Mathematica 6 introduced the revolutionary idea of symbolic dynamic interactivity. Mathematica 7 makes use of this idea throughout the system, and adds a number of additional ...
In Mathematica, a palette is just a notebook with a collection of controls such as buttons. A uniquely powerful consequence of Mathematica's unified design is that a symbolic ...
Mathematica's dynamic interactivity system makes it easy to view and annotate any object in a dynamic way. Building on Mathematica's symbolic programming architecture, ...
DynamicSetting[e] represents an object which displays as e, but is interpreted as the dynamically updated current value of Setting[e] if supplied as Mathematica ...
DefaultOptions is a style option that allows default options to be specified for particular formatting and related constructs.
Control
(Built-in Mathematica Symbol) Control[{u, dom}] represents an interactive control for the variable u in the domain dom, with the type of control chosen to be appropriate for the domain ...
This tutorial describes the principles behind Dynamic, DynamicModule, and related functions, and goes into detail about how they interact with each other and with the rest of ...
Combining a new level of programmatic support for symbolic color with carefully chosen aesthetic color parametrizations, Mathematica allows a uniquely flexible and compelling ...
Version 6.0 greatly extended Mathematica's powerful symbolic document paradigm, integrating support for editable symbolic graphics, structure-programmable table layouts, ...
Mathematica 7 enhances the Mathematica notebook experience in several ways, with new convenient usability features, new levels of automation for the form and structure of ...