Difference between revisions of "TrigCombine Command"

From GeoGebra Manual
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 6: Line 6:
 
;TrigCombine[ <Expression>, <Target Function> ]
 
;TrigCombine[ <Expression>, <Target Function> ]
 
:Transforms a trigonometric expression including products of trigonometric functions into an expression without products involving sums of variables, preferring the given target function.
 
:Transforms a trigonometric expression including products of trigonometric functions into an expression without products involving sums of variables, preferring the given target function.
:{{example|1=<code>TrigCombine[(tan(p) + tan(q)) / (1 - tan(p) tan(q)), tan(x)]</code> gives ''tan(p + q)''.}}
+
:{{example|1=<code>TrigCombine[(tan(x) + tan(y)) / (1 - tan(x) tan(y)), tan(x)]</code> gives ''tan(x + y)''.}}
 
==CAS Syntax==
 
==CAS Syntax==
 
;TrigCombine[ <Expression> ]
 
;TrigCombine[ <Expression> ]

Revision as of 08:35, 19 December 2012


TrigCombine[ <Expression> ]
Transforms a trigonometric expression including products of trigonometric functions into an expression without products involving sums of variables.
Example: TrigCombine[sin(x) cos(3x)] gives \frac{sin(4x)-sin(2x)}{2}.
TrigCombine[ <Expression>, <Target Function> ]
Transforms a trigonometric expression including products of trigonometric functions into an expression without products involving sums of variables, preferring the given target function.
Example: TrigCombine[(tan(x) + tan(y)) / (1 - tan(x) tan(y)), tan(x)] gives tan(x + y).

CAS Syntax

TrigCombine[ <Expression> ]
Transforms a trigonometric expression including products of trigonometric functions into an expression without products involving sums of variables.
Example: TrigCombine[sin(x) cos(3x)] gives \frac{sin(4x)-sin(2x)}{2}.
TrigCombine[ <Expression>, <Target Function> ]
Transforms a trigonometric expression including products of trigonometric functions into an expression without products involving sums of variables, preferring the given target function.
Example: TrigCombine[(tan(p) + tan(q)) / (1 - tan(p) tan(q)), tan(x)] gives tan(p + q).
© 2024 International GeoGebra Institute