If so, please temporary remove them.Īlex Chen * Beware of scammers posting fake support numbers here. See if you have any add-ins listed at there. Second, go to Word > Insert > My add-ins. In Word 2000-2003 you will find the icon on the command bar, in Word 2007-2010 go to the Add-Ins ribbon tab as seen on the screenshot below. Just open the document ( doc, docx, rtf) in Microsoft Word and then click the Word-to-LaTeX icon. Please go to Word > File > Options > Add-ins > Manage: Using the Word-to-LaTeX Word add-in is by far the most convenient. Meanwhile, if it works in safe mode then it might be highly related with the add-ins, I also know that you've checked there is no related add-ins installed/downloaded for your Word app, but just want to make sure: So in your case, it would be better for you to uninstall the Office 2016 and stick with the Office 365 for enterprise. Meanwhile, installing 2 versions of Office might cause problems.
Since you mentioned your have Office 365 for enterprise and Office 2016 Pro Plus, we need to know what's your current Office version. Please help me I am a mechanical engineering student at home but cannot seem to fix this issue after trying everything.Ĭould you open Word > File > Account and take a screenshot at the Product Information section? I also don't have any add-ins downloaded I tried that step as well it did not work.
I tried uninstalling office with the Microsoft uninstalling software recommended here in another thread and reinstalling it but that did not work. However, as soon as I go back to typing equations in the normal version of Word, the warning pops up again. I have followed steps to open Word in safe mode, and the equation typing works just fine then. I have run the MS remove Office 365 utility and reinstalled ProPlus multiple times My personal computer has the following info:
I have typed equations perfectly fine in the past without this warning and I have not changed any settings in Word since then.
When this software was installed, you (or your administrator) chose not to install support for macros or controls." Again, a conclusion you have drawn for your own situation which, as your opinion, may or may not apply to someone else.When I try to type an equation in Word using Insert->Equation, I am given an error stating "The function you are attempting to run contains macros or content that requires macro language support. Hence, there's no reason for MathType except for the Inline Equation problem that you are experiencing. For the record though, MathType has had color capability since April 1999, when MathType 4 was released. That's incorrect, but what if MathType 6 did just introduce color? I'm not sure what your point is. Moreover, the built-in version supports colors, which Mathtype 6.0 just now introduced. That's only 5 differences there are more. Finally, MathType integrates very well into PowerPoint 2007, which the OMML EE does not. To do this with the OMML EE is a kludgy workaround. Fourth, with MathType you can easily number your display equations and include references in your text that link to the equation numbers. Third, the equation library in the OMML EE has very limited capability to organize your equations, while on the MathType toolbar you can arrange your equations however you want.
Second, Cambria Math won't print to some printers (such as the HP LJ 1200), and has sometimes shown to be problematic when converting to PDF (using Acrobat). If you're using Verdana in your document, for example, your equations will still be Cambria Math. The OMML EE has one choice - Cambria Math. First, you can change to any font you want in MathType. However, there are plenty of reasons why someone might decide the OMML Equation Editor (i.e., the "new equation editor" in Word 2007) is inadequate.
"Now that 2007 has it built in, there's really no reason I need MathType anymore." That's a personal decision, and if you don't need MathType anymore, I won't argue with that. I do need to respond to some inaccuracies in your post though. We appreciate the suggestion to look at MathType 6, and you are correct that MathType can display the limits above and below the summation symbol in inline equations. But now that 2007 has it built in, there's really no reason I need MathType anymore, although it may be a little more capable than the built in equation editor. It can display limits on top and below in Inline Equations. You may want to look at MathType 6.0 by DesignScience.