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From: maria on 6 Mar 2010 13:58 dear all, I have two points p1=(-1, -0.5, 2.5) and p2=(2.5, 0, 2.8). They define isosurface with isovalue 2.2. How I can plot it? I use function isosurface but I need also V? What I can do? i know also that 1<=x<=3. Any advice will be appreciate Thank you, Maria
From: John D'Errico on 6 Mar 2010 16:02
maria <mkour80(a)gmail.com> wrote in message <0e570877-bb6a-4fca-ab9a-1069d762f52d(a)f8g2000yqn.googlegroups.com>... > dear all, > > I have two points p1=(-1, -0.5, 2.5) and p2=(2.5, 0, 2.8). They define > isosurface with isovalue 2.2. How I can plot it? I use function > isosurface but I need also V? What I can do? > > i know also that 1<=x<=3. > > Any advice will be appreciate No. Two points determine a line. Nothing more. You can dream that they give you something more, but it is just a fanciful dream. As far as knowing that x lies in the closed interval [1,3], so what? What does that have to do with anything you have told us? If you have a meaningful problem to ask about, you need to first learn how to state you problem clearly. So sit down at the keyboard and explain, CLEARLY what is your problem. John |