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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Lichinsol (talk | contribs) at 03:53, 8 October 2019 (→‎Need revision for "Curvature of Plane curves"). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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(Layout problem)

The illustration and the text are interfering with each other, as viewed from Netscape. I've tried putting a colon before the "div", and I've tried putting "br" before and after it, to no avail.
Michael Hardy 20:12 Mar 14, 2003 (UTC)

This seems to be affecting a number of images that used to work correctly in Netscape (they still work as expected in IE). Was something changed in the Wiki software that is affecting this? I'll change it to using a table.
Chas zzz brown 22:50 Mar 14, 2003 (UTC)

Earth's curvature

Seeking information on the Earth's curvature, but no linkage from this page. I've read that "The earth's curvature is not visible from altitudes lower than about 20 miles.", but I'd really like a cite.
~ender 2007-08-21 12:06:PM MST —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.167.217.162 (talk)

Signed curvature in three dimensions

It seems noteworthy to me that the local curvature can easily be obtained by adding an obvious term. If one extends the given equation by the directional vector normalized to unit length the curvature vector becomes as signed quantity:

Where the added term makes consistent to the sign in the signed curvature k for the two dimensional case:


Thus it is possible to give also a signed curvature for a three dimensional curve. Then one can integrate this and obtain, for example the 'net' curvature for a Lissajous (1:2) figure to be (0.0,0.0,0.0) instead of the unsigned case, where the curvature adds up.

I verified this 'experimentally' in Mathematica. However, can this be found in literature?
User:Aritglanor Friday, June 19, 2009 at 3:44:14 PM (UTC)

About convex and concave curvature

I have made several edits about convex and concave curvature, but those are reverted [1] [2] [3] by User:Sławomir Biały. How sad the Wikipedia only include "convex curvature" for representing "positive curvature" in terms of Gaussian curvature, but not include "concave curvature" for representing "negative curvature"! More sadly, even though the revert might be valid, Wikipedia still not explain "convex curve" nor "concave curve" in terms of Mean curvature... UU (talk) 16:22, 25 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You're simply wrong that convex/concave surfaces can have negative curvature. A (smooth, strictly) locally convex surface, by definition, is a surface that locally lies on one side of its tangent plane. A neccesary and sufficient condition for local convexity is positive Gauss curvature. Sławomir Biały (talk) 16:58, 25 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Need revision for "Curvature of Plane curves"

Please see the latest edits by Lichinsol (reverted by some editor) in history. The section "Curvature of plane curves "lacks clear mathematical illustrations and things are written in an unsynchronized manner. Also suggestion for a derivation of" Local expressions " formula on my edit.
Need suggestions!
(The editors who are repeatedly reverting my edits are edit warring. I am not. Without looking into the edit and simply reverting just because it is bold is not the reason to revert as suggested by BRD. BRD too is not the reason to revert. I want to re revert, but then I would be warring.) Lichinsol (talk) 01:36, 2 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

The old version really had problems : using "time" for arc length which is actually "distance".It was also discussed in an old discussion. The present has a derivation for the local expressions too. I would also suggest a derivation for the polar coordinates expression too, if that's possible.VaibhavShinchan (talk) 06:53, 3 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I cannot understand what this statement means in the Local Expressions :"They can be expressed in a coordinate-independent manner......". Commas are used inside the determinent. This way of writing is probably not used anywhere in the article Determinant. Either a citation should be provided or it should be explained what the determinant actually means.VaibhavShinchan (talk) 07:03, 3 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

@D.Lazard: Please, discuss with each other the disputed edit. — MarkH21 (talk) 07:21, 5 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

The number of modifications made in a single edit by Lichinsol makes difficult to recognize whether this fixes some content issues of the previous version. On the other hand, here are several changes that are not acceptable:
  • In section "Curvature of plane curves", replacement of regular prose by a bulleted list. This is against Wikipedia standard, see MOS:LISTBASICS
  • Same section: The last bulleted item is nonsensical: it is the curvature that is defined as a rate of change, not the converse as said in Lichinsol's version
  • Same section: The last section is indented with "blockquote" without any apparent reason
  • Section "Local expression" An useful explanation is removed or hidden in a collapsed box entitled "derivation"
  • Section "Curvature of the graph of a function": Lichinsol's heading is badly formatted. Worse, Lichinsol's removes all reference to the graph of a function for introducing a confusion (rather common, I must admit) between a function, which is not a curve, and thus does not has curvature, and its graph, which is a curve and not a function.
I have not checked Linchinsol edits further, but this is sufficient for a revert of the whole edit. If some issues need to be fixed or if some point needs to be improved, please proceed as follows: if the issue or the improvement can be clearly explained in the edit summary, proceed with an explicit edit summary, without any other modification in the same edit. If more detailed explanations are needed, then open a thread in the talk page for given them in details. In any case, respect the Wikipedia rule that asserts that a disputed edit must get a consensus before being kept or redone. D.Lazard (talk) 09:31, 5 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Here is my say:
First, please open the "archive" of this talk page, and u will find a dispute titled "Meaning of dT/ds", in which someone points out that 'arc length' was written 'time' instead. Writing this way is dubious. This error was not rectified since then. The physical meaning of dT/ds is necessary to be written, but not in this way.
In the section "Curvature of Plane Curves", which explains about dT/ds as the curvature, but it is not written why it is the curvature. In the end paragraph of the section, a small hint of it was given: d(theta)/ds, but it defintely still does not explain the meaning. That is why the section is "unsynchronized" and "lacks information on topic".
Adding bullets to the section should not be a problem at all. It was necessary there.
The "blockquote" was by mistake. I use Visual edit always. Maybe some keyboard key combinations had lead to it being added.
What D.Lazard is talking about of graph of function is incorrect. The subsection was only for, y=f(x). Every function has a graph and may not necessarily be written in the form y=f(x), for example of a circle. So the subsection heading is wrong.
In section "Local Expresssions", the derivation was added by me. It is necessary for explanation, and that hiding it in "show template" makes the article look cleaner, not too harsh to the eyes if the formulae and procedures were thrown naked to the article.
Lastly, I would add that I have not found any weight in almost any of the points mentioned by D.Lazard above. The edit might be large in size, accounting the many problems, they could not be done separately.Lichinsol (talk) 16:24, 5 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Bullets: It is your right to think that not taking care of Wikipedia rules is not a problem, but if you want to take your part of this encyclopedic project, you must convince other editors that in this case, it makes the article better. Saying "It was necessary there" is not a good way to convince anybody.
The derivation was added by me. It is necessary for explanation: A derivation is a proof, not an explanation. A proof may be useful for supporting an explanation, but can never replace it. Here you have removed an explanation and added a proof. This does not explains anything
Every function has a graph and may not necessarily be written in the form y=f(x), for example of a circle: In this article, all functions are supposed to be differentiable (otherwise, the curvature is not defined); the implicit function theorem says exactly that all differentiable function can be written in the form Also, a circle is not a function, although the upper half circle is the graph of a function. D.Lazard (talk) 17:15, 5 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]


The bullets are making the things more clearer. If there are problems, then we may remove the bullets.

For the y=f(x) problem, I think u already know the answer. The sub-section was created for simple functions which can be written in the form y=f(x) and not for others like a circle,Cycloid, etc. The implicit function theorem says that they can be written in the form y=f(x), but the sub-section is only for simple functions where the independent variable(x) can be separated from the dependent variable(y) easily. No too deep thinking in this case. Take the 'simple' word as intuitive as possible here. (Would u prefer to convert the cartesian equation of a cycloid to y=f(x) first or prefer the parametric equation for finding the curvature. Obviously u know the answer. It is almost impossible to convert the cartesian equation of cycloid in the form y=f(x))

The derivation is much better than the explanation written in the present article, and the derivation explains everything, provided the "Curvature of Plane Curves" is read thoroughly. The explanation lacks why an "extra factor of reciprocal of tangent modulus is present in the formula for curvature". Require the attention of D.Lazard in this matter.----Lichinsol (talk) 05:55, 7 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

On the point of bullets and proofs, we should certainly strive for prose over bullet points, as well as prose explanation over derivations and proofs (MOS:PROSE). — MarkH21 (talk) 08:12, 7 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]


But the article MOS:PROSE gives the example of a list. What I did was that the bullets were actually prose in themselves. They were not plain 2 to 3 words in a bullet. Every bullet had material in it. The bullets were made for a reason and they clearly do a better work than if prose were used instead.

It is a mathematical article and adding a derivation to it too is for the betterment of the article. Many mathematical articles on wikipedia provide explicit derivations than explanations(See Pendulum (mathematics).----Lichinsol (talk) 13:53, 7 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't look at the particular content here, I meant as a general principle. But generally, prose is still better than bullets containing prose unless there is a clear reason for the bullets. Derivations certainly have a place on mathematical articles as well, but should not be dominant. We should keep WP:NOTTEXTBOOK in mind. I think D.Lazard has more specific comments on this particular instance. — MarkH21 (talk) 21:16, 7 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]


The bullets were made because the section was to elaborate the "number" of possible ways in which curvature could be defined, So making bullets was important. Adding derivations to the article may not make it a textbook necessarily. Many articles on wikipedia provide proofs & derivations. I can't find what problems are being encountered by the editors. Please clearly look into the edit before foretelling that it makes the article a textbook or the bullets are ruling out the norms.Lichinsol (talk) 03:53, 8 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]