Project this triangle on surface of a sphere Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Clipping more complicated shapes in TikZtransform shape nonlinear=true vs. accessing coordinatesLaTeX equivalent of ConTeXt buffersRotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?Numerical conditional within tikz keys?Why do I get an extra white page before my TikZ picture?TikZ: Drawing an arc from an intersection to an intersectionHow to prevent rounded and duplicated tick labels in pgfplots with fixed precision?Drawing rectilinear curves in Tikz, aka an Etch-a-Sketch drawingLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themHow to draw a square and its diagonals with arrows?
Find longest string in Datatable column
How can I make names more distinctive without making them longer?
What is a 'tuning' of a guitar and why would you use it? Doesn't it make it more difficult to play?
Should I call the interviewer directly, if HR aren't responding?
If Jon Snow became King of the Seven Kingdoms what would his title be?
Date formating in QGIS expression
Regex in IF condition in awk
Is there a concise way to say "all of the X, one of each"?
Is there a service that would inform me whenever a new direct route is scheduled from a given airport?
How do you clear the ApexPages.getMessages() collection in a test?
Sorting numerically
What would be Julian Assange's expected punishment, on the current English criminal law?
If a contract sometimes uses the wrong name, is it still valid?
When -s is used with third person singular. What's its use in this context?
How to pronounce "criar"?
If A makes B more likely then B makes A more likely"
How to change the Selenium IDE file extension (.side file into java file) while saving the project
Can a drone be seen on TCAS?
Do I really need recursive chmod to restrict access to a folder?
Are Luton Airport to London National Express transfer hours fixed according to my reservation?
Why is "Captain Marvel" translated as male in Portugal?
Do we need dark matter and dark energy, if the Sun is a plasma and not a blackbody?
How much radiation do nowadays nuclear physics experiments impose on researcher
Is 1 ppb equal to 1 μg/kg?
Project this triangle on surface of a sphere
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Clipping more complicated shapes in TikZtransform shape nonlinear=true vs. accessing coordinatesLaTeX equivalent of ConTeXt buffersRotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?Numerical conditional within tikz keys?Why do I get an extra white page before my TikZ picture?TikZ: Drawing an arc from an intersection to an intersectionHow to prevent rounded and duplicated tick labels in pgfplots with fixed precision?Drawing rectilinear curves in Tikz, aka an Etch-a-Sketch drawingLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themHow to draw a square and its diagonals with arrows?
I have the following triangle in TikZ MWE:
documentclass[tikz]standalone
usepackagepgfplots,mathtools
usetikzlibraryhapes,decorations.pathreplacing
usetikzlibrarypatterns
definecolorRoyalAzurergb0.0, 0.22, 0.66
begindocument
begintikzpicture
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;
endtikzpicture
enddocument
that generates:

I would like to project this triangle to the surface of a sphere, much like this figure:

How can I do this?
tikz-pgf tikz-styles
add a comment |
I have the following triangle in TikZ MWE:
documentclass[tikz]standalone
usepackagepgfplots,mathtools
usetikzlibraryhapes,decorations.pathreplacing
usetikzlibrarypatterns
definecolorRoyalAzurergb0.0, 0.22, 0.66
begindocument
begintikzpicture
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;
endtikzpicture
enddocument
that generates:

I would like to project this triangle to the surface of a sphere, much like this figure:

How can I do this?
tikz-pgf tikz-styles
Somewhat related: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/408245/…
– John Kormylo
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I have the following triangle in TikZ MWE:
documentclass[tikz]standalone
usepackagepgfplots,mathtools
usetikzlibraryhapes,decorations.pathreplacing
usetikzlibrarypatterns
definecolorRoyalAzurergb0.0, 0.22, 0.66
begindocument
begintikzpicture
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;
endtikzpicture
enddocument
that generates:

I would like to project this triangle to the surface of a sphere, much like this figure:

How can I do this?
tikz-pgf tikz-styles
I have the following triangle in TikZ MWE:
documentclass[tikz]standalone
usepackagepgfplots,mathtools
usetikzlibraryhapes,decorations.pathreplacing
usetikzlibrarypatterns
definecolorRoyalAzurergb0.0, 0.22, 0.66
begindocument
begintikzpicture
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;
endtikzpicture
enddocument
that generates:

I would like to project this triangle to the surface of a sphere, much like this figure:

How can I do this?
tikz-pgf tikz-styles
tikz-pgf tikz-styles
asked 5 hours ago
SidSid
711314
711314
Somewhat related: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/408245/…
– John Kormylo
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Somewhat related: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/408245/…
– John Kormylo
1 hour ago
Somewhat related: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/408245/…
– John Kormylo
1 hour ago
Somewhat related: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/408245/…
– John Kormylo
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
The angles of the triangle on the sphere are 3 times 90 degrees whereas the angles of the triangle in the plane are 60 degrees each. Therefore I do not precisely understand what is meant by "project". If it is meant that the triangle on the sphere should also have three equal angles, you could do e.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usepackagetikz-3dplot
usetikzlibrarypatterns
begindocument
tdplotsetmaincoords7030
begintikzpicture[tdplot_main_coords,declare function=R=pi;]
shade[tdplot_screen_coords,ball color=gray,opacity=0.5] (0,0) circle[radius=R];
draw plot[variable=x,domain=tdplotmainphi-180:tdplotmainphi,smooth]
(R*cos(x),R*sin(x),0);
draw[blue,pattern=dots,pattern color=blue]
plot[variable=x,domain=90:00,smooth] (0,-R*sin(x),R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*sin(x),0,R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*cos(x),-R*sin(x),0);
endtikzpicture
enddocument

An alternative could be to use nonlinear transformations to project anything you want on a sphere. We have used this for the Christmas balls in this video (at a time in which the atmosphere were better...). However, when doing this, we run into the above-mentioned problem that the triangle has different angles on the sphere.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usetikzlibrarypatterns
usepgfmodulenonlineartransformations
makeatletter
% from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/434247/121799
tikzdeclarecoordinatesystemsphere
tikz@scan@one@pointrelax(#1)
spheretransformation
%
defspheretransformation% similar to the pgfmanual section 103.4.2
pgfmathsincos@pgf@sys@tonumberpgf@x%
pgfmathsetmacrorelXthepgf@x/28.3465%
pgfmathsetmacrorelYthepgf@y/28.3465%min(max(
pgfmathsetmacromyx28.3465*Radius*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*sin(min(max((relX/Radius)*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*(180/pi),-90),90))
pgfmathsetmacromyy28.3465*Radius*sin(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))%typeout(relX,relY)->(myx,myy)%
pgf@x=myx pt%
pgf@y=myy pt%
makeatother
begindocument
begintikzpicture[pics/trian/.style=code=
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;]
pgfmathsetmacroRadius4
shade[ball color=red] (0,0) circle[radius=Radius];
beginscope[xshift=-10cm]
path (0,0) pictrian;
endscope
beginscope[transform shape nonlinear=true]
pgftransformnonlinearspheretransformation
pic[local bounding box=box1] at (0,0) trian;
endscope
endtikzpicture
enddocument

1
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "85"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f484945%2fproject-this-triangle-on-surface-of-a-sphere%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The angles of the triangle on the sphere are 3 times 90 degrees whereas the angles of the triangle in the plane are 60 degrees each. Therefore I do not precisely understand what is meant by "project". If it is meant that the triangle on the sphere should also have three equal angles, you could do e.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usepackagetikz-3dplot
usetikzlibrarypatterns
begindocument
tdplotsetmaincoords7030
begintikzpicture[tdplot_main_coords,declare function=R=pi;]
shade[tdplot_screen_coords,ball color=gray,opacity=0.5] (0,0) circle[radius=R];
draw plot[variable=x,domain=tdplotmainphi-180:tdplotmainphi,smooth]
(R*cos(x),R*sin(x),0);
draw[blue,pattern=dots,pattern color=blue]
plot[variable=x,domain=90:00,smooth] (0,-R*sin(x),R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*sin(x),0,R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*cos(x),-R*sin(x),0);
endtikzpicture
enddocument

An alternative could be to use nonlinear transformations to project anything you want on a sphere. We have used this for the Christmas balls in this video (at a time in which the atmosphere were better...). However, when doing this, we run into the above-mentioned problem that the triangle has different angles on the sphere.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usetikzlibrarypatterns
usepgfmodulenonlineartransformations
makeatletter
% from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/434247/121799
tikzdeclarecoordinatesystemsphere
tikz@scan@one@pointrelax(#1)
spheretransformation
%
defspheretransformation% similar to the pgfmanual section 103.4.2
pgfmathsincos@pgf@sys@tonumberpgf@x%
pgfmathsetmacrorelXthepgf@x/28.3465%
pgfmathsetmacrorelYthepgf@y/28.3465%min(max(
pgfmathsetmacromyx28.3465*Radius*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*sin(min(max((relX/Radius)*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*(180/pi),-90),90))
pgfmathsetmacromyy28.3465*Radius*sin(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))%typeout(relX,relY)->(myx,myy)%
pgf@x=myx pt%
pgf@y=myy pt%
makeatother
begindocument
begintikzpicture[pics/trian/.style=code=
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;]
pgfmathsetmacroRadius4
shade[ball color=red] (0,0) circle[radius=Radius];
beginscope[xshift=-10cm]
path (0,0) pictrian;
endscope
beginscope[transform shape nonlinear=true]
pgftransformnonlinearspheretransformation
pic[local bounding box=box1] at (0,0) trian;
endscope
endtikzpicture
enddocument

1
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
add a comment |
The angles of the triangle on the sphere are 3 times 90 degrees whereas the angles of the triangle in the plane are 60 degrees each. Therefore I do not precisely understand what is meant by "project". If it is meant that the triangle on the sphere should also have three equal angles, you could do e.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usepackagetikz-3dplot
usetikzlibrarypatterns
begindocument
tdplotsetmaincoords7030
begintikzpicture[tdplot_main_coords,declare function=R=pi;]
shade[tdplot_screen_coords,ball color=gray,opacity=0.5] (0,0) circle[radius=R];
draw plot[variable=x,domain=tdplotmainphi-180:tdplotmainphi,smooth]
(R*cos(x),R*sin(x),0);
draw[blue,pattern=dots,pattern color=blue]
plot[variable=x,domain=90:00,smooth] (0,-R*sin(x),R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*sin(x),0,R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*cos(x),-R*sin(x),0);
endtikzpicture
enddocument

An alternative could be to use nonlinear transformations to project anything you want on a sphere. We have used this for the Christmas balls in this video (at a time in which the atmosphere were better...). However, when doing this, we run into the above-mentioned problem that the triangle has different angles on the sphere.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usetikzlibrarypatterns
usepgfmodulenonlineartransformations
makeatletter
% from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/434247/121799
tikzdeclarecoordinatesystemsphere
tikz@scan@one@pointrelax(#1)
spheretransformation
%
defspheretransformation% similar to the pgfmanual section 103.4.2
pgfmathsincos@pgf@sys@tonumberpgf@x%
pgfmathsetmacrorelXthepgf@x/28.3465%
pgfmathsetmacrorelYthepgf@y/28.3465%min(max(
pgfmathsetmacromyx28.3465*Radius*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*sin(min(max((relX/Radius)*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*(180/pi),-90),90))
pgfmathsetmacromyy28.3465*Radius*sin(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))%typeout(relX,relY)->(myx,myy)%
pgf@x=myx pt%
pgf@y=myy pt%
makeatother
begindocument
begintikzpicture[pics/trian/.style=code=
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;]
pgfmathsetmacroRadius4
shade[ball color=red] (0,0) circle[radius=Radius];
beginscope[xshift=-10cm]
path (0,0) pictrian;
endscope
beginscope[transform shape nonlinear=true]
pgftransformnonlinearspheretransformation
pic[local bounding box=box1] at (0,0) trian;
endscope
endtikzpicture
enddocument

1
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
add a comment |
The angles of the triangle on the sphere are 3 times 90 degrees whereas the angles of the triangle in the plane are 60 degrees each. Therefore I do not precisely understand what is meant by "project". If it is meant that the triangle on the sphere should also have three equal angles, you could do e.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usepackagetikz-3dplot
usetikzlibrarypatterns
begindocument
tdplotsetmaincoords7030
begintikzpicture[tdplot_main_coords,declare function=R=pi;]
shade[tdplot_screen_coords,ball color=gray,opacity=0.5] (0,0) circle[radius=R];
draw plot[variable=x,domain=tdplotmainphi-180:tdplotmainphi,smooth]
(R*cos(x),R*sin(x),0);
draw[blue,pattern=dots,pattern color=blue]
plot[variable=x,domain=90:00,smooth] (0,-R*sin(x),R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*sin(x),0,R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*cos(x),-R*sin(x),0);
endtikzpicture
enddocument

An alternative could be to use nonlinear transformations to project anything you want on a sphere. We have used this for the Christmas balls in this video (at a time in which the atmosphere were better...). However, when doing this, we run into the above-mentioned problem that the triangle has different angles on the sphere.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usetikzlibrarypatterns
usepgfmodulenonlineartransformations
makeatletter
% from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/434247/121799
tikzdeclarecoordinatesystemsphere
tikz@scan@one@pointrelax(#1)
spheretransformation
%
defspheretransformation% similar to the pgfmanual section 103.4.2
pgfmathsincos@pgf@sys@tonumberpgf@x%
pgfmathsetmacrorelXthepgf@x/28.3465%
pgfmathsetmacrorelYthepgf@y/28.3465%min(max(
pgfmathsetmacromyx28.3465*Radius*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*sin(min(max((relX/Radius)*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*(180/pi),-90),90))
pgfmathsetmacromyy28.3465*Radius*sin(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))%typeout(relX,relY)->(myx,myy)%
pgf@x=myx pt%
pgf@y=myy pt%
makeatother
begindocument
begintikzpicture[pics/trian/.style=code=
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;]
pgfmathsetmacroRadius4
shade[ball color=red] (0,0) circle[radius=Radius];
beginscope[xshift=-10cm]
path (0,0) pictrian;
endscope
beginscope[transform shape nonlinear=true]
pgftransformnonlinearspheretransformation
pic[local bounding box=box1] at (0,0) trian;
endscope
endtikzpicture
enddocument

The angles of the triangle on the sphere are 3 times 90 degrees whereas the angles of the triangle in the plane are 60 degrees each. Therefore I do not precisely understand what is meant by "project". If it is meant that the triangle on the sphere should also have three equal angles, you could do e.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usepackagetikz-3dplot
usetikzlibrarypatterns
begindocument
tdplotsetmaincoords7030
begintikzpicture[tdplot_main_coords,declare function=R=pi;]
shade[tdplot_screen_coords,ball color=gray,opacity=0.5] (0,0) circle[radius=R];
draw plot[variable=x,domain=tdplotmainphi-180:tdplotmainphi,smooth]
(R*cos(x),R*sin(x),0);
draw[blue,pattern=dots,pattern color=blue]
plot[variable=x,domain=90:00,smooth] (0,-R*sin(x),R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*sin(x),0,R*cos(x))
-- plot[variable=x,domain=0:90,smooth] (R*cos(x),-R*sin(x),0);
endtikzpicture
enddocument

An alternative could be to use nonlinear transformations to project anything you want on a sphere. We have used this for the Christmas balls in this video (at a time in which the atmosphere were better...). However, when doing this, we run into the above-mentioned problem that the triangle has different angles on the sphere.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usetikzlibrarypatterns
usepgfmodulenonlineartransformations
makeatletter
% from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/434247/121799
tikzdeclarecoordinatesystemsphere
tikz@scan@one@pointrelax(#1)
spheretransformation
%
defspheretransformation% similar to the pgfmanual section 103.4.2
pgfmathsincos@pgf@sys@tonumberpgf@x%
pgfmathsetmacrorelXthepgf@x/28.3465%
pgfmathsetmacrorelYthepgf@y/28.3465%min(max(
pgfmathsetmacromyx28.3465*Radius*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*sin(min(max((relX/Radius)*cos(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))*(180/pi),-90),90))
pgfmathsetmacromyy28.3465*Radius*sin(min(max((relY/Radius)*(180/pi),-90),90))%typeout(relX,relY)->(myx,myy)%
pgf@x=myx pt%
pgf@y=myy pt%
makeatother
begindocument
begintikzpicture[pics/trian/.style=code=
draw[pattern color=black!50!white,pattern=dots, line width=0.6pt] (0,0) -- (2,3.4641) -- (4,0)--cycle;]
pgfmathsetmacroRadius4
shade[ball color=red] (0,0) circle[radius=Radius];
beginscope[xshift=-10cm]
path (0,0) pictrian;
endscope
beginscope[transform shape nonlinear=true]
pgftransformnonlinearspheretransformation
pic[local bounding box=box1] at (0,0) trian;
endscope
endtikzpicture
enddocument

edited 2 hours ago
answered 2 hours ago
marmotmarmot
118k6151285
118k6151285
1
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
add a comment |
1
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
1
1
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
In this case, I did only want a triangle with the same angles but on the surface of the sphere. I do have other examples where I want to perform a strict projection - but you have very helpfully included an example on how to do that too! Thank you. P.s. a lot of marmots in the video :D
– Sid
1 hour ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
For the first method you have, is it possible you could add the axes as in the image in the question?
– Sid
34 mins ago
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f484945%2fproject-this-triangle-on-surface-of-a-sphere%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Somewhat related: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/408245/…
– John Kormylo
1 hour ago