

There might be a version with a nicer special fonts prettyprinter, maybe on linux, I didn't try (yet). Use a menu option to chose a separate plot window.

The 3D plot is not a perspective projection with fixed aspect ratio, it is not in that way correct, but it works interactive (clicking the mouse on it and translating makes it sort of rotate. In the bottom window, double click on the blue links to make them work. I've downloaded the windows version, (see above) june 2004, which works fine, and shows for isntance these pictures by just a few clicks:Ī Riemann surface 3D plot from the examples TV: I'm looking into maxima for reasons of lack of mathematica license, and because there are at least half a dozen applications I find interesting for mathematical symbolic manipulation, including a tcl formula manipulator, physics problems, maybe my string simulator, (electronic) network analysis, maybe drawing certain graphs, etc, and a bit of mathematical recreation of course. TV : I'll be doing a beginners tutorial on Tcl with maxima and bwise at Fosdem 2005 end of februari, see and the schedule.
Insert a graph in texmacs how to#
See the page Calling Maxima from Tcl for a thorough description of how to hook into the Tk version of Maxima from Tcl. See the page Maxima through a pipe for a rudimentary programmatic interface to the command line Maxima. It's also: 1) a car, 2) a princess, 3) the plural of "maximum" in several languages, beginning with Latin, and the name of an ancient place, e.g. Of course you can also run it from the command line. One of its interfaces is constructed with Tk.

Maxima is an open-source work-(much-)alike to Mathematica or Maple.
