11 November 2020

GeoGebra Discovery: Explore envelopes easily!

One of GeoGebra's newest experimental features is the availability of the Envelope tool in the Toolbar. Now the user does not need to type the Envelope command in the Input Bar, but just to select the required tool in the Toolbar. In addition, in the latest version there is language support for Spanish, German and Hungarian to ease the user's experiments.


Let's try a simple example:
  1. Create a circle with center \(A\) and circumpoint \(B\). The circle \(c\) is created.
  2. Put a point \(C\) on the circle by using the Point tool .
  3. Create an arbitrary point \(D\) somewhere in the plane by using the Point tool again.
  4. Create the perpendicular bisector of points \(C\) and \(D\). A line \(f\) is created.
  5. Use the Move tool to make experiments how the line \(f\) is changing while you drag \(C\) on the circle.
  6. (Optional.) Right-click on \(f\) and enable trace. Make some more experiments by dragging \(C\) on the circle. When you finish this step, you may eventually disable showing trace and remove the already drawn trace by pressing Ctrl-Shift-F.
  7. Use the Envelope tool to select line \(f\) and the mover point \(C\). This results in showing the envelope of the lines \(f\) while \(C\) is moving on its path.
  8. (Optional.) Select the created object \(eq1\) and change its color to make a difference to the other objects. Eventually you can try steps 5 and 6 again to visually check if the envelope is indeed always touched by all possible lines \(f\).
  9. Change point \(D\) to learn how the geometric properties of the envelope depend on your selection.
Acknowledgment. The introductory figure is a contribution of my son Benedek. He used the SVG version of the Envelope tool icon, and imported it in Blender, then, after some magick, he rendered a 3D view figure and voilà!


Entries on topic GeoGebra

  1. I restart my blog… (28 September 2020)
  2. A new GeoGebra version with better angle bisectors… (29 September 2020)
  3. Better language support… (6 October 2020)
  4. Detection of perpendicular lines… (19 October 2020)
  5. Points attached to an algebraic curve… (31 October 2020)
  6. Explore envelopes easily! (11 November 2020)
  7. Offsets of a trifolium (17 November 2020)
  8. Ellipsograph of Archimedes as a simple LEGO construction (18 November 2020)
  9. Pete-Dőtsch theorem (29 December 2020)
  10. Comparison improvements (25 January 2021)
  11. ApplyMap (26 January 2021)
  12. Discovering geometric inequalities (27 October 2021)
  13. Proving inequalities (28 October 2021)
  14. Supporting logic in function calculus (2 November 2021)
  15. Supporting logic with technology: Part 2 (12 February 2022)

Zoltán Kovács
Linz School of Education
Johannes Kepler University
Altenberger Strasse 69
A-4040 Linz