Mathematica uses the powerful idea of building up all 2D and 3D graphics from symbolic primitives—which can be manipulated using all standard Mathematica functions and ...
WMF
(Mathematica Import/Export Format) Microsoft WMF format. Image file format. Used by the Windows operating system and by Microsoft applications as a graphics resource format. WMF is an acronym derived from ...
Mathematica can immediately export graphics and animations to online, print, and web formats, preserving dynamic annotation when possible. Mathematica also has powerful ...
Mathematica provides various options for labeling three-dimensional graphics. Some of these options are directly analogous to those for two-dimensional graphics, discussed in ...
EMF
(Mathematica Import/Export Format) Microsoft EMF format. Image file format. Used by the Windows operating system and by Microsoft applications as a graphics resource format. EMF is an acronym derived from ...
Mathematica is available for Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. For a complete list of platform availability, visit www.wolfram.com/mathematica/features/system-requirements.html. ...
Type Ctrl+DynamicBox[If[$OperatingSystem === MacOSX, T, D], ImageSizeCache -> {9., {0., 8.}}] or choose Graphics > Drawing Tools. For more information on each tool, click the ...
In three dimensions, just as in two dimensions, you can give various graphics directives to specify how the different elements in a graphics object should be rendered. All ...
OpenCLLink allows Mathematica to use the OpenCL parallel computing language. It contains functions that facilitate loading user-defined OpenCL functions into Mathematica. ...
One of the most powerful aspects of graphics in Mathematica is the availability of three-dimensional as well as two-dimensional graphics primitives. By combining ...