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TheGrifter80 (talk | contribs) →Use of tau (𝜏) in addition to π: new section |
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:All of our articles [[Trigonometric functions]], [[Trigonometry]], and [[History of trigonometry]] also do a very poor job of explaining the varying mathematical context through history. There was no concept of "trigonometric functions" per se until quite recently. Through most of history these were taken to be line segments (and line segments were implicitly associated with their lengths), not numbers or ratios.
:It's anachronistic and misleading to say something like "X person invented the cotangent function" when an accurate description would be more like "X person wrote down a table associating the sun's altitude to the length of the shadow of a vertical gnomon (sundial rod), which 2 centuries later began to be used for more general trigonometric purposes. X's table was probably based on earlier examples, possibly much earlier, but they have been lost." –[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[user_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 15:54, 14 February 2025 (UTC)
== Use of tau (𝜏) in addition to π ==
Could the "Algebraic values" section benefit from providing radian measures in terms of 𝜏 as well as π? For people coming to trigonometry for the first time this could give an additional intuition linking angles to turns around the unit circle.
For example:
sin π/6 = sin 𝜏/12 = sin 30° = √1/2 = 1/2 [[User:TheGrifter80|TheGrifter80]] ([[User talk:TheGrifter80|talk]]) 02:28, 14 March 2025 (UTC)
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