Difference between revisions of "Naming Objects"

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In the symbol list of the input bar, you will find special characters for the following constants:
 
In the symbol list of the input bar, you will find special characters for the following constants:
* π - the circle constant pi, which you can also type with <Alt>p
+
* π - the circle constant pi, which you can also type with {{KeyCode|Alt-p}}
* ℯ - the Euler number, e.g. for the exponential function ℯ^x, which you can also type with <Alt>e
+
* ℯ - the Euler number, e.g. for the exponential function ℯ^x, which you can also type with {{KeyCode|Alt-e}}
* ί - the imaginary unit, e.g. for complex numbers like z = 3 + ί, which you can also type with <Alt>i
+
* ί - the imaginary unit, e.g. for complex numbers like z = 3 + ί, which you can also type with {{KeyCode|Alt-i}}
 
When the variable names e and i are not used yet, they are automatically read as ℯ and ί respectively for convenience.
 
When the variable names e and i are not used yet, they are automatically read as ℯ and ί respectively for convenience.
  
 
See also [[Labels and Captions]].
 
See also [[Labels and Captions]].

Revision as of 23:16, 13 September 2011


You can assign a certain name to an object when you create it using the Input Bar:

  • Points: In GeoGebra, points are always named using upper case letters. Just type in the name (e. g., A, P) and an equal sign in front of the coordinates or commands.
Example: C = (2, 4), P = (1; 180°)
  • Vectors: In order to distinguish between points and vectors, vectors need to have a lower case name in GeoGebra. Again, type in the name (e. g., v, u) and an equal sign in front of the coordinates or commands.
Example: v = (1, 3), u = (3; 90°)
  • Lines, circles, and conic sections: These objects can be named by typing in the name and a colon in front of their equations or commands.
Example: g: y = x + 3, c: (x-1)^2 + (y – 2)^2 = 4, hyp: x^2 – y^2 = 2
  • Functions: You can name functions by typing, for example, f(x) = or g(x)= in front of the function’s equation or commands.
Example: h(x) = 2 x + 4, q(x) = x^2, trig(x) = sin(x)
Note:
  • If you don’t manually assign a name to an object, GeoGebra assigns the names of new objects in alphabetical order.
  • You can create indices within the names of objects by using an underscore. For example A1 is entered as A_1 and sAB is entered as s_{AB}.

Reserved labels

These are the labels you can't use for objects: x, y, xAxis, yAxis, zAxis, abs, sgn, sqrt, exp, log, ln, ld, lg, cos, sin, tan, acos, arcos, arccos, asin, arcsin, atan, arctan, cosh, sinh, tanh, acosh, arcosh, arccosh, asinh, arcsinh, atanh, arctanh, atan2, erf, floor, ceil, round, random, conjugate, arg, gamma, gammaRegularized, beta, betaRegularized, sec, csc, cosec, cot, sech, csch, coth

In the symbol list of the input bar, you will find special characters for the following constants:

  • π - the circle constant pi, which you can also type with Alt-p
  • ℯ - the Euler number, e.g. for the exponential function ℯ^x, which you can also type with Alt-e
  • ί - the imaginary unit, e.g. for complex numbers like z = 3 + ί, which you can also type with Alt-i

When the variable names e and i are not used yet, they are automatically read as ℯ and ί respectively for convenience.

See also Labels and Captions.

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