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Scaling Constrained
Maple plots can be constrained or unconstrained.
Plots are unconstrained by default, which means the plot is scaled to fit the plot window. For example, the plot of a circle on unconstrained axes may appear oval or flattened so that the largest possible diagram can fit in the plot object.
Plots are constrained when the scales in all directions are of equal proportion. In this case, the plot of a circle appears perfectly round because the x and y axes are scaled in equal proportions.
To use Maple commands to alter data structures in standard plots, see plottools.
For plots containing dual axes, the constraining only applies to the first vertical axis.
Note: Scaling is not applicable for polarplots.
Changing the Plot Scaling
Click the plot to select it.
Alternatively, right-click (Control-click, for Macintosh) the plot to activate the context menu.
From the Plot menu, select the Scaling Constrained check box. Alternatively, clear the check box to display an unconstrained plot.
See Also
Modify the Appearance of Three-Dimensional Plots, Modify the Appearance of Two-Dimensional Plots, Overview of Plot Menu, plot, plot3d, plot3d[option], plot[options], plottools, Use Context Menus for Plots
Download Help Document