Like the Mathematica Player, you can investigate math documents, but cannot create and save your own. Java-based, so PC, Mac, Linux, Solaris SparcĪllows user to interact with documents made by the commercial LiveMath Editor. Carthesian plot, polar plot, parametric plot, best fit, fast fourier transformation, histogram. Cartesian, spherical and cylindrical coordinates. Calculates distances, intersections, volume and area for point, line, plane, sphere, circle. It handles vectors, matrices, complex numbers, quaternions, coordinates, regular polygons and intersections. Mathematical graph and charting software for geometry and statistics Can do best fits, function plotting, integration. Ideal for investigating and exploring a wide array of math.Įxtendable function library, a function solver, 2D and 3D graphing, a calculus facility allowing single, double and triple integration and differentiation. Can perform differentiation and integration on functions. Reduced feature version for most phones.ĭynamically interact with geometric figures and graphs.
#MATH ILLUSTRATIONS DOWNLOAD ANDROID#
ProductĬross platform on all devices, including Android and iOS (Apple). Please feel free to add your suggestions to this list.
#MATH ILLUSTRATIONS DOWNLOAD UPDATE#
I will update this page as more packages come to my notice. Any one of them would be good math software for gifted students too. Each of the following would be appropriate for incorporating into an interactive whiteboard lesson - especially if the students are given the opportunity to interact and learn from their explorations. I have only included packages that are still currently under development. These products could replace expensive high school math software. I have restricted the list to products that are suitable for the range of topics in my Interactive Mathematics site (that is, from beginner algebra through trigonometry, logarithms, graphs, and calculus up to Laplace Transform and Fourier Series). So here is a list of free math software downloads that you may find useful. Sophisticated packages like Matlab ($500 for a student license), MathCAD ($995 single user, $129 for student license) or Mathematica ($3120 for standard download and $139 for students) are beyond the reach of most institutions and certainly most individual students. High cost has been one of the main barriers to the implementation of computer math software. Computer algebra systems have been around for a few decades and yet many math educators continue to resist them. For many years now I've been advocating greater use of math software in education.