Difference between revisions of "Asymptote: Useful commands and their Output"
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For each of the following, we have put a blue dot at the origin in order to indicate relative location of the output on the coordinate plane. In other words, assume that before each of the examples below is the command | For each of the following, we have put a blue dot at the origin in order to indicate relative location of the output on the coordinate plane. In other words, assume that before each of the examples below is the command | ||
<tt>dot((0,0),blue);</tt> | <tt>dot((0,0),blue);</tt> | ||
− | In addition, a comment after a line such as <tt>//math - extension</tt> indicates that the command (in this case extension) used in that line is defined in the <tt>math</tt> package, thus motivating the <tt>include math;</tt> (or other appropriate package) line at the top of the example. | + | In addition, a comment after a line such as <tt>//math - extension</tt> indicates that the command (in this case <tt>extension</tt>) used in that line is defined in the <tt>math</tt> package, thus motivating the <tt>include math;</tt> (or other appropriate package) line at the top of the example. |
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Revision as of 07:11, 5 February 2007
For each of the following, we have put a blue dot at the origin in order to indicate relative location of the output on the coordinate plane. In other words, assume that before each of the examples below is the command
dot((0,0),blue);
In addition, a comment after a line such as //math - extension indicates that the command (in this case extension) used in that line is defined in the math package, thus motivating the include math; (or other appropriate package) line at the top of the example.
Example 1:
dot((20,0));
Example 2:
draw((0,0)--(50,0),BeginArrow); draw((0,-10)--(50,-10),MidArrow); draw((0,-30)--(50,-30),Arrows);
Example 3:
draw((0,0)--(50,0)); arrow((30,0),dir(180),green);
Example 4:
include math; pair A,B,C,D,E; A=(0,0); C=(50,0); B=(10,10); D=(40,20); E=extension(A,B,C,D); // math - extension // extension(A,B,C,D) returns the intersection of lines AB and CD draw(A--B); draw(C--D); draw(B--E--D,orange);
Example 5:
include graph; draw(Circle((0,0),20)); // graph - Circle
Example 6:
path p=(0,0)..(20,15)..(40,-5)..(50,0); draw(p); draw(rotate(90)*p,green); draw(rotate(180,(-5,0))*p,orange); draw(shift((5,20))*p,magenta); draw(shift((0,-25))*yscale(1.4)*p,red);
Example 7:
include olympiad; pair A,B,C,O,I; A=origin; B=2*right; C=1.5*dir(70); O=circumcenter(A,B,C); // olympiad - circumcenter I=incenter(A,B,C); // olympiad - incenter draw(A--B--C--cycle); dot(O); dot(I); draw(circumcircle(A,B,C)); // olympiad - circumcircle draw(incircle(A,B,C)); // olympiad - incircle label("",I,W); label("",O,S);
Example 8:
include three; unitsize(1inch); currentprojection=orthographic(1/2,-1,1/2); // three - currentprojection, orthographic draw((0,0,0)--(1,0,0)--(1,1,0)--(0,1,0)--cycle3,red); //three - cycle3 draw((0,0,0)--(0,0,1)); draw((0,1,0)--(0,1,1)); draw((1,1,0)--(1,1,1)); draw((1,0,0)--(1,0,1)); draw((0,0,1)--(1,0,1)--(1,1,1)--(0,1,1)--cycle3,green);