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downloadable files
A demo version of Omnigraph is available
for download. Go to the Download page for
details. Contact SPA if
you wish to purchase it. You can also download some files that can be loaded
into it. This is a developing area of MathsNet. You may have files
yourself that could be made available to other users. Make contact if you
have. For MathsNet Omnigraph files, move to the
Download... page. |
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link
with TI-82/3 calculators
The Texas Instruments calculators TI-82
and TI-83 both have some graph and coordinate plotting functions that are
similar to Omnigraph. In the last year or two, more and more students studying
mathematics at A-Level or similar have purchased such graphic calculators, so
that, whereas only a few might have Omnigraph at home, most will have the
calculator. It therefore seems like a good idea to make some resources for
investigating mathematics common to both media. With this in mind you
will find by moving to the Download... page
some files that can be loaded in your TI calculator. They are essentially
identical to files contained in "Investigations with Omnigraph" mentioned
above. |
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MEI
users group
An M.E.I. Technology Working group on
Omnigraph was set up in June 1996. The contact is:
Tony Beadsworth, School Of Maths and Computing,
Somerset College of Art and Technology, Wellington Rd, Taunton, England TA1 5AX
(+44) (0)1823 366366 |
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reviewed
Omnigraph for Dos, probably the best
educational software on graph processing, has been around for a number of
years. Now SPA has
published the Windows version, which is currently at Version 2:
It loads and runs very quickly in
Windows 3.1. Though the concepts of calculus and other higher level mathematics
are readily available, the greatest single strength of Omnigraph has always
been that you can load it up and type in y=2x+1 and get a graph displayed at
once. This remains true in the Windows version. The biggest improvement after
that is the replacement of the confusing "Options" menu of the Dos version by
the conventional Windows menu system - though there are no icons yet. Maybe
there's no need. All the previous options are still available - you can even
load the same old Dos files into it. It will load csv
format files too (a format most spreadsheets can save in), which immediately
opens up the potential for using Omnigraph for data handling. MathsNet
will be creating soon some csv data files for this purpose.
There are new options too - the most important being
the ability to enter implicit equations (x²+y²=9 for example) and inequalities.
The program's ability to cope with implicit equations is good but you may have
to wait and put up with some strung-out points if the equation is too
complicated. Complicated functions can be entered and displayed in correct
format, for example (x+1)/(x+2) will appear in correct fractional notation.
Other developments include much improved
coordinate handling. Single points can be readily added or deleted. In addition
to zooming in and out and rescaling, you can now "grab" the whole graph and
slide it about. Drag a tangent line along a curve and see it surf up and down
the slope changing its gradient appropriately. There is a "demonstration" mode
whereby curves are drawn slowly by a computer pencil, and lines can be
thickened to make them more visable in the classroom.
I would imagine that the "Power series" option in the Dos
version was rarely used; now there is an improvement in that you can define a
series by its nth term. The series y=1 + x + x²/2! + ... is entered
by nth=xn-1/(n-1)! Clicking
on the curve highlights its equation - a nice new touch! - but what would be
brilliant is the facility to alter the shape of the curve with the mouse whilst
its equation is continuously updated in the Equations Window. Can we have that
in Version 3 please? Overall though, an
excellent program has got even better. |
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