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restart;
with(geometry);
with(plots);
Bl := color = black;
y0 := x -> -ln(1 - exp(-x));
y0 := proc (x) options operator, arrow; -ln(1-exp(-x)) end proc

y1 := x -> -ln(-1 + exp(-x));
y1 := proc (x) options operator, arrow; -ln(-1+exp(-x)) end proc

y2 := x -> -ln(1 + exp(-x));
y2 := proc (x) options operator, arrow; -ln(1+exp(-x)) end proc

p := plot(y0(x), x = 0.02 .. 4, scaling = constrained, color = blue);
p1 := plot(y2(x), x = -4 .. 4, scaling = constrained, color = green);
p2 := plot(y1(x), x = -4 .. 0, scaling = constrained, color = red);
display({p, p1, p2}, view = [-4 .. 4, -4 .. 5]);
Calculate its area; Thank you.

I am looking for something similar to color functions of plot3D. plot.options is directing me to plot,color where I cannot find an example. I tried

plot(floor(x),x=-3..3,color=floor(x))

Error, (in plot) invalid color specification: floor(x)

I have a surface defined by C(x, y, x) = 0 that I visualize with implicitplot3d.
Using shading=shue does not suits me and I would like to define my own coloring function F(x, y, z).

The first error I got made me think that a coloring function cannot depend on 3 parameters.
But a simpler (and not visually satysfying function) F(x, y) already leads to an error, which makes me wonder if it is possible to use a colorig function with  implicitplot3d?

implicitplot3d_coloring.mw

Thanks in advance

Hi,

I am looking to refine my animation. I would like to add a condition on the colors to illustrate the periodicity of the sine function: the first circle in red, and the curve in red from 0 to 2π, then the second circle in blue and the curve in blue from 2π to 4π, etc. Any ideas? Thank you very much in advance.

AnimSinusCouleurs.mw

Hi,

I need your insights on two technical questions regarding my BoxPlot:

1) How to adjust the color of the text (Title and caption)

2) How to remove only the y-axis

Thank you

S5StatBoxPlotBtest.mw

I am a little overwhelmed by the possibilities of ColorTools.
Is there a graphical overview of implemented palettes side by side?

Currently, the argument is mapped to the HUE coloring scheme (I guess)

plots:-complexplot3d(z, z = -2 - 2*I .. 2 + 2*I, title = -ln(1/c) - ln(c), orientation = [-90, 0, 0])

This makes it difficult to distinguish the sign of the argument close to the positive real axis (just to give an example). To increase contrast I thought about alternatives: Linear ramping from 0 to 2pi from one color to another (similar to phase wrapped images) or a stepped color scheme (in pi/4 increments for example).

I tried color=argument(z/2/Pi) but this did work.

For some of the users with eye problems like me, the white canvas is burning eyes out of sockets as the monitor needs to be close up. Even turning down the intensity do not work especially since all other applications on Linux can be configured to have a dark-theme, but NOT Maple it seems.

What is the reason for this resistance from Maple Developers to just ram this white canvas down our throats verion after version.

Users have been asking since about Maple 11 to change  this.

I mean, Maple is not exactly cheap, which would have been an excuse, and is formidable intellectual software, so "ability" should not be a problem

However am I to believe that just changing the canvas color, turns out to be  a serious intellectual challenge for developers ?

Google yields such custom canvas request spanning more than a decade, but users arrive at crickets and a dead end.

Please be kind and give us a customizable canvas or any DARK theme of your choice for users with visual challenges and the lots of normal users who also want a custom canvas color or dark theme. It is overdue.

At the moment I use the cumbersome table-solution with a gray background, which helps some, but it is clunky and no alternative for long term use as the window and bars itself are still white and distracts and defeats the objective somewhat.

We all know that math is beautiful in and of itself—but sometimes students might need a little convincing. What better way to do that then sprucing up your math with a little colour? With Maple Learn, plot colours are fully customizable. We have several colour palettes to choose from—want your document to evoke the delicate tones of springtime? Looking for a palette that’s colourblind friendly? Or maybe you’re just nostalgic for the colours of Maple V? All these options and more are available for making your graphs colourful and coordinated. But maybe you’re the kind of person who wants to go against the grain, and you laugh in the face of predetermined colour coordination. Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered too! With our colour selector, you can also choose your own custom colours. The full colour spectrum is right at your fingertips. To learn more about how to customize the colours on your document, check out this How-To guide.

And of course, the potential for colour inevitably leads to the potential for art. Our Maple Learn Art Gallery has plenty of fun and colourful works you can admire and contemplate (and maybe even draw inspiration from!). One of our most recent and most colourful additions is this document showcasing the history of the rainbow pride flag, in honour of June being Pride Month. You can use the slider to move through time, letting you see how the colours on the flag evolved and read about the meanings behind them. And, thanks to the colour selector, the colours match the precise shades used for the original flags! That’s the magic of hexadecimal colours for you.


Hold on—the magic of hexadecimal colours, I hear you ask? What an enticing concept. If only we had some kind of document, perhaps one made in Maple Learn, that explained how hexadecimal colours worked and included an interactive example so that you could easily see how the red, green, and blue colour values blend together to create any given colour… Too bad we don’t!

Just kidding. Of course we do.

If all these colours have inspired you, be sure to check out our Call for Creative Works for the upcoming Maple Conference! Maybe your colourful creation could be this year’s winner.

Hi senior, i am trying to customize the range for horizontal axis means in my case y axis but got error, also trying to give different color for outcomes. Please help in this regards.

Axis_Help.mw

Hello, I have a simple question, yet I haven't find a plot command to do what I intend to:

I have a scalar field (density), as rho:=-4*x+4*y+4*z+3.

What I want to do is plot this density (using color gradients) on a cube, this is x=0..4, y=0..4 and z=0..4.
The color gradient would be something like from blue to red, including (maybe) some other colors in between.

I suppose this would provide me a cube with some colors schemes al over its faces.

Is there a plot command to do this, for 2D there is densityplot, but I have failed to find a 3D equivalent.

Thank you very much!

I am trying make atomic variables stand out in the document, I thought they used to automatically change to a purple type colour.

So under Format, styles , I set the style to size 14, Bold, dark green.  The font changed on the existing ones but not the colour.

On new ones no setting occours just default text. I then restored to default settings under styles and they all turned purple including the new ones.

Then I made another one but no adoption of the default style (purple) occured. 

This fiddlyness needs to be improved  

Has anyone any suggestions to make the atomic variables adope their default colour etc?

 

Happy Valentine’s Day to everyone in the MaplePrimes community. Valentine’s Day is a time to celebrate all things love and romance. To celebrate, we at Maplesoft wanted to share our hearts with you.

 


 

Today the heart shape represents love, affection, and a major organ. Though the heart’s full meaning today is unique to the modern era, the shape itself is much older.

 In ancient Greece, the Cyrenese people used the heart-shaped seed of a plant called silphium as a form of contraception. The seed became so widely used that it is featured on Cyrenese currency. This is the first case of the heart shape being connected to love and passion, but the form did not yet have an association with the human heart.

French poet Thibault de Blaison was the first to use a pear-shaped human heart to symbolize love in his thirteenth-century romance “Roman de la Poire”. Later, during the renaissance period, artists began to paint the Sacred Heart of Jesus in a spade-like shape. Depictions of the heart continued to develop and by the Victorian Era, the heart we know and love today had taken shape and started to appear on Valentine’s Day cards.

The simplicity and symmetry of the heart shape, which likely led to its widespread popularity, also makes the form convenient to define mathematically.

To find the equation for your heart, use the Valentine Hearts Maple Learn document. Choose one of four ways to define your heart, then move the sliders and change the color to make a unique equation for your heart. 

Once you’re done, take a screenshot and share it with your Valentine. Who says math isn’t romantic?

 

 

Hello,

    I am manually re-creating the TS diagram for phase plot of fluid=air for use in a report as a pretty plot.   The TemperatureEntropyChart function is colored in grayscale.  I really need to change to colorized for additional data being added.

   The code to generate the various isobars color gradient is shadebetween two curves.   

    Using the code method to plot leaves white gaps in the discontinutiy of the plot curves returned from the Property function at the liquid and vapor lines.   I have manually connected the horizontal "under the dome" in a matrix of X,Y for each of two isobar curves.

   However, the shadebetween doesn't seem to like the two X,Y matrices for the curves as inputs to shadebetween.

    So,...   Q:   1.)  Can the color be changed using the TempertureEntropyChart function,..or
                      2.)  Can matrices of unequal X,Y values (scatterplot type data sets) be used for the curves in shadebetween command?  The help infers the Y (v, of (u,v))  values need to match.

Thanks,
Bill

Ref:    worksheet contained at:  https://www.mapleprimes.com/maplesoftblog/203462-Computing-With-Thermophysical-Data

Good Day.

I have attached a worksheet for a time series that comprises 45 data points. I would like to investigate the overall demand (for forecasting purposes) and to isolate the underlying demand components; that is, trend, level, seasonal, and residual. However, I have difficulty in distinguishing each component in the plot as the colors appear to be similar and some may have relatively small values.

Does anyone know how to recolor these components so they appear to be more obvious? It would be also beneficial to isolate and plot each individual component - can that be done?

Thanks for your interest!

MaplePrimes_Time_Series.mw

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