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Graphics[primitives, options] represents a two-dimensional graphical image.
Mathematica allows you to customize your 2D and 3D graphics through a variety of options.
Mathematica supports a variety of coordinate systems, organized for ease and efficiency of both direct and programmatic use. It supports convenient robust automatic range and ...
When you set up a graphics object in Mathematica, you give coordinates for the various graphical elements that appear. When Mathematica renders the graphics object, it has to ...
Whenever Mathematica draws a three-dimensional object, it always effectively puts a cuboidal box around the object. With the default option setting Boxed->True, Mathematica ...
When Mathematica plots a graph for you, it has to make many choices. It has to work out what the scales should be, where the function should be sampled, how the axes should ...
Mathematica's unified symbolic graphics architecture makes possible powerful mixing of programmatic graphics generation with interactive editing and control. The Mathematica ...
FullGraphics[g] takes a graphics object, and generates a new one in which objects specified by graphics options are given as explicit lists of graphics primitives.
GraphicsRow[{g_1, g_2, ...}] generates a graphic in which the g_i are laid out in a row. GraphicsRow[list, spacing] leaves the specified spacing between successive elements.
GraphicsColumn[{g_1, g_2, ...}] generates a graphic in which the g_i are laid out in a column, with g_1 above g_2, etc. GraphicsColumn[list, alignment] aligns each element ...
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