Difference between revisions of "Radius Command"

From GeoGebra Manual
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Text replace - "<div class="box info"> 48px|left This page is part of the official manual for print and pdf. For structural reasons normal users can't edit this page. If you found any errors on this page please contact )
(command syntax: changed [ ] into ( ))
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<noinclude>{{Manual Page|version=4.2}}</noinclude>
+
<noinclude>{{Manual Page|version=5.0}}</noinclude>{{command|geometry}}
{{command|geometry}}
+
; Radius( <Conic> )
; Radius[Circle]: Returns the radius of the circle.
+
:Returns the radius of a conic.
  
{{example| 1=<div>Returns the radius of a circle c (e.g. c:(x - 1)² + (y - 1)² = 9) </div><div><code><nowiki>Radius[c]</nowiki></code> yields a = 3</div>}}
+
:{{examples| 1=<div>
{{example| 1=<div>Returns the radius of a circle formula</div><div><code><nowiki>Radius[(x - 2)² + (y - 2)² = 16]</nowiki></code> yields a = 4</div>}}
+
:*Returns the radius of a circle c (e.g. c:(x - 1)² + (y - 1)² = 9) <code><nowiki>Radius(c)</nowiki></code> yields ''a = 3''.
 +
:*Returns the radius of a circle formula <code><nowiki>Radius((x - 2)² + (y - 2)² = 16)</nowiki></code> yields ''a = 4''.</div>}}

Latest revision as of 10:38, 11 October 2017


Radius( <Conic> )
Returns the radius of a conic.
Examples:
  • Returns the radius of a circle c (e.g. c:(x - 1)² + (y - 1)² = 9) Radius(c) yields a = 3.
  • Returns the radius of a circle formula Radius((x - 2)² + (y - 2)² = 16) yields a = 4.
© 2024 International GeoGebra Institute