go away.

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