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author | Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> | 2011-12-15 15:47:17 -0600 |
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committer | Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> | 2011-12-15 15:47:17 -0600 |
commit | 6c3f7a55fb7888efc80a7350ef0c2f46ee02baa3 (patch) | |
tree | cc90a09df2d1fd6d956cc084529a62d354316ad3 /kig/DESIGN | |
parent | 174fd5e23c68598774706ea9b571d3d178e36b81 (diff) | |
download | tdeedu-6c3f7a55fb7888efc80a7350ef0c2f46ee02baa3.tar.gz tdeedu-6c3f7a55fb7888efc80a7350ef0c2f46ee02baa3.zip |
Rename a number of old tq methods that are no longer tq specific
Diffstat (limited to 'kig/DESIGN')
-rw-r--r-- | kig/DESIGN | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
@@ -185,7 +185,7 @@ All this gives labels in Kig a lot of flexibility. 2.2 Locuses Locuses are a mathematical concept that has been modelled in Kig. -Loosely defined, a locus is the mathematical tqshape defined by the set +Loosely defined, a locus is the mathematical shape defined by the set of points that a certain point moves through while another point is moved over its constraints. This can be used to define mathematical objects like conics, and various other things. It has been modelled @@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ the constrained point. This is wrong because when the constrained point moves within the limits of the curve constraining it, the locus does by definition not change. Also, if the constrained point is redefined so that it is no longer constrained to any curve, this is a -major problem, because it would tqinvalidate the locus. Another point +major problem, because it would invalidate the locus. Another point is that in practice, the locus depends on more objects than its parents alone. This is not a good thing, because it makes it impossible to optimise drawing of the objects, using the information |