I have just written an answer to a question, where I felt the explanation would suffer visually if I couldn't use math notation and graphs freely to explain the logical errors behind it. So I've taken the liberty of describing the method I used there in a meta post as a workaround for the highly-requested/disputed MathJax solution, hopefully to help out people who have the same problem, and possibly interest the SO devs in that kind of approach as an alternative to MathJax.
However, whether MathJax should or should not be used for such a thing (and I am fully aware and accept many of the reasons outlined in the answers to this now-controversially popular question) it is my impression that there is a big divide of opinion regarding to what extent latex math (or math notation in general) is useful or necessary on SO.
It seems to me that the community is divided between opinions like this or this, who feel math has almost no place in SO, versus people who keep getting disgruntled because they want to use it all the time, and that both opinions are vocal, but there is no real indication of how many *actual* users would benefit, or are hurt by the absence of such a tool, or at least a standardised workaround.
So, I was hoping people might post / link to answers or comments below demonstrating and discussing actual use cases for math on SO, and present actual arguments on why math notation is useful or not on this forum (like my example above), to gauge whether there's an actual need for a more appropriate bespoke solution, as opposed to resorting to cumbersome / nonstandardised workarounds like the one I posted.
To clarify: whether or not this solution ends up being MathJax or not is not the question I'm asking. The question I'm asking is "can we finally gauge whether this need is real or not from the actual users here, rather than rely on anecdotal evidence and scattered opinions on whether it is or isn't an issue?" If we gauge that it is, then maybe we can discuss how to approach the problem (MathJax or otherwise). If it is not, then we can put that issue to rest, fully confident that we are not disgruntling a large majority of users (and specifically of the scientific programming user group).