The current release of this package typesets mathematics with unicode input and using OpenType maths fonts. (There is little compatibility with older maths packages.) XeTeX support is well tested, though LuaTeX support less so.
The package can typeset using STIX fonts, the XITS development of those fonts, the Asana-Math fonts and the commercial Cambria Math fonts. There is no support yet for any extra alphabets in the Unicode ‘private use area'.
The package relies on recent versions of the fontspec package and the l3kernel and l3packages bundles.
On September 20, 1996, Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdös passed away. He published more scientific papers than any other mathematician in history, with hundreds of collaborators.
On October 23, 1635, German astronomer and mathematician Wilhelm Schickard, who constructued the very first mechanical calculator, passed away. His famous calculator was able to perform additions and subtractions. For more complicated operations, it provided so-called Napier bones, named after the Scottish mathematician John Napier, who came up with the idea of logarithms. Although it is widely believed that the first mechanical calculating device was created by the French mathematician Blaise Pascal in 1642. However, that distinction actually belongs to Wilhelm Schickard.
On January 12, 1665, French lawyer and amateur mathematician Pierre de Fermat, famous for his research in number theory, analytical geometry and probability theory, passed away. He is best known for Fermat's Last Theorem, which he described in a note at the margin of a copy of Diophantus' Arithmetica.
D. Dominici, P. Gill, and T. Limpanuparb. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Science, 468 (2145):
2667-2681(September 2012)
M. Raginsky, and I. Sason. (2012)cite arxiv:1212.4663Comment: Foundations and Trends in Communications and Information Theory, vol. 10, no 1-2, pp. 1-248, 2013. Second edition was published in October 2014. ISBN to printed book: 978-1-60198-906-2.
M. Cheng, J. Duncan, and J. Harvey. (2012)cite arxiv:1204.2779Comment: 124 pages, 75 tables; updated references and minor editing in v.2; minor editing and two new theorems in v.3.