3-16 Function Graphing
8303FUNC.DOC TI-83 international English Bob Fedorisko Revised: 02/19/01 12:16 PM Printed: 02/19/01 1:35
PM Page 16 of 28
8303FUNC.DOC TI-83 international English Bob Fedorisko Revised: 02/19/01 12:16 PM Printed: 02/19/01 1:35
PM Page 16 of 28
On the TI-83, you can graph one or more new functions
without replotting existing functions. For example, store
sin(X) to Y1 in the Y= editor and press s. Then store
cos(X) to Y2 and press s again. The function Y2 is
graphed on top of Y1, the original function.
If you enter a list (Chapter 11) as an element in an
expression, the TI-83 plots the function for each value in
the list, thereby graphing a family of curves. In Simul
graphing-order mode, it graphs all functions sequentially
for the first element in each list, and then for the second,
and so on.
{2,4,6}sin(X) graphs three functions: 2 sin(X), 4 sin(X), and
6 sin(X).
{2,4,6}sin({1,2,3}X) graphs 2 sin(X), 4 sin(2X), and 6 sin(3X).
Note: When using more than one list, the lists must have the same
dimensions.
Overlaying
Functions on a
Graph
Graphing a
Family of Curves