The parameterized solutions come from solving the following
24
25
26
The goal is to get rid of r. We replace it with c/2/sin(α)
27
28
29
1/sin(α) diverges as the central angle and thus α goes to 0. We'd like to be able to divide it through and have the terms simplify. We'll return to x in a bit, for now we'll focus on y. Factoring a sin(α) out of the difference in cosines might be easier it they're replaced with a product
30
31
That looks promising. Replacing the sin(u±v) with sin(u)cos(v)±cos(u)sin(v) would make a lot of sin terms to factor out
32
33
We can divide both of those sums by a sin(α) if we multiply by a second one. This makes it clear why y shouldn't diverge.
34
35
If there was a trigonometric identity for dividing sines we would be done with both x and y. But there isn't so we'll introduce the "boxySine" function which I named after what it looks like.
36
37
negative 1
1
38
39
This boxy sine, which is really a patched ratio of two sines lets us write the x and y coordinates of the point on the arc without referring to the radius or diverging in any way
40
41
Adding x₀ turns out to be superfluous with the definition of boxySine
42
43
44
equals
45
r1c3:
r2c3:
r3c3:
46
equals
47
equals
48
49
propulsé par
propulsé par
Nouveau graphique vide
Exemples