Convert LaTeX Equations from LLMs to Word
Many AI models like ChatGPT and Gemini output math as LaTeX equations inside Markdown. This tool is built specifically to keep those LaTeX equations and math formulas intact when you export to Word, so you do not have to retype each formula in the equation editor. It is especially useful when you copy Markdown from Gemini and want the equations to survive the trip into a Word document.
Quick steps
- In ChatGPT or Gemini, ask for an answer in Markdown and use LaTeX for equations (inline
$...$, block$$...$$). - Copy the entire answer, including text, lists, tables, and equations.
- Open the LLM to Word Converter and paste the content into the left textarea.
- Check the preview: make sure LaTeX formulas, integrals, matrices, and other symbols render correctly.
- Click Download Word Doc to get a Word document that is ready to edit.
Tips for working with formulas
- Use
$...$for inline math and$$...$$for display math so the converter can consistently detect equation blocks. - Avoid mixing LaTeX inside code blocks unless you intentionally want it to appear as code rather than an equation.
- If rendering errors appear, double-check your LaTeX syntax (braces, backslashes, etc.) in the preview before downloading the Word document.
FAQ
Can ChatGPT export LaTeX equations directly to Word?
Not reliably. ChatGPT and similar models usually return LaTeX inside Markdown, not native Word equations. This converter keeps the LaTeX equations as rendered math in HTML and then packages them into a Word document so you can open and edit the document in Word.
How do I preserve Markdown tables and lists when exporting to Word?
Paste the Markdown or rich text from your LLM directly into the LLM to Word Converter. The tool normalizes Markdown tables and nested lists so they render cleanly in the preview and carry over correctly into the generated Word document.
Can this tool handle LaTeX matrices and integrals?
Yes. As long as the LaTeX syntax is valid, the converter can render integrals, fractions, sums, products, and matrices (for example using \begin{bmatrix} ... \end{bmatrix}) and include them in the Word export.