Maybe do you know wolfram alpha which draw graph
Bu I cannot draw polar graph. For instance $$r=2\cos\ (t)\ : x^2+y^2=r^2=2r\cos\ t=2x\ (circle)$$
If we enter this, then it show $cosine$ graph, not a circle.
How can we draw polar graph ?
Maybe do you know wolfram alpha which draw graph
Bu I cannot draw polar graph. For instance $$r=2\cos\ (t)\ : x^2+y^2=r^2=2r\cos\ t=2x\ (circle)$$
If we enter this, then it show $cosine$ graph, not a circle.
How can we draw polar graph ?
Type>
polar plot | r = 2 cos(t) | t = -pi to pi
PolarPlot[r=2 cos(t), {t,-pi , pi}]
Also, the cartesian plot for this circle is: $(x-1)^2+y^2 = 1$
plot | (x-1)^2 + y^2 = 1 | x = 0 to 1 | y= -1 to 1
Plot[(x-1)^2+y^2=1, {x,0,1}, {y,-1,1}]
(Though $x^2+y^2=2x$ also works.)
$$r=2\cos t$$
$$r^2=2 r\cos t$$
$$x^2+y^2=2x$$
$$(x^2-2x+1) +y^2 = 1$$
$$(x-1)^2 + y^2 = 1$$
I prefer to use Mathematica syntax wherever possible.
Try:
PolarPlot[{2cos(x)}, {x, 0,2pi}]
And in general:
PolarPlot[{f(x), g(x), h(x), ... }, {x, xmin,xmax}]
Here is a more complicated example with more than one polar function:
PolarPlot[{2*cos(x),sin(6x),cos(sin(x))}, {x, pi, 2pi}]