Pause a math lecture, tutorial, or research video, capture the formula on screen, and convert it into a Word-ready editable equation online.
Quick answer: Pause the YouTube video where the full equation is visible, take a clear screenshot or snip, paste or upload it to Miss Formula, then copy the recognized Word-ready equation into Microsoft Word.
Start from paused YouTube lectures, tutorials, course videos, conference talks, or screen recordings.
Crop the formula area so the equation is readable and not mixed with distracting video controls.
Paste recognized equations into Microsoft Word and keep editing them in your notes or report.
Use LaTeX output when the same formula belongs in Overleaf, Markdown, or technical notes.
Move formulas from video explanations into editable class notes instead of leaving them as screenshots.
Convert YouTube equation screenshots in the browser without installing a desktop formula editor.
Pause the video when the equation is fully visible. Increase video quality or zoom the browser if the formula is small.
Use a screenshot tool to snip only the formula or the smallest useful area around it.
Add the captured image to Miss Formula and let the online converter recognize the equation structure.
Paste the Word-ready result into Microsoft Word and compare it with the paused video before continuing your notes.
YouTube videos do not provide editable equation source. A lecture may show the formula on a board, slide, tablet, or shared screen, but direct copy-paste is not available. A plain screenshot is quick, yet it remains a static image inside Word.
To copy equations from YouTube video to Word, use the video frame as a visual source. Capture the formula, recognize it with Miss Formula, and paste an editable equation into your document.
Use the highest available video quality, pause on a sharp frame, avoid motion blur, and crop out captions or player controls. If the video shows a long derivation, capture one line or expression at a time so the recognized result is easier to review.
For a general screen capture workflow, see Screenshot to Equations. For formula snips that need Word output, use Snip Equation to Word. If you need LaTeX from the same video frame, see Snip to LaTeX or Image to LaTeX for Overleaf.
Can I copy equations from a YouTube video into Word?
Yes. Pause the video, capture a clear equation screenshot, convert it with Miss Formula, and paste the recognized Word-ready equation into Word.
Do I need to download the YouTube video?
No. A clear screenshot or snip of the visible formula is enough for the online conversion workflow.
Can recognized video equations be exported to a Word file?
Yes. Recognized formulas can be exported to one Word file with one click.
Pause the video, capture the equation, and paste editable math into your Word document.
Try Miss Formula Free