Draw this image in the TIKZ package [on hold]

I need to draw this image using TikZ.
tikz-pgf
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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put on hold as too broad by Werner, Raaja, egreg, JouleV, siracusa 16 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |

I need to draw this image using TikZ.
tikz-pgf
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
put on hold as too broad by Werner, Raaja, egreg, JouleV, siracusa 16 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
5
Welcome to TeX.se. I've changed your Portuguese request to English, which is the language of the site. But questions which just post an image and ask people to draw it for you are really not the best way to ask a question. Much of this diagram is quite simple, so can you edit your question to include a minimal document that shows at least some of what you've tried. Then we could help you with what you're having trouble with.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
add a comment |

I need to draw this image using TikZ.
tikz-pgf
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

I need to draw this image using TikZ.
tikz-pgf
tikz-pgf
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited yesterday
Alan Munn
162k28431706
162k28431706
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked yesterday
Ícaro ViterbreÍcaro Viterbre
151
151
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Ícaro Viterbre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
put on hold as too broad by Werner, Raaja, egreg, JouleV, siracusa 16 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as too broad by Werner, Raaja, egreg, JouleV, siracusa 16 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
5
Welcome to TeX.se. I've changed your Portuguese request to English, which is the language of the site. But questions which just post an image and ask people to draw it for you are really not the best way to ask a question. Much of this diagram is quite simple, so can you edit your question to include a minimal document that shows at least some of what you've tried. Then we could help you with what you're having trouble with.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
add a comment |
5
Welcome to TeX.se. I've changed your Portuguese request to English, which is the language of the site. But questions which just post an image and ask people to draw it for you are really not the best way to ask a question. Much of this diagram is quite simple, so can you edit your question to include a minimal document that shows at least some of what you've tried. Then we could help you with what you're having trouble with.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
5
5
Welcome to TeX.se. I've changed your Portuguese request to English, which is the language of the site. But questions which just post an image and ask people to draw it for you are really not the best way to ask a question. Much of this diagram is quite simple, so can you edit your question to include a minimal document that shows at least some of what you've tried. Then we could help you with what you're having trouble with.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
Welcome to TeX.se. I've changed your Portuguese request to English, which is the language of the site. But questions which just post an image and ask people to draw it for you are really not the best way to ask a question. Much of this diagram is quite simple, so can you edit your question to include a minimal document that shows at least some of what you've tried. Then we could help you with what you're having trouble with.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Using a local bounding box saves us from a lot of hassle here.
documentclass[border=3.14mm,tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node[fill,inner sep=1.5pt,circle] (O) at (0,0){};
begin{scope}[local bounding box=box]
draw (O.center) -- (100:4) arc(100:140:4) node[pos=0.7,above,sloped,inner
xsep=0pt] {$c(h)$}
-- node[midway,below] {$h$} cycle;
end{scope}
draw (box.south west) rectangle (box.north east);
draw[|-|] (1,0|-box.south) -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$};
draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1 -|box.east)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

+1 for the use of thelocal bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q :draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
– AndréC
yesterday
add a comment |
A PSTricks solution just for fun.
documentclass[pstricks,12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-eucl}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[arrowinset=0](-5,-1)(1,5.5)
pstGeonode[PointSymbol=none,PosAngle=-45](0,0){S}
pnodes(5;150){A}(5;100){B}
pswedge(S){5}{(B)}{(A)}
psframe(A|S)(S|B)
rput{0}(5.4;130){$c(h)$}
pcline(A)(S)ncput*{$h$}
pcline[offset=-.5]{|<->|}(A|S)(S)ncput*{$p$}
pcline[offset=.5]{|<->|}(S|B)(S)ncput*{$q$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}

1
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Here is a way to build this figure that uses several key concepts from TikZ:
- the
scope
clip- the use of the
intersectionslibrary - the use of
nodeto place text.
slopedto write text tangent to a path
Their use is explained in the written comments in the code.

documentclass[border=5mm]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{intersections}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% This scope allows you to draw the part of the circle inside the rectangle. The outer part is cut off.
begin{scope}% use of intersections library to define the intersections between circle and rectangle
draw[name path global=cadre,clip] (0,0) rectangle (3.5,4.5);
draw[name path global=cercle] (3.5,0)circle(4.6cm);
end{scope}
% draw both sides of the angular sector
draw[name intersections={of=cercle and cadre}](intersection-2)--(3.5,0)--(intersection-1)node[above right,midway]{h};
% sloped allow to write text tangent to the path
path[above] (intersection-1)to[bend left=15]node[sloped]{$c(h)$}(intersection-2);
% dimension of rectangle wrtien in 2 differents way
draw [<->](4.2,0)--node[right]{q}(4.2,4.5);
draw [<->](0,-.6)--(3.5,-.6)node[below,midway]{p};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Here you go :)
documentclass{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[x=0.75pt,y=0.75pt,yscale=-1,xscale=1,line width=0.75pt]
draw (46.5,25) -- (145.5,25) -- (145.5,156.33) -- (46.5,156.33) -- cycle ;
draw (46.5,176.33) -- (145.5,176.33) ;
draw [shift={(145.5,176.33)}, rotate = 180] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(46.5,176.33)}, rotate = 0] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (165.5,156.33) -- (165.5,25) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,25)}, rotate = 450] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,156.33)}, rotate = 270] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (46.88,52.66) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw (117.77,25) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw [draw opacity=0] (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) -- (117.08,127.92) -- cycle ; draw (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) ;
% Text Nodes
draw (99,163) node [align=left] {$displaystyle p$};
draw (174,91) node [align=left] {$displaystyle q$};
draw (101,96) node [align=left] {$displaystyle h$};
draw (153,160) node [align=left] {$displaystyle s$};
draw (82,40) node [scale=0.8] [align=left] {$displaystyle c( h)$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
2
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
1
And do you really want to set a style forevery picture? This will affect all othertikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Using a local bounding box saves us from a lot of hassle here.
documentclass[border=3.14mm,tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node[fill,inner sep=1.5pt,circle] (O) at (0,0){};
begin{scope}[local bounding box=box]
draw (O.center) -- (100:4) arc(100:140:4) node[pos=0.7,above,sloped,inner
xsep=0pt] {$c(h)$}
-- node[midway,below] {$h$} cycle;
end{scope}
draw (box.south west) rectangle (box.north east);
draw[|-|] (1,0|-box.south) -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$};
draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1 -|box.east)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

+1 for the use of thelocal bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q :draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
– AndréC
yesterday
add a comment |
Using a local bounding box saves us from a lot of hassle here.
documentclass[border=3.14mm,tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node[fill,inner sep=1.5pt,circle] (O) at (0,0){};
begin{scope}[local bounding box=box]
draw (O.center) -- (100:4) arc(100:140:4) node[pos=0.7,above,sloped,inner
xsep=0pt] {$c(h)$}
-- node[midway,below] {$h$} cycle;
end{scope}
draw (box.south west) rectangle (box.north east);
draw[|-|] (1,0|-box.south) -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$};
draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1 -|box.east)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

+1 for the use of thelocal bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q :draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
– AndréC
yesterday
add a comment |
Using a local bounding box saves us from a lot of hassle here.
documentclass[border=3.14mm,tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node[fill,inner sep=1.5pt,circle] (O) at (0,0){};
begin{scope}[local bounding box=box]
draw (O.center) -- (100:4) arc(100:140:4) node[pos=0.7,above,sloped,inner
xsep=0pt] {$c(h)$}
-- node[midway,below] {$h$} cycle;
end{scope}
draw (box.south west) rectangle (box.north east);
draw[|-|] (1,0|-box.south) -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$};
draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1 -|box.east)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

Using a local bounding box saves us from a lot of hassle here.
documentclass[border=3.14mm,tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node[fill,inner sep=1.5pt,circle] (O) at (0,0){};
begin{scope}[local bounding box=box]
draw (O.center) -- (100:4) arc(100:140:4) node[pos=0.7,above,sloped,inner
xsep=0pt] {$c(h)$}
-- node[midway,below] {$h$} cycle;
end{scope}
draw (box.south west) rectangle (box.north east);
draw[|-|] (1,0|-box.south) -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$};
draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1 -|box.east)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

answered yesterday
marmotmarmot
107k5129243
107k5129243
+1 for the use of thelocal bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q :draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
– AndréC
yesterday
add a comment |
+1 for the use of thelocal bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q :draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};
– AndréC
yesterday
+1 for the use of the
local bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q : draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};– AndréC
yesterday
+1 for the use of the
local bounding box. You can simplify the drawing of the lengths p and q : draw[|-|] (1,0)node{a} -- (1,0|-box.north)node[midway,fill=white]{$p$}; draw[|-|] (0,-1 -|box.west) -- (0,-1)node[midway,fill=white]{$q$};– AndréC
yesterday
add a comment |
A PSTricks solution just for fun.
documentclass[pstricks,12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-eucl}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[arrowinset=0](-5,-1)(1,5.5)
pstGeonode[PointSymbol=none,PosAngle=-45](0,0){S}
pnodes(5;150){A}(5;100){B}
pswedge(S){5}{(B)}{(A)}
psframe(A|S)(S|B)
rput{0}(5.4;130){$c(h)$}
pcline(A)(S)ncput*{$h$}
pcline[offset=-.5]{|<->|}(A|S)(S)ncput*{$p$}
pcline[offset=.5]{|<->|}(S|B)(S)ncput*{$q$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}

1
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
add a comment |
A PSTricks solution just for fun.
documentclass[pstricks,12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-eucl}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[arrowinset=0](-5,-1)(1,5.5)
pstGeonode[PointSymbol=none,PosAngle=-45](0,0){S}
pnodes(5;150){A}(5;100){B}
pswedge(S){5}{(B)}{(A)}
psframe(A|S)(S|B)
rput{0}(5.4;130){$c(h)$}
pcline(A)(S)ncput*{$h$}
pcline[offset=-.5]{|<->|}(A|S)(S)ncput*{$p$}
pcline[offset=.5]{|<->|}(S|B)(S)ncput*{$q$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}

1
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
add a comment |
A PSTricks solution just for fun.
documentclass[pstricks,12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-eucl}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[arrowinset=0](-5,-1)(1,5.5)
pstGeonode[PointSymbol=none,PosAngle=-45](0,0){S}
pnodes(5;150){A}(5;100){B}
pswedge(S){5}{(B)}{(A)}
psframe(A|S)(S|B)
rput{0}(5.4;130){$c(h)$}
pcline(A)(S)ncput*{$h$}
pcline[offset=-.5]{|<->|}(A|S)(S)ncput*{$p$}
pcline[offset=.5]{|<->|}(S|B)(S)ncput*{$q$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}

A PSTricks solution just for fun.
documentclass[pstricks,12pt]{standalone}
usepackage{pst-eucl}
begin{document}
begin{pspicture}[arrowinset=0](-5,-1)(1,5.5)
pstGeonode[PointSymbol=none,PosAngle=-45](0,0){S}
pnodes(5;150){A}(5;100){B}
pswedge(S){5}{(B)}{(A)}
psframe(A|S)(S|B)
rput{0}(5.4;130){$c(h)$}
pcline(A)(S)ncput*{$h$}
pcline[offset=-.5]{|<->|}(A|S)(S)ncput*{$p$}
pcline[offset=.5]{|<->|}(S|B)(S)ncput*{$q$}
end{pspicture}
end{document}

answered yesterday
The Inventor of GodThe Inventor of God
4,58711041
4,58711041
1
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
add a comment |
1
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
1
1
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
+ 1 for {(B)}{(A)}
– chishimutoji
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Here is a way to build this figure that uses several key concepts from TikZ:
- the
scope
clip- the use of the
intersectionslibrary - the use of
nodeto place text.
slopedto write text tangent to a path
Their use is explained in the written comments in the code.

documentclass[border=5mm]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{intersections}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% This scope allows you to draw the part of the circle inside the rectangle. The outer part is cut off.
begin{scope}% use of intersections library to define the intersections between circle and rectangle
draw[name path global=cadre,clip] (0,0) rectangle (3.5,4.5);
draw[name path global=cercle] (3.5,0)circle(4.6cm);
end{scope}
% draw both sides of the angular sector
draw[name intersections={of=cercle and cadre}](intersection-2)--(3.5,0)--(intersection-1)node[above right,midway]{h};
% sloped allow to write text tangent to the path
path[above] (intersection-1)to[bend left=15]node[sloped]{$c(h)$}(intersection-2);
% dimension of rectangle wrtien in 2 differents way
draw [<->](4.2,0)--node[right]{q}(4.2,4.5);
draw [<->](0,-.6)--(3.5,-.6)node[below,midway]{p};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Here is a way to build this figure that uses several key concepts from TikZ:
- the
scope
clip- the use of the
intersectionslibrary - the use of
nodeto place text.
slopedto write text tangent to a path
Their use is explained in the written comments in the code.

documentclass[border=5mm]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{intersections}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% This scope allows you to draw the part of the circle inside the rectangle. The outer part is cut off.
begin{scope}% use of intersections library to define the intersections between circle and rectangle
draw[name path global=cadre,clip] (0,0) rectangle (3.5,4.5);
draw[name path global=cercle] (3.5,0)circle(4.6cm);
end{scope}
% draw both sides of the angular sector
draw[name intersections={of=cercle and cadre}](intersection-2)--(3.5,0)--(intersection-1)node[above right,midway]{h};
% sloped allow to write text tangent to the path
path[above] (intersection-1)to[bend left=15]node[sloped]{$c(h)$}(intersection-2);
% dimension of rectangle wrtien in 2 differents way
draw [<->](4.2,0)--node[right]{q}(4.2,4.5);
draw [<->](0,-.6)--(3.5,-.6)node[below,midway]{p};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Here is a way to build this figure that uses several key concepts from TikZ:
- the
scope
clip- the use of the
intersectionslibrary - the use of
nodeto place text.
slopedto write text tangent to a path
Their use is explained in the written comments in the code.

documentclass[border=5mm]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{intersections}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% This scope allows you to draw the part of the circle inside the rectangle. The outer part is cut off.
begin{scope}% use of intersections library to define the intersections between circle and rectangle
draw[name path global=cadre,clip] (0,0) rectangle (3.5,4.5);
draw[name path global=cercle] (3.5,0)circle(4.6cm);
end{scope}
% draw both sides of the angular sector
draw[name intersections={of=cercle and cadre}](intersection-2)--(3.5,0)--(intersection-1)node[above right,midway]{h};
% sloped allow to write text tangent to the path
path[above] (intersection-1)to[bend left=15]node[sloped]{$c(h)$}(intersection-2);
% dimension of rectangle wrtien in 2 differents way
draw [<->](4.2,0)--node[right]{q}(4.2,4.5);
draw [<->](0,-.6)--(3.5,-.6)node[below,midway]{p};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Here is a way to build this figure that uses several key concepts from TikZ:
- the
scope
clip- the use of the
intersectionslibrary - the use of
nodeto place text.
slopedto write text tangent to a path
Their use is explained in the written comments in the code.

documentclass[border=5mm]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{intersections}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% This scope allows you to draw the part of the circle inside the rectangle. The outer part is cut off.
begin{scope}% use of intersections library to define the intersections between circle and rectangle
draw[name path global=cadre,clip] (0,0) rectangle (3.5,4.5);
draw[name path global=cercle] (3.5,0)circle(4.6cm);
end{scope}
% draw both sides of the angular sector
draw[name intersections={of=cercle and cadre}](intersection-2)--(3.5,0)--(intersection-1)node[above right,midway]{h};
% sloped allow to write text tangent to the path
path[above] (intersection-1)to[bend left=15]node[sloped]{$c(h)$}(intersection-2);
% dimension of rectangle wrtien in 2 differents way
draw [<->](4.2,0)--node[right]{q}(4.2,4.5);
draw [<->](0,-.6)--(3.5,-.6)node[below,midway]{p};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
edited yesterday
answered yesterday
AndréCAndréC
10.2k11547
10.2k11547
add a comment |
add a comment |
Here you go :)
documentclass{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[x=0.75pt,y=0.75pt,yscale=-1,xscale=1,line width=0.75pt]
draw (46.5,25) -- (145.5,25) -- (145.5,156.33) -- (46.5,156.33) -- cycle ;
draw (46.5,176.33) -- (145.5,176.33) ;
draw [shift={(145.5,176.33)}, rotate = 180] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(46.5,176.33)}, rotate = 0] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (165.5,156.33) -- (165.5,25) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,25)}, rotate = 450] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,156.33)}, rotate = 270] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (46.88,52.66) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw (117.77,25) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw [draw opacity=0] (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) -- (117.08,127.92) -- cycle ; draw (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) ;
% Text Nodes
draw (99,163) node [align=left] {$displaystyle p$};
draw (174,91) node [align=left] {$displaystyle q$};
draw (101,96) node [align=left] {$displaystyle h$};
draw (153,160) node [align=left] {$displaystyle s$};
draw (82,40) node [scale=0.8] [align=left] {$displaystyle c( h)$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
2
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
1
And do you really want to set a style forevery picture? This will affect all othertikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Here you go :)
documentclass{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[x=0.75pt,y=0.75pt,yscale=-1,xscale=1,line width=0.75pt]
draw (46.5,25) -- (145.5,25) -- (145.5,156.33) -- (46.5,156.33) -- cycle ;
draw (46.5,176.33) -- (145.5,176.33) ;
draw [shift={(145.5,176.33)}, rotate = 180] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(46.5,176.33)}, rotate = 0] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (165.5,156.33) -- (165.5,25) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,25)}, rotate = 450] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,156.33)}, rotate = 270] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (46.88,52.66) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw (117.77,25) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw [draw opacity=0] (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) -- (117.08,127.92) -- cycle ; draw (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) ;
% Text Nodes
draw (99,163) node [align=left] {$displaystyle p$};
draw (174,91) node [align=left] {$displaystyle q$};
draw (101,96) node [align=left] {$displaystyle h$};
draw (153,160) node [align=left] {$displaystyle s$};
draw (82,40) node [scale=0.8] [align=left] {$displaystyle c( h)$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
2
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
1
And do you really want to set a style forevery picture? This will affect all othertikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Here you go :)
documentclass{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[x=0.75pt,y=0.75pt,yscale=-1,xscale=1,line width=0.75pt]
draw (46.5,25) -- (145.5,25) -- (145.5,156.33) -- (46.5,156.33) -- cycle ;
draw (46.5,176.33) -- (145.5,176.33) ;
draw [shift={(145.5,176.33)}, rotate = 180] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(46.5,176.33)}, rotate = 0] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (165.5,156.33) -- (165.5,25) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,25)}, rotate = 450] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,156.33)}, rotate = 270] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (46.88,52.66) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw (117.77,25) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw [draw opacity=0] (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) -- (117.08,127.92) -- cycle ; draw (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) ;
% Text Nodes
draw (99,163) node [align=left] {$displaystyle p$};
draw (174,91) node [align=left] {$displaystyle q$};
draw (101,96) node [align=left] {$displaystyle h$};
draw (153,160) node [align=left] {$displaystyle s$};
draw (82,40) node [scale=0.8] [align=left] {$displaystyle c( h)$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Here you go :)
documentclass{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[x=0.75pt,y=0.75pt,yscale=-1,xscale=1,line width=0.75pt]
draw (46.5,25) -- (145.5,25) -- (145.5,156.33) -- (46.5,156.33) -- cycle ;
draw (46.5,176.33) -- (145.5,176.33) ;
draw [shift={(145.5,176.33)}, rotate = 180] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(46.5,176.33)}, rotate = 0] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (165.5,156.33) -- (165.5,25) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,25)}, rotate = 450] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-4.9) .. controls (6.95,-2.3) and (3.31,-0.67) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.67) and (6.95,2.3) .. (10.93,4.9) ;
draw [shift={(165.5,156.33)}, rotate = 270] [color={rgb, 255:red, 0; green, 0; blue, 0 } ][line width=0.75] (0,5.59) -- (0,-5.59)(10.93,-3.29) .. controls (6.95,-1.4) and (3.31,-0.3) .. (0,0) .. controls (3.31,0.3) and (6.95,1.4) .. (10.93,3.29) ;
draw (46.88,52.66) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw (117.77,25) -- (145.5,156.33) ;
draw [draw opacity=0] (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) -- (117.08,127.92) -- cycle ; draw (46.88,52.66) .. controls (65.27,35.5) and (89.95,25) .. (117.08,25) .. controls (117.31,25) and (117.54,25) .. (117.77,25) ;
% Text Nodes
draw (99,163) node [align=left] {$displaystyle p$};
draw (174,91) node [align=left] {$displaystyle q$};
draw (101,96) node [align=left] {$displaystyle h$};
draw (153,160) node [align=left] {$displaystyle s$};
draw (82,40) node [scale=0.8] [align=left] {$displaystyle c( h)$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}

New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited yesterday
New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered yesterday
Superuser27Superuser27
34813
34813
New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Superuser27 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
2
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
1
And do you really want to set a style forevery picture? This will affect all othertikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
2
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
1
And do you really want to set a style forevery picture? This will affect all othertikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.
– Alan Munn
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
2
2
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
As always here -- please make your code snippet compilable, then we do not have to guess what you are doing with documentclass, used packages etc.
– Kurt
yesterday
1
1
And do you really want to set a style for
every picture? This will affect all other tikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.– Alan Munn
yesterday
And do you really want to set a style for
every picture? This will affect all other tikzpictures, which is probably not desirable.– Alan Munn
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
It's compilable now @Kurt, enjoy :) You can change document class if you like. Any should work, really... And only one package.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@AlanMunn you're right, thanks. Fixed it.
– Superuser27
yesterday
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
@Superuser27: your code is from Geogebra, right?
– Black Mild
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
5
Welcome to TeX.se. I've changed your Portuguese request to English, which is the language of the site. But questions which just post an image and ask people to draw it for you are really not the best way to ask a question. Much of this diagram is quite simple, so can you edit your question to include a minimal document that shows at least some of what you've tried. Then we could help you with what you're having trouble with.
– Alan Munn
yesterday