How to plot function sin(x)^2 / x^2
up vote
12
down vote
favorite
The above function looks like this:
However, using tikzpicture with addplot
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Gives the following disturbing result:
How should I plot sin(x)^2 / x^2
in tikz?
tikz-pgf gnuplot
New contributor
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
12
down vote
favorite
The above function looks like this:
However, using tikzpicture with addplot
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Gives the following disturbing result:
How should I plot sin(x)^2 / x^2
in tikz?
tikz-pgf gnuplot
New contributor
3
(1) welcome, (2) as always on this site you are much much more likely to get help if you provide a full minimal example that others can copy and test as is. Then they will not have to guess 80% of your setup.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:53
1
Thanks for the tip, I've done that now!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 10:57
8
Try more samples andsin(deg(x))
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:58
Yes, it seems sin(deg(x)) is required when plotting sin(x). Thanks!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 11:23
1
@daleif Damn! I did not see your comment :) Also sampling is just as fine, as it is now. Onlydeg(...)
is necessary withsin
.
– Raaja
Nov 20 at 11:41
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
12
down vote
favorite
up vote
12
down vote
favorite
The above function looks like this:
However, using tikzpicture with addplot
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Gives the following disturbing result:
How should I plot sin(x)^2 / x^2
in tikz?
tikz-pgf gnuplot
New contributor
The above function looks like this:
However, using tikzpicture with addplot
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Gives the following disturbing result:
How should I plot sin(x)^2 / x^2
in tikz?
tikz-pgf gnuplot
tikz-pgf gnuplot
New contributor
New contributor
edited Nov 20 at 10:56
New contributor
asked Nov 20 at 10:48
MrMartin
1038
1038
New contributor
New contributor
3
(1) welcome, (2) as always on this site you are much much more likely to get help if you provide a full minimal example that others can copy and test as is. Then they will not have to guess 80% of your setup.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:53
1
Thanks for the tip, I've done that now!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 10:57
8
Try more samples andsin(deg(x))
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:58
Yes, it seems sin(deg(x)) is required when plotting sin(x). Thanks!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 11:23
1
@daleif Damn! I did not see your comment :) Also sampling is just as fine, as it is now. Onlydeg(...)
is necessary withsin
.
– Raaja
Nov 20 at 11:41
|
show 3 more comments
3
(1) welcome, (2) as always on this site you are much much more likely to get help if you provide a full minimal example that others can copy and test as is. Then they will not have to guess 80% of your setup.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:53
1
Thanks for the tip, I've done that now!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 10:57
8
Try more samples andsin(deg(x))
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:58
Yes, it seems sin(deg(x)) is required when plotting sin(x). Thanks!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 11:23
1
@daleif Damn! I did not see your comment :) Also sampling is just as fine, as it is now. Onlydeg(...)
is necessary withsin
.
– Raaja
Nov 20 at 11:41
3
3
(1) welcome, (2) as always on this site you are much much more likely to get help if you provide a full minimal example that others can copy and test as is. Then they will not have to guess 80% of your setup.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:53
(1) welcome, (2) as always on this site you are much much more likely to get help if you provide a full minimal example that others can copy and test as is. Then they will not have to guess 80% of your setup.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:53
1
1
Thanks for the tip, I've done that now!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 10:57
Thanks for the tip, I've done that now!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 10:57
8
8
Try more samples and
sin(deg(x))
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:58
Try more samples and
sin(deg(x))
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:58
Yes, it seems sin(deg(x)) is required when plotting sin(x). Thanks!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 11:23
Yes, it seems sin(deg(x)) is required when plotting sin(x). Thanks!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 11:23
1
1
@daleif Damn! I did not see your comment :) Also sampling is just as fine, as it is now. Only
deg(...)
is necessary with sin
.– Raaja
Nov 20 at 11:41
@daleif Damn! I did not see your comment :) Also sampling is just as fine, as it is now. Only
deg(...)
is necessary with sin
.– Raaja
Nov 20 at 11:41
|
show 3 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
As commented by @daleif, the problem is that the trigonometric functions in pgfplots are defined with the argument in degrees, not in radians. So you are calculating the function really near zero, and you have huge rounding errors (and wrong scale...).
You can use sin(deg(x))
to do the conversion, or globally switch with pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
.
Notice however that the manual states:
/pgf/trig format=deg|red [sic, should be rad]
Allows to reconfigure
the trigonometric format for all user arguments. This affects all user
arguments including view, Tik Z polar coordinates, pins of nodes,
start/end angles for edges, etc. At the time of this writing, this
feature is in experimental state: it can happen that it breaks Tik Z
internals. Please handle with care and report any bugs.
In this case it works:
documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}pgfplotsset{compat=newest}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Notice also that you have to avoid the point x=0
in your drawing, where the function is undefined... this is with:
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=151,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
A PSTricks solution for comparison purpose only.
documentclass[pstricks,border=12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot}
deff{(sin(x)/x)^2}
psset
{
yunit=4cm,
xunit=.5cm
}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,plotpoints=200](-12,-.1)(12.5,1.2)
psaxes[Dx=5]{->}(0,0)(-12,-.1)(12,1.1)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot[linecolor=blue]{-12}{12}{f}
uput[45](*.7 {f}){$displaystyle f(x)=frac{sin^2(x)}{x^2}$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
It seems that the problem is with pgfplots
, and it can be solved by switching to gnuplot
:
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot [no markers] gnuplot [domain=-6:6, samples=50] {sin(x)**2/x**2};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
New contributor
1
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
As commented by @daleif, the problem is that the trigonometric functions in pgfplots are defined with the argument in degrees, not in radians. So you are calculating the function really near zero, and you have huge rounding errors (and wrong scale...).
You can use sin(deg(x))
to do the conversion, or globally switch with pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
.
Notice however that the manual states:
/pgf/trig format=deg|red [sic, should be rad]
Allows to reconfigure
the trigonometric format for all user arguments. This affects all user
arguments including view, Tik Z polar coordinates, pins of nodes,
start/end angles for edges, etc. At the time of this writing, this
feature is in experimental state: it can happen that it breaks Tik Z
internals. Please handle with care and report any bugs.
In this case it works:
documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}pgfplotsset{compat=newest}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Notice also that you have to avoid the point x=0
in your drawing, where the function is undefined... this is with:
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=151,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
As commented by @daleif, the problem is that the trigonometric functions in pgfplots are defined with the argument in degrees, not in radians. So you are calculating the function really near zero, and you have huge rounding errors (and wrong scale...).
You can use sin(deg(x))
to do the conversion, or globally switch with pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
.
Notice however that the manual states:
/pgf/trig format=deg|red [sic, should be rad]
Allows to reconfigure
the trigonometric format for all user arguments. This affects all user
arguments including view, Tik Z polar coordinates, pins of nodes,
start/end angles for edges, etc. At the time of this writing, this
feature is in experimental state: it can happen that it breaks Tik Z
internals. Please handle with care and report any bugs.
In this case it works:
documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}pgfplotsset{compat=newest}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Notice also that you have to avoid the point x=0
in your drawing, where the function is undefined... this is with:
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=151,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
up vote
8
down vote
accepted
As commented by @daleif, the problem is that the trigonometric functions in pgfplots are defined with the argument in degrees, not in radians. So you are calculating the function really near zero, and you have huge rounding errors (and wrong scale...).
You can use sin(deg(x))
to do the conversion, or globally switch with pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
.
Notice however that the manual states:
/pgf/trig format=deg|red [sic, should be rad]
Allows to reconfigure
the trigonometric format for all user arguments. This affects all user
arguments including view, Tik Z polar coordinates, pins of nodes,
start/end angles for edges, etc. At the time of this writing, this
feature is in experimental state: it can happen that it breaks Tik Z
internals. Please handle with care and report any bugs.
In this case it works:
documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}pgfplotsset{compat=newest}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Notice also that you have to avoid the point x=0
in your drawing, where the function is undefined... this is with:
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=151,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
As commented by @daleif, the problem is that the trigonometric functions in pgfplots are defined with the argument in degrees, not in radians. So you are calculating the function really near zero, and you have huge rounding errors (and wrong scale...).
You can use sin(deg(x))
to do the conversion, or globally switch with pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
.
Notice however that the manual states:
/pgf/trig format=deg|red [sic, should be rad]
Allows to reconfigure
the trigonometric format for all user arguments. This affects all user
arguments including view, Tik Z polar coordinates, pins of nodes,
start/end angles for edges, etc. At the time of this writing, this
feature is in experimental state: it can happen that it breaks Tik Z
internals. Please handle with care and report any bugs.
In this case it works:
documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}pgfplotsset{compat=newest}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
pgfplotsset{trig format=rad}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=50,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Notice also that you have to avoid the point x=0
in your drawing, where the function is undefined... this is with:
addplot[domain=-6:6,samples=151,smooth,red] { (sin(x)^2)/pow(x,2) };
answered Nov 20 at 16:31
Rmano
7,50721647
7,50721647
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
A PSTricks solution for comparison purpose only.
documentclass[pstricks,border=12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot}
deff{(sin(x)/x)^2}
psset
{
yunit=4cm,
xunit=.5cm
}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,plotpoints=200](-12,-.1)(12.5,1.2)
psaxes[Dx=5]{->}(0,0)(-12,-.1)(12,1.1)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot[linecolor=blue]{-12}{12}{f}
uput[45](*.7 {f}){$displaystyle f(x)=frac{sin^2(x)}{x^2}$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
A PSTricks solution for comparison purpose only.
documentclass[pstricks,border=12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot}
deff{(sin(x)/x)^2}
psset
{
yunit=4cm,
xunit=.5cm
}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,plotpoints=200](-12,-.1)(12.5,1.2)
psaxes[Dx=5]{->}(0,0)(-12,-.1)(12,1.1)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot[linecolor=blue]{-12}{12}{f}
uput[45](*.7 {f}){$displaystyle f(x)=frac{sin^2(x)}{x^2}$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
A PSTricks solution for comparison purpose only.
documentclass[pstricks,border=12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot}
deff{(sin(x)/x)^2}
psset
{
yunit=4cm,
xunit=.5cm
}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,plotpoints=200](-12,-.1)(12.5,1.2)
psaxes[Dx=5]{->}(0,0)(-12,-.1)(12,1.1)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot[linecolor=blue]{-12}{12}{f}
uput[45](*.7 {f}){$displaystyle f(x)=frac{sin^2(x)}{x^2}$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}
A PSTricks solution for comparison purpose only.
documentclass[pstricks,border=12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot}
deff{(sin(x)/x)^2}
psset
{
yunit=4cm,
xunit=.5cm
}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,plotpoints=200](-12,-.1)(12.5,1.2)
psaxes[Dx=5]{->}(0,0)(-12,-.1)(12,1.1)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot[linecolor=blue]{-12}{12}{f}
uput[45](*.7 {f}){$displaystyle f(x)=frac{sin^2(x)}{x^2}$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}
edited Nov 20 at 11:15
answered Nov 20 at 11:01
Artificial Stupidity
4,8711833
4,8711833
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
It seems that the problem is with pgfplots
, and it can be solved by switching to gnuplot
:
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot [no markers] gnuplot [domain=-6:6, samples=50] {sin(x)**2/x**2};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
New contributor
1
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
It seems that the problem is with pgfplots
, and it can be solved by switching to gnuplot
:
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot [no markers] gnuplot [domain=-6:6, samples=50] {sin(x)**2/x**2};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
New contributor
1
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
It seems that the problem is with pgfplots
, and it can be solved by switching to gnuplot
:
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot [no markers] gnuplot [domain=-6:6, samples=50] {sin(x)**2/x**2};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
New contributor
It seems that the problem is with pgfplots
, and it can be solved by switching to gnuplot
:
documentclass[11pt]{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}
addplot [no markers] gnuplot [domain=-6:6, samples=50] {sin(x)**2/x**2};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
New contributor
New contributor
answered Nov 20 at 11:01
MrMartin
1038
1038
New contributor
New contributor
1
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
add a comment |
1
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
1
1
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
Nope, works just fine for me without gnuplot.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 11:17
add a comment |
MrMartin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
MrMartin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
MrMartin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
MrMartin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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3
(1) welcome, (2) as always on this site you are much much more likely to get help if you provide a full minimal example that others can copy and test as is. Then they will not have to guess 80% of your setup.
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:53
1
Thanks for the tip, I've done that now!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 10:57
8
Try more samples and
sin(deg(x))
– daleif
Nov 20 at 10:58
Yes, it seems sin(deg(x)) is required when plotting sin(x). Thanks!
– MrMartin
Nov 20 at 11:23
1
@daleif Damn! I did not see your comment :) Also sampling is just as fine, as it is now. Only
deg(...)
is necessary withsin
.– Raaja
Nov 20 at 11:41