There are few videos that deal with asymptotes so this is nice to see. Plotting rational functions is pretty much impossible without knowing how to deal with the asymptotes. Thanks!
Great video. I would like to see more of these but separated into multiple files rather than one master document. I find hard to keep track of things with multiple lines of code being either activated or hidden. Simple might be: Here is how we do plot A, plot B, plot C etc. Thanks Peter!
Thank you so much for this wonderful video. What GUI are you using for latex workflows? I only work on overleaf, because long back i found keeping track of packages was crazy
Hi Abdullah, no worries. These days I actually prefer to work in Overleaf myself. In the past, though, I used to work more in Texmaker. Overleaf is so good though, isn't it?
Hi Amanda, the text editor I'm using here is called Texmaker and my LaTeX distribution is MacTeX. Having said that, I'd recommend using the online system called Overleaf. I find it to be a better fit for my needs than Texmaker and MacTeX.
@@wduandy It can be heavy reading at times but the pgfplots package manual can be found at ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots?lang=en. Page 35 would be a good place to start.
Hi, glad you found it useful! Suppose you wanted your horizontal axis to be labelled X and your vertical axis to be labelled Y, then in the axis options make sure you include the code: xlabel=$X$, ylabel=$Y$,
One tip: you can do a lot of the same stuff with way less complexity in Matlab, Mathematica, Maple, and even Excel (or Google Sheets), Geogebra, and export the output as a .pdf and then include it into your latex project.