3-D graphing software?

Peter Lauri peterlauri at gmail.com
Tue Nov 20 19:18:34 UTC 2007


gnuplot?

On Tue, 2007-11-20 at 11:14 -0800, Dean S. Messing wrote:
> Dotan Cohen wrote:
> : In an advanced Calculus course, we are dealing with functions with 2
> : (and more) variables. Is there any 3-D graphing software for Fedora
> : available? Something like Kalgebra, but with a bit more functions such
> : as multiple functions graphed at the same time, asymptote min max and
> : other significant points, zoom into 3-D graph, graph of derivative and
> : integral, etc. Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
> 
> I'm surprised that nobody has mentioned the excellent Scilab
> system. It is put out by INRIA in France (similar to Sandia or Los
> Alamos Nat'l Labs here in the States.) It is FOSS software.
> 
> Like Octave, it is a very high level "rapid prototyping" language.  By
> "high level" I mean that with great ease one can do a lot of
> mathematical computation.
> 
> As a simple example, to solve a system of equations,  M*x = b,
> where M is the matrix of coefficients, one merely writes
> 
> x = M\b;
> 
> You may recognise this as Matlab code. Scilab is meant to be nearly
> identical to Matlab except for the plotting commands. It runs on
> both Window and Linux.
> 
> Plotting facilities are good.  You can plot multiple 3D graphs and
> then individually rotate them in 3D with your mouse or from the
> command-line.  If you are an Emacs user like me, then you will enjoy
> using the Emacs Scilab mode instead of the native Scilab command
> window.  The plotting facilities allow you do almost anything with
> regard to axis labeling, scaling, view angles.
> 
> Scilab (like Matlab) has several "toolboxes" which people have written
> for special purposes.  The one I use extensively in my research in SIP
> (Scilab Image Processing).
> 
> Scilab is not symbolic so you won't be able to compute symbolic
> derivatives, but it can do numerical differentiation which can
> then be plotted.
> 
> There is a USENET news support group and several people on it are
> experts who have written texts on Scilab so help is available when you
> have questions.
> 
> Go to <http://www.scilab.org/> for more information.
> 
> Dean
> 




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