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ViewMatrix   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
ViewMatrix is an option for Graphics3D and related functions that can be used to specify a pair of explicit homogeneous transformation and projection matrices for 3D ...
Dummy Variables in Mathematics   (Mathematica Tutorial)
When you set up mathematical formulas, you often have to introduce various kinds of local objects or "dummy variables". You can treat such dummy variables using modules and ...
PageFooterLines   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
PageFooterLines is an option for notebooks that specifies whether a horizontal line is inserted at the bottom of each page when the notebook is printed.
PageHeaderLines   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
PageHeaderLines is an option for notebooks that specifies whether a horizontal line is inserted at the top of each page when the notebook is printed.
UndirectedEdge   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
UndirectedEdge[u, v] or u \[UndirectedEdge] v represents an undirected edge of a graph with vertices u and v.
\[EscapeKey]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F769. Alias: Esc ␣esc Esc. Letter-like form. Representation of the Escape key on a keyboard. Used in describing how to type aliases for special characters in ...
\[Placeholder]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F528. Alias: Esc pl Esc. Letter-like form. Used to indicate where expressions can be inserted in a form obtained by pasting the contents of a button. Not the same as ...
\[ReturnKey]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F766. Alias: Esc ␣ret Esc. Letter-like form. Representation of the Return key on a keyboard. Used in describing how to type textual input. Esc ret Esc is the alias ...
\[SelectionPlaceholder]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F527. Alias: Esc spl Esc. Letter-like form. Used to indicate where the current selection should be inserted when the contents of a button are pasted by ...
Equations and Inequalities over Domains   (Mathematica Tutorial)
Mathematica normally assumes that variables which appear in equations can stand for arbitrary complex numbers. But when you use Reduce, you can explicitly tell Mathematica ...
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