Making a Perfect Cusp Tikz
up vote
8
down vote
favorite
This Cusp I made came out awkward and I can not fix it.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
draw (1.5,2.5) to [out=-80, in=175] (2.75,.4);
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
This outputs:
I am trying to achieve:
Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.
tikz-pgf
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
favorite
This Cusp I made came out awkward and I can not fix it.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
draw (1.5,2.5) to [out=-80, in=175] (2.75,.4);
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
This outputs:
I am trying to achieve:
Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.
tikz-pgf
What precisely do you want to achieve? (The top is tilted since you havein=80
andout=-80
instead of90
.)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 14:30
@Marmot, I posted above what I am trying to achieve, I didn't think I'd have to ask a question on this but I also tried 90 and could not get the look I wanted.
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:09
How aboutdraw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5) to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
?
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:13
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
favorite
up vote
8
down vote
favorite
This Cusp I made came out awkward and I can not fix it.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
draw (1.5,2.5) to [out=-80, in=175] (2.75,.4);
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
This outputs:
I am trying to achieve:
Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.
tikz-pgf
This Cusp I made came out awkward and I can not fix it.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
draw (1.5,2.5) to [out=-80, in=175] (2.75,.4);
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
This outputs:
I am trying to achieve:
Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.
tikz-pgf
tikz-pgf
edited Nov 30 at 15:08
asked Nov 30 at 14:19
MathScholar
5778
5778
What precisely do you want to achieve? (The top is tilted since you havein=80
andout=-80
instead of90
.)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 14:30
@Marmot, I posted above what I am trying to achieve, I didn't think I'd have to ask a question on this but I also tried 90 and could not get the look I wanted.
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:09
How aboutdraw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5) to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
?
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:13
add a comment |
What precisely do you want to achieve? (The top is tilted since you havein=80
andout=-80
instead of90
.)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 14:30
@Marmot, I posted above what I am trying to achieve, I didn't think I'd have to ask a question on this but I also tried 90 and could not get the look I wanted.
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:09
How aboutdraw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5) to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
?
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:13
What precisely do you want to achieve? (The top is tilted since you have
in=80
and out=-80
instead of 90
.)– marmot
Nov 30 at 14:30
What precisely do you want to achieve? (The top is tilted since you have
in=80
and out=-80
instead of 90
.)– marmot
Nov 30 at 14:30
@Marmot, I posted above what I am trying to achieve, I didn't think I'd have to ask a question on this but I also tried 90 and could not get the look I wanted.
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:09
@Marmot, I posted above what I am trying to achieve, I didn't think I'd have to ask a question on this but I also tried 90 and could not get the look I wanted.
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:09
How about
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5) to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
?– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:13
How about
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5) to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
?– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:13
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
I guess the sign of 80
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is the culprit.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5)
to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
draw[thin] (1.5,2.5) -- ++ (0.2,0.6) node[above]{$f'(a)$ does not exist};
draw (1.5,0.2) -- (1.5,-0.2) node[below]{$a$};
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
1
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note$f'(a)$ does not exist
).
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@MathScholar I guess the sign ofin
indraw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a-
there.
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
|
show 6 more comments
up vote
4
down vote
Here is a solution using the pgfplots
package, which extends tikz
to include a wide variety of plotting options:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}begin{axis}[xmin=0,xmax=1,ymin=0,xtick={0.5},xticklabels=$a$,axis lines=left,ymajorticks=false,xlabel=$x$,ylabel=$y$,clip=false]
addplot [domain=0.1:0.5] {0.1+x^2} node [pos=0.2,above left] {$f$};
addplot [domain=0.5:0.9] {0.1+(x-1)^2} node[pin={90: $f'(a)$ does not exist.} ] at (axis cs:0.5,0.35) {};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
A PSTricks solution just for comparison purposes.
documentclass[pstricks]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot,pst-plot}
deff#1{(x-#1)^2+1}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,ticks=none,labels=none](-.4,-.5)(4.5,3.5)
psaxes{->}(0,0)(-.3,-.4)(4,3)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot{1}{2}{f{1}}
psplot{2}{3}{f{3}}
psxTick[labelsep=1pt](2){a}
rput(2.2,3){rnode[b]{a}{$f'(a)$ does not exist}}
pcline[nodesep=2pt]{->}(a)(*2 {f{1}})
end{pspicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
I guess the sign of 80
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is the culprit.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5)
to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
draw[thin] (1.5,2.5) -- ++ (0.2,0.6) node[above]{$f'(a)$ does not exist};
draw (1.5,0.2) -- (1.5,-0.2) node[below]{$a$};
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
1
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note$f'(a)$ does not exist
).
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@MathScholar I guess the sign ofin
indraw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a-
there.
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
|
show 6 more comments
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
I guess the sign of 80
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is the culprit.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5)
to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
draw[thin] (1.5,2.5) -- ++ (0.2,0.6) node[above]{$f'(a)$ does not exist};
draw (1.5,0.2) -- (1.5,-0.2) node[below]{$a$};
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
1
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note$f'(a)$ does not exist
).
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@MathScholar I guess the sign ofin
indraw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a-
there.
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
|
show 6 more comments
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
I guess the sign of 80
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is the culprit.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5)
to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
draw[thin] (1.5,2.5) -- ++ (0.2,0.6) node[above]{$f'(a)$ does not exist};
draw (1.5,0.2) -- (1.5,-0.2) node[below]{$a$};
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
I guess the sign of 80
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is the culprit.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[scale=1,cap=round]
tikzset{axes/.style={}}
% The graphic
begin{scope}[style=axes]
draw[->] (-.5,0) -- (3,0) node[below] {$x$};
draw[->] (0,-.5)-- (0,3) node[left] {$y$};
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5)
to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
draw[thin] (1.5,2.5) -- ++ (0.2,0.6) node[above]{$f'(a)$ does not exist};
draw (1.5,0.2) -- (1.5,-0.2) node[below]{$a$};
%%%
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
edited Nov 30 at 15:24
answered Nov 30 at 15:16
marmot
84.3k495179
84.3k495179
1
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note$f'(a)$ does not exist
).
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@MathScholar I guess the sign ofin
indraw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a-
there.
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
|
show 6 more comments
1
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note$f'(a)$ does not exist
).
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@MathScholar I guess the sign ofin
indraw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a-
there.
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
1
1
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note
$f'(a)$ does not exist
).– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
marmot, why does it have to be 90? (Side note
$f'(a)$ does not exist
).– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:17
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@gusbrs Well, that's how I interpreted "Note it is not exactly symmetric either but the head is cleaner.". I thought the OP wants to have it symmetric. (And thanks for the note!)
– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:20
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@Marmot, that works but I thought I tried that. Eyes playing tricks on me. Not sure exactly what we changed Thanks Marmot!
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:21
@MathScholar I guess the sign of
in
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a -
there.– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
@MathScholar I guess the sign of
in
in draw (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=80] (1.5,2.5);
is crucial. I have a -
there.– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:22
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
Well, conceptually, we could still have side derivatives (is this how this is said in english?...) reaching "a" at 80 degrees and the derivative in a would not exist. The graphic would be symmetric like this. But the question is why doesn't tikz accept it?
– gusbrs
Nov 30 at 15:23
|
show 6 more comments
up vote
4
down vote
Here is a solution using the pgfplots
package, which extends tikz
to include a wide variety of plotting options:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}begin{axis}[xmin=0,xmax=1,ymin=0,xtick={0.5},xticklabels=$a$,axis lines=left,ymajorticks=false,xlabel=$x$,ylabel=$y$,clip=false]
addplot [domain=0.1:0.5] {0.1+x^2} node [pos=0.2,above left] {$f$};
addplot [domain=0.5:0.9] {0.1+(x-1)^2} node[pin={90: $f'(a)$ does not exist.} ] at (axis cs:0.5,0.35) {};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Here is a solution using the pgfplots
package, which extends tikz
to include a wide variety of plotting options:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}begin{axis}[xmin=0,xmax=1,ymin=0,xtick={0.5},xticklabels=$a$,axis lines=left,ymajorticks=false,xlabel=$x$,ylabel=$y$,clip=false]
addplot [domain=0.1:0.5] {0.1+x^2} node [pos=0.2,above left] {$f$};
addplot [domain=0.5:0.9] {0.1+(x-1)^2} node[pin={90: $f'(a)$ does not exist.} ] at (axis cs:0.5,0.35) {};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Here is a solution using the pgfplots
package, which extends tikz
to include a wide variety of plotting options:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}begin{axis}[xmin=0,xmax=1,ymin=0,xtick={0.5},xticklabels=$a$,axis lines=left,ymajorticks=false,xlabel=$x$,ylabel=$y$,clip=false]
addplot [domain=0.1:0.5] {0.1+x^2} node [pos=0.2,above left] {$f$};
addplot [domain=0.5:0.9] {0.1+(x-1)^2} node[pin={90: $f'(a)$ does not exist.} ] at (axis cs:0.5,0.35) {};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Here is a solution using the pgfplots
package, which extends tikz
to include a wide variety of plotting options:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}begin{axis}[xmin=0,xmax=1,ymin=0,xtick={0.5},xticklabels=$a$,axis lines=left,ymajorticks=false,xlabel=$x$,ylabel=$y$,clip=false]
addplot [domain=0.1:0.5] {0.1+x^2} node [pos=0.2,above left] {$f$};
addplot [domain=0.5:0.9] {0.1+(x-1)^2} node[pin={90: $f'(a)$ does not exist.} ] at (axis cs:0.5,0.35) {};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
answered Nov 30 at 15:32
Ubiquitous
1,6511020
1,6511020
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
add a comment |
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
@Ubiquitos Thank you for your answer. I needed a corner with a more vertical right and left tangent, but someone else will find this very useful to them. Thanks for sharing
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:41
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
A PSTricks solution just for comparison purposes.
documentclass[pstricks]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot,pst-plot}
deff#1{(x-#1)^2+1}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,ticks=none,labels=none](-.4,-.5)(4.5,3.5)
psaxes{->}(0,0)(-.3,-.4)(4,3)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot{1}{2}{f{1}}
psplot{2}{3}{f{3}}
psxTick[labelsep=1pt](2){a}
rput(2.2,3){rnode[b]{a}{$f'(a)$ does not exist}}
pcline[nodesep=2pt]{->}(a)(*2 {f{1}})
end{pspicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
A PSTricks solution just for comparison purposes.
documentclass[pstricks]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot,pst-plot}
deff#1{(x-#1)^2+1}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,ticks=none,labels=none](-.4,-.5)(4.5,3.5)
psaxes{->}(0,0)(-.3,-.4)(4,3)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot{1}{2}{f{1}}
psplot{2}{3}{f{3}}
psxTick[labelsep=1pt](2){a}
rput(2.2,3){rnode[b]{a}{$f'(a)$ does not exist}}
pcline[nodesep=2pt]{->}(a)(*2 {f{1}})
end{pspicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
A PSTricks solution just for comparison purposes.
documentclass[pstricks]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot,pst-plot}
deff#1{(x-#1)^2+1}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,ticks=none,labels=none](-.4,-.5)(4.5,3.5)
psaxes{->}(0,0)(-.3,-.4)(4,3)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot{1}{2}{f{1}}
psplot{2}{3}{f{3}}
psxTick[labelsep=1pt](2){a}
rput(2.2,3){rnode[b]{a}{$f'(a)$ does not exist}}
pcline[nodesep=2pt]{->}(a)(*2 {f{1}})
end{pspicture}
end{document}
A PSTricks solution just for comparison purposes.
documentclass[pstricks]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-plot,pst-plot}
deff#1{(x-#1)^2+1}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[algebraic,ticks=none,labels=none](-.4,-.5)(4.5,3.5)
psaxes{->}(0,0)(-.3,-.4)(4,3)[$x$,0][$y$,90]
psplot{1}{2}{f{1}}
psplot{2}{3}{f{3}}
psxTick[labelsep=1pt](2){a}
rput(2.2,3){rnode[b]{a}{$f'(a)$ does not exist}}
pcline[nodesep=2pt]{->}(a)(*2 {f{1}})
end{pspicture}
end{document}
answered Nov 30 at 16:54
Artificial Stupidity
5,26511039
5,26511039
add a comment |
add a comment |
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What precisely do you want to achieve? (The top is tilted since you have
in=80
andout=-80
instead of90
.)– marmot
Nov 30 at 14:30
@Marmot, I posted above what I am trying to achieve, I didn't think I'd have to ask a question on this but I also tried 90 and could not get the look I wanted.
– MathScholar
Nov 30 at 15:09
How about
draw[thick] (0.25,0.4) to [out=10,in=-90] (1.5,2.5) to [out=-90, in=175] (2.75,.4);
?– marmot
Nov 30 at 15:13