coords - Maple Help
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Set Coordinate System for 3-D Plots

 

Description

Examples

Description

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The default coordinate system for all three dimensional plotting commands is the Cartesian coordinate system.  The coords option allows the user to alter this coordinate system.  The alternate choices are: bipolarcylindrical, bispherical, cardioidal, cardioidcylindrical, casscylindrical, confocalellip, confocalparab, conical, cylindrical, ellcylindrical, ellipsoidal, hypercylindrical, invcasscylindrical, invellcylindrical, invoblspheroidal, invprospheroidal, logcoshcylindrical, logcylindrical, maxwellcylindrical, oblatespheroidal, paraboloidal, paracylindrical, prolatespheroidal, rosecylindrical, sixsphere, spherical, spherical_math, spherical_physics, tangentcylindrical, tangentsphere, and toroidal.

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For a description of each of the above coordinate systems, see the coords help page.

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When using Cartesian coordinates, z, the vertical coordinate, is expressed as a function of x and y: .

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For alternate coordinate systems this is interpreted differently. For example, when using cylindrical coordinates, Maple expects the command to be of the following form: .

  

r, the distance to the projection of the point in the x-y plane from the origin, is a function of theta, the counterclockwise angle from the positive x-axis, and of z, the height above the x-y plane.

  

For spherical coordinates the interpretation is: .

  

where theta is the counterclockwise angle measured from the x-axis in the x-y plane.  phi is the angle measured from the positive z-axis, or the colatitude.  These angles determine the direction from the origin while the distance from the origin, r, is a function of phi and theta.  A second convention for spherical coordinates is also available, called spherical_physics, in which the meanings of the second and third coordinates are swapped.  For details, see coords. Other coordinate systems have similar interpretations.

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The conversions from the various coordinate systems to Cartesian coordinates can be found in coords.

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All coordinate systems are also valid for parametrically defined 3-D plots with the same interpretations of the coordinate system transformations.

Examples

Define a new cylindrical system so  instead of :

The command to create the plot from the Plotting Guide is

See Also

addcoords

coords

plot3d

plot3d/option

plots[changecoords]

plots[coordplot]

 


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