\author{Jill Tardival\\Computing Laboratory, University of Kent\\Email: \texttt{gmt@ukc.ac.uk}} \title{The Euromath System} \begin{Article} \noindent Mathematicians, scientists and engineers who use mathematical notation have particular typesetting needs which generally have not been met by available software. The principal problem is typesetting mathematical symbols in documents, which in the majority of cases is performed using edit/view cycles as with \LaTeX . Using such systems neither equations within mathematical documents, nor emails containing such notations, can be viewed directly from the authoring system. Mathematics is a science which depends on the use of complex symbols in order to describe abstract ideas and the laborious methods used to exchange ideas is perceived as a barrier to mathematical communication. The European Mathematical Trust (\acro{EMT}) was established to provide a powerful support system for the core of a mathematical computing environment. Software has been developed through European collaboration involving commercial organisations and academic mathematicians in France, Germany, Portugal, Denmark, Sweden, Eire, Slovakia and the \acro{UK}. The product is the Euromath system, an \acro{SGML} based, \acro{WYSIWYG}, mathematical editor, based on the Grif \acro{SGML} editor. The current version of Euromath (Em1) is Unix based and has three Document Type Definitions (\acro{DTD}s which determine the structure of documents) for creating articles, sheets and slides (\acro{OHP}s). All include the facility to manipulate \acro{WYSIWYG} mathematics without an editing/previewing cycle. Further \acro{DTD}s, including letter and fax, are scheduled for future releases. The incorporation of \LaTeX\ to \acro{SGML} conversion software for mathematics allows notation to be created in either of two ways. The appropriate symbols may be selected from symbol palettes, or if the author is already familiar with \LaTeX , the notation may be typed in as a \LaTeX\ string and converted to \acro{WYSIWYG} SGML using a preset key combination. The equation will be seen as it will appear in the document and edited using either method. Similarly certain \LaTeX\ documents containing mathematics can be converted on input to \acro{SGML} and edited in a \acro{WYSIWYG} fashion. Standard features of the editor include automatic updating and numbering, search and replace facilities, European (\acro{ISO}-Latin~1) language support, graphics inclusion (\acro{X}11 bitmaps, xwd, Idraw, \acro{EPSF}, \acro{CGM} and \acro{TIFF}) and \acro{WYSIWYG} generation of commutative diagrams. The Euromath software package includes a Gopher interface and automated on-line access to remote databases. Software which helps the user to create new \acro{DTD}s, and to link the editor to other applications is also incorporated in the Euromath package. Subsequent releases will include a \acro{PC} platform, an integrated mailing system, an extended help system, extra \acro{DTD}s, development of the directory services and an interface to computer algebra systems through the related OpenMath project. The Euromath project has been funded by the European Union Science programme. The European Mathematical Trust is a registered charity, financially based in the \acro{UK}. The editor is available to academic sites by subscription to Euromath. The current release is the first stage of a unified computer based \acro{WYSIWYG} mathematical environment. \end{Article}