Capture formulas from PowerPoint slides, PDF lecture decks, online course slides, or classroom screenshots and convert them into Word-ready editable equations.
Quick answer: Open the lecture slide, capture a clear screenshot or crop of the equation, paste or upload it to Miss Formula, then copy the recognized Word-ready equation into Microsoft Word.
Start from PowerPoint, PDF decks, online course slides, classroom screens, or shared lecture notes.
Snip only the formula area so slide titles, diagrams, and surrounding text do not clutter the image.
Paste recognized equations into Microsoft Word and keep editing them in homework, reports, or notes.
Use LaTeX output from the same conversion when the formula also belongs in Overleaf or Markdown.
Turn important slide formulas into editable content instead of storing them as static screenshots.
Recognized formulas can be exported to one Word file with one click for collected study material.
Use presentation mode, zoom in, or open the PDF deck at a size where the equation is easy to read.
Take a screenshot or snip of the formula, keeping small symbols, subscripts, and superscripts visible.
Add the slide crop to Miss Formula and let the online converter recognize the equation structure.
Paste the Word-ready output into Microsoft Word, then compare it with the original slide before submitting or sharing.
Lecture slides often store equations as images, rendered objects, or flattened content inside a PDF. Even when the formula looks correct on the slide, copy-paste may give you a picture, broken symbols, or text that cannot be edited as an equation in Word.
To copy equations from lecture slides to Word, use the visible formula as the source. Capture the slide equation, recognize it with Miss Formula, and paste editable math into your Word document.
Use the highest available slide resolution, crop tightly around the equation, and avoid including presenter controls or captions. If the slide contains multiple formulas, convert one formula or aligned block at a time so the result is easier to review.
For equations captured from videos, see Copy Equations from YouTube Video to Word. For any screen capture, use Screenshot to Equations or Snip Equation to Word. If you need LaTeX from the same slide, see Snip to LaTeX.
Can I copy equations from PowerPoint slides to Word?
Yes. Capture a clear equation screenshot from the slide, convert it with Miss Formula, and paste the recognized Word-ready equation into Word.
Does this work for PDF lecture slides?
Yes. Open the PDF deck, crop the equation area, and upload or paste the image into Miss Formula.
Can I export several recognized slide formulas to Word?
Yes. Recognized formulas can be exported to one Word file with one click after conversion.
Capture the slide formula, recognize it online, and paste editable math into your Word notes or report.
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