Rebuild math-heavy PDFs as editable LaTeX
document-to-latex helps reconstruct equations, symbols, and surrounding structure from math-heavy PDFs into source you can inspect.
For formulas, derivations, and technical notation
Math PDFs are difficult to convert because meaning lives in superscripts, subscripts, alignment, equation numbering, and spacing.
The converter is designed to identify displayed equations, inline formulas, theorem-like blocks, and surrounding explanatory text.
Use it for lecture notes, derivations, preprints, problem sets, and technical reports where retyping formulas would take too long.
Math-focused conversion workflow
- 01
Upload a clear PDF with visible formulas and notation.
- 02
Let the converter rebuild text, displayed equations, and inline math.
- 03
Compare the rendered LaTeX with the original page for each derivation.
- 04
Correct symbols, equation numbering, and alignment where needed.
- 05
Export the project once the math review is complete.
Math-specific benefits
Helps turn formulas into editable LaTeX instead of static images.
Aims to preserve displayed equation structure and alignment.
Supports review of each rendered page against the source PDF.
Useful for lecture scripts, notes, papers, and exercise sheets.
Lets you continue editing notation in Overleaf or locally.
Math needs careful checking
- Similar-looking symbols can be confused, especially in scans.
- Long aligned derivations may need manual alignment cleanup.
- Custom macros from the original source are not recoverable from the PDF.
- Review formulas before submitting, teaching, or publishing the result.
Common questions
Can it convert equations into LaTeX?
It is designed to help reconstruct equations as LaTeX, but complex notation should be checked manually.
Does it handle inline math?
Yes, the converter aims to preserve both inline and displayed math where the source is readable.
What about theorem environments?
The system may identify theorem-like structure, but you may want to adapt environments to your own template.
Are equation numbers preserved?
Visible equation numbers can often be reconstructed, but numbering and labels should be reviewed.
Is this suitable for handwritten math?
Clear handwriting can be attempted, but handwritten math generally requires more correction than printed PDFs.
Keep exploring
Continue with nearby converter pages, pricing, or the product overview.
Convert, compare, then edit
Upload a PDF, inspect the generated LaTeX render beside the original, and review before submitting or sharing the result.