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  2. Axonometric projection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axonometric_projection

    The three types of axonometric projection are isometric projection, dimetric projection, and trimetric projection, depending on the exact angle by which the view deviates from the orthogonal. [2] [3] Typically in axonometric drawing, as in other types of pictorials, one axis of space is shown to be vertical.

  3. 3D projection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_projection

    In trimetric pictorials (for methods, see Trimetric projection), the direction of viewing is such that all of the three axes of space appear unequally foreshortened. The scale along each of the three axes and the angles among them are determined separately as dictated by the angle of viewing. Approximations in Trimetric drawings are common.

  4. Isometric projection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isometric_projection

    Isometric graph paper can be placed under a normal piece of drawing paper to help achieve the effect without calculation. In a similar way, an isometric view can be obtained in a 3D scene. Starting with the camera aligned parallel to the floor and aligned to the coordinate axes, it is first rotated horizontally (around the vertical axis) by ± ...

  5. 2.5D - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2.5D

    There are three main divisions of axonometric projection: isometric (equal measure), dimetric (symmetrical and unsymmetrical), and trimetric (single-view or only two sides). The most common of these drawing types in engineering drawing is isometric projection. This projection is tilted so that all three axes create equal angles at intervals of ...

  6. Engineering drawing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engineering_drawing

    Here is an example of an engineering drawing (an isometric view of the same object is shown above). The different line types are colored for clarity. Black = object line and hatching; Red = hidden line; Blue = center line of piece or opening; Magenta = phantom line or cutting plane line

  7. Isometric video game graphics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isometric_video_game_graphics

    A common example is picking the tile that lies right under the cursor when a user clicks. One such method is using the same rotation matrices that originally produced the isometric view in reverse to turn a point in screen coordinates into a point that would lie on the game board surface before it was rotated. Then, the world x and y values can ...

  8. Isometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isometry

    A global isometry, isometric isomorphism or congruence mapping is a bijective isometry. Like any other bijection, a global isometry has a function inverse. The inverse of a global isometry is also a global isometry. Two metric spaces X and Y are called isometric if there is a bijective isometry from X to Y.

  9. Axonometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axonometry

    If the three foreshortenings are equal, the projection is called isometric. If all foreshortenings are different, the projection is called trimetric . The parameters in the diagram at right (e.g. of the house drawn on graph paper) are: α = 135 ∘ , β = 90 ∘ , v y = v z = 1 , v x = 1 / 2 . {\displaystyle \alpha =135^{\circ },\beta =90 ...