Hi Mike Li, I would imagine the process is similar to what is described here. Your transformation matrix should be 3x3 though. You can introduce sliders in the 2D graphics pane, and then use that same slider in your 3D graphics pane. I hope that makes sense.
@@johnestesmath3036 @John Estes Math I too prefer the desktop app ... I was thinking of the downloadable worksheet/lab that you share with your students. It is a Google document ( a lot of work); it does not seem Geogebra has the analog of a Mathematica notebook.
@@MyWissam Oh yes! I wrote the lab in LaTeX. I can share the source material if you'd like it. As far as I can tell, Geogebra doesn't yet have the Mathematica notebook analog. However, with Jupyter notebook, R Markdown, etc, it may be possible to have an HTML page with interactive Geogebra exercises. I'm not sure. I have not tried it.
@@johnestesmath3036 I like your idea of possibly using Jupyter ... I usually embed the Geogebra file in a Canvas page, and it works fine, except that I don't like this over-reliance on Canvas. (just occurred to me, I can copy the Canvas page's html ...) If you don't mind, I would like to see your LaTex source code ... the worksheet looks very professional and I would use it as a template. Did you want to share it in the description, or do you prefer I give you an email address?
@@MyWissam I have it all here on github. You'll need to change your file path for the images. Let me know if you need help. github.com/john-w-estes/Course_Materials
crisp and clear
How do we apply the matrix transformation to 3D objects in Geogebra?
Hi Mike Li, I would imagine the process is similar to what is described here. Your transformation matrix should be 3x3 though. You can introduce sliders in the 2D graphics pane, and then use that same slider in your 3D graphics pane. I hope that makes sense.
thank you 👍
Is the worksheet produced with the Geogebra classroom? Or are you pasting Geogebra images into a Word or PDF?
I used the Geogebra desktop app. I prefer the tool layout on the desktop app over the browser version.
@@johnestesmath3036 @John Estes Math I too prefer the desktop app ... I was thinking of the downloadable worksheet/lab that you share with your students. It is a Google document ( a lot of work); it does not seem Geogebra has the analog of a Mathematica notebook.
@@MyWissam Oh yes! I wrote the lab in LaTeX. I can share the source material if you'd like it. As far as I can tell, Geogebra doesn't yet have the Mathematica notebook analog. However, with Jupyter notebook, R Markdown, etc, it may be possible to have an HTML page with interactive Geogebra exercises. I'm not sure. I have not tried it.
@@johnestesmath3036 I like your idea of possibly using Jupyter ... I usually embed the Geogebra file in a Canvas page, and it works fine, except that I don't like this over-reliance on Canvas. (just occurred to me, I can copy the Canvas page's html ...)
If you don't mind, I would like to see your LaTex source code ... the worksheet looks very professional and I would use it as a template. Did you want to share it in the description, or do you prefer I give you an email address?
@@MyWissam I have it all here on github. You'll need to change your file path for the images. Let me know if you need help. github.com/john-w-estes/Course_Materials
Couldn’t we have started with vectors, so the terminal point is automatically identified with the vector?
I did it this way so I could start by drawing my image of interest. You can start with the vectors if you'd like. 👍