Ways of geometrical multiplicationGeometric notion of addition for the real projective lineConstruction of a regular pentagonConstruct circle tangent to two lineshyperbolic geometry (and circle ) construction problemConstruct a circle with straight edge and compass with some given conditions.Finding tangents to a circle with a straightedgeInscribing square in circle in just seven compass-and-straightedge stepsfinding the center of a circle (elementary geometry)Construct a perpendicular to a given line from a given (external) point, using a compass only onceDoes this mean that one can construct the cube root of two in three dimensions?Approximation of the quadratic formula with straightedge and compass

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Ways of geometrical multiplication


Geometric notion of addition for the real projective lineConstruction of a regular pentagonConstruct circle tangent to two lineshyperbolic geometry (and circle ) construction problemConstruct a circle with straight edge and compass with some given conditions.Finding tangents to a circle with a straightedgeInscribing square in circle in just seven compass-and-straightedge stepsfinding the center of a circle (elementary geometry)Construct a perpendicular to a given line from a given (external) point, using a compass only onceDoes this mean that one can construct the cube root of two in three dimensions?Approximation of the quadratic formula with straightedge and compass













21












$begingroup$


There are at least five ways to multiply two natural numbers $a$ and $b$ given as integer points $A$ and $B$ on the number line by geometrical means. Two of them include counting, the others are purely geometric. I wonder (i) if there are other ways and (ii) how to deeply understand the interrelationship between the different methods (i.e. recipes).



Let $A,B$ be two integer points on the line $O1$:



enter image description here



Method 1



  1. Count how often the unit length $|O1|$ fits into $|OA|$. Let this number be $a$ (here $a = 3$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $B$.


  2. Let $C$ be the (other) intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $a-1$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 2



  1. Construct a rectangle with side lengths $|OA|$, $|OB|$.

enter image description here



  1. Count how often the unit square (with side length $|O1|$) fits into the rectangle. Let this number be $c$ (here $c=6$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $0$.


  2. Let $C$ be the intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $c$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 3



  1. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the points $1'$ and $B'$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw the line $1'A$.


  2. Construct the parallel to $1'A$ through $B'$.


  3. The intersection point of this parallel with the line $O1$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 4



  1. Construct the perpendicular line to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the point $1'$.


  3. Construct the circle through $1'$, $A$ and $B$.


  4. The intersection point of this circle with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 5



This method makes use of the parabola, i.e. goes beyond compass-ruler constructions.



  1. Construct the unit parabola $(x,y)$ with $y = x^2$.


  2. Construct $B'$.


  3. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $A$.


  4. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $B'$.


  5. Draw the line through the intersection points of these two lines with the parabola.


  6. The intersection point of this line with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here




For me it's something like a miracle that these five methods – seemingly very different (as recipes) and not obviously equivalent – yield the very same result (i.e. point).




Note that the different methods take different amounts $sigma$ of Euclidean space (to completely show all intermediate points and (semi-)circles involved, assuming that $a >b$):



  • Method 1: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 2: $sigma sim ab$


  • Method 3: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 4: $sigma sim a^2b^2$


  • Method 5: $sigma sim a^3b$


This is space complexity. Compare this to time complexity, i.e. the number $tau$ of essential construction steps that are needed:



  • Method 1: $tau sim a$


  • Method 2: $tau sim ab$


  • Method 3: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 4: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 5: $tau sim 1$


From this point of view method 3 would be the most efficient.




Once again:




I'm looking for other geometrical methods to multiply two numbers
given as points on the number line $O1$ (is there one using the
hyperbola?) and trying to understand better the "deeper" reasons why
they all yield the same result (i.e. point).





Those answers I managed to visualize I will add here:



Method 6 (due to Cia Pan)



enter image description here



Method 7 (due to celtschk)



enter image description here



Method 8 (due to Accumulation)



enter image description here










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$







  • 3




    $begingroup$
    IMVHO methods 1 and 2 do not count: when you use the word 'count', the method becomes arithmetical instead of geometrical.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 17:06






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @CiaPan So methods that count don't count?
    $endgroup$
    – Acccumulation
    Mar 20 at 21:37






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    When you say 'count it – let $n$ be the numer – do something $n$ times' you introduce some counter $n$ and some variable 'iteration number' running from 1 through $n$. In my feeling this goes beyond classic constructions and I would translate it into purely geometric actions. For example in Method 1: construct a chain of consecutive copies of the segment $O1$ along the line, until you reach $A$; at each constructed endpoint construct a copy of $OB$ perpendicular to the line; construct a chain of consecutive copies of... (to be continued)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (cont.) ...all those segments along the line; the final endpoint is the point sought. This way we iterate over some set of concrete objects (segments or their endpoints). We can say 'I proces this one, and now this one... And I processed all of them so here is the result.' as opposite to 'I do one construction, and the second one... And I remember I was to make five of them, so now I'm done.' which involves some criterion not visible in the drawing.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    According to the Mohr–Mascheroni theorem (Wikipedia), any point classicaly constructible by a straightedge and a compass can also be constructed by a compass alone. Applying this would turn all points in your recent list to "circle". :)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 21 at 12:17















21












$begingroup$


There are at least five ways to multiply two natural numbers $a$ and $b$ given as integer points $A$ and $B$ on the number line by geometrical means. Two of them include counting, the others are purely geometric. I wonder (i) if there are other ways and (ii) how to deeply understand the interrelationship between the different methods (i.e. recipes).



Let $A,B$ be two integer points on the line $O1$:



enter image description here



Method 1



  1. Count how often the unit length $|O1|$ fits into $|OA|$. Let this number be $a$ (here $a = 3$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $B$.


  2. Let $C$ be the (other) intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $a-1$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 2



  1. Construct a rectangle with side lengths $|OA|$, $|OB|$.

enter image description here



  1. Count how often the unit square (with side length $|O1|$) fits into the rectangle. Let this number be $c$ (here $c=6$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $0$.


  2. Let $C$ be the intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $c$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 3



  1. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the points $1'$ and $B'$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw the line $1'A$.


  2. Construct the parallel to $1'A$ through $B'$.


  3. The intersection point of this parallel with the line $O1$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 4



  1. Construct the perpendicular line to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the point $1'$.


  3. Construct the circle through $1'$, $A$ and $B$.


  4. The intersection point of this circle with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 5



This method makes use of the parabola, i.e. goes beyond compass-ruler constructions.



  1. Construct the unit parabola $(x,y)$ with $y = x^2$.


  2. Construct $B'$.


  3. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $A$.


  4. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $B'$.


  5. Draw the line through the intersection points of these two lines with the parabola.


  6. The intersection point of this line with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here




For me it's something like a miracle that these five methods – seemingly very different (as recipes) and not obviously equivalent – yield the very same result (i.e. point).




Note that the different methods take different amounts $sigma$ of Euclidean space (to completely show all intermediate points and (semi-)circles involved, assuming that $a >b$):



  • Method 1: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 2: $sigma sim ab$


  • Method 3: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 4: $sigma sim a^2b^2$


  • Method 5: $sigma sim a^3b$


This is space complexity. Compare this to time complexity, i.e. the number $tau$ of essential construction steps that are needed:



  • Method 1: $tau sim a$


  • Method 2: $tau sim ab$


  • Method 3: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 4: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 5: $tau sim 1$


From this point of view method 3 would be the most efficient.




Once again:




I'm looking for other geometrical methods to multiply two numbers
given as points on the number line $O1$ (is there one using the
hyperbola?) and trying to understand better the "deeper" reasons why
they all yield the same result (i.e. point).





Those answers I managed to visualize I will add here:



Method 6 (due to Cia Pan)



enter image description here



Method 7 (due to celtschk)



enter image description here



Method 8 (due to Accumulation)



enter image description here










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$







  • 3




    $begingroup$
    IMVHO methods 1 and 2 do not count: when you use the word 'count', the method becomes arithmetical instead of geometrical.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 17:06






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @CiaPan So methods that count don't count?
    $endgroup$
    – Acccumulation
    Mar 20 at 21:37






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    When you say 'count it – let $n$ be the numer – do something $n$ times' you introduce some counter $n$ and some variable 'iteration number' running from 1 through $n$. In my feeling this goes beyond classic constructions and I would translate it into purely geometric actions. For example in Method 1: construct a chain of consecutive copies of the segment $O1$ along the line, until you reach $A$; at each constructed endpoint construct a copy of $OB$ perpendicular to the line; construct a chain of consecutive copies of... (to be continued)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (cont.) ...all those segments along the line; the final endpoint is the point sought. This way we iterate over some set of concrete objects (segments or their endpoints). We can say 'I proces this one, and now this one... And I processed all of them so here is the result.' as opposite to 'I do one construction, and the second one... And I remember I was to make five of them, so now I'm done.' which involves some criterion not visible in the drawing.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    According to the Mohr–Mascheroni theorem (Wikipedia), any point classicaly constructible by a straightedge and a compass can also be constructed by a compass alone. Applying this would turn all points in your recent list to "circle". :)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 21 at 12:17













21












21








21


6



$begingroup$


There are at least five ways to multiply two natural numbers $a$ and $b$ given as integer points $A$ and $B$ on the number line by geometrical means. Two of them include counting, the others are purely geometric. I wonder (i) if there are other ways and (ii) how to deeply understand the interrelationship between the different methods (i.e. recipes).



Let $A,B$ be two integer points on the line $O1$:



enter image description here



Method 1



  1. Count how often the unit length $|O1|$ fits into $|OA|$. Let this number be $a$ (here $a = 3$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $B$.


  2. Let $C$ be the (other) intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $a-1$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 2



  1. Construct a rectangle with side lengths $|OA|$, $|OB|$.

enter image description here



  1. Count how often the unit square (with side length $|O1|$) fits into the rectangle. Let this number be $c$ (here $c=6$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $0$.


  2. Let $C$ be the intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $c$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 3



  1. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the points $1'$ and $B'$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw the line $1'A$.


  2. Construct the parallel to $1'A$ through $B'$.


  3. The intersection point of this parallel with the line $O1$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 4



  1. Construct the perpendicular line to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the point $1'$.


  3. Construct the circle through $1'$, $A$ and $B$.


  4. The intersection point of this circle with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 5



This method makes use of the parabola, i.e. goes beyond compass-ruler constructions.



  1. Construct the unit parabola $(x,y)$ with $y = x^2$.


  2. Construct $B'$.


  3. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $A$.


  4. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $B'$.


  5. Draw the line through the intersection points of these two lines with the parabola.


  6. The intersection point of this line with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here




For me it's something like a miracle that these five methods – seemingly very different (as recipes) and not obviously equivalent – yield the very same result (i.e. point).




Note that the different methods take different amounts $sigma$ of Euclidean space (to completely show all intermediate points and (semi-)circles involved, assuming that $a >b$):



  • Method 1: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 2: $sigma sim ab$


  • Method 3: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 4: $sigma sim a^2b^2$


  • Method 5: $sigma sim a^3b$


This is space complexity. Compare this to time complexity, i.e. the number $tau$ of essential construction steps that are needed:



  • Method 1: $tau sim a$


  • Method 2: $tau sim ab$


  • Method 3: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 4: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 5: $tau sim 1$


From this point of view method 3 would be the most efficient.




Once again:




I'm looking for other geometrical methods to multiply two numbers
given as points on the number line $O1$ (is there one using the
hyperbola?) and trying to understand better the "deeper" reasons why
they all yield the same result (i.e. point).





Those answers I managed to visualize I will add here:



Method 6 (due to Cia Pan)



enter image description here



Method 7 (due to celtschk)



enter image description here



Method 8 (due to Accumulation)



enter image description here










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




There are at least five ways to multiply two natural numbers $a$ and $b$ given as integer points $A$ and $B$ on the number line by geometrical means. Two of them include counting, the others are purely geometric. I wonder (i) if there are other ways and (ii) how to deeply understand the interrelationship between the different methods (i.e. recipes).



Let $A,B$ be two integer points on the line $O1$:



enter image description here



Method 1



  1. Count how often the unit length $|O1|$ fits into $|OA|$. Let this number be $a$ (here $a = 3$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $B$.


  2. Let $C$ be the (other) intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|OB|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $a-1$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 2



  1. Construct a rectangle with side lengths $|OA|$, $|OB|$.

enter image description here



  1. Count how often the unit square (with side length $|O1|$) fits into the rectangle. Let this number be $c$ (here $c=6$).

enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $0$.


  2. Let $C$ be the intersection point of this circle with the line $O1$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw a circle with radius $|O1|$ around $C$.


  2. Do this $c$ times.


  3. The last intersection point $C$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 3



  1. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the points $1'$ and $B'$.


enter image description here



  1. Draw the line $1'A$.


  2. Construct the parallel to $1'A$ through $B'$.


  3. The intersection point of this parallel with the line $O1$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 4



  1. Construct the perpendicular line to $O1$ through $O$.


  2. Construct the point $1'$.


  3. Construct the circle through $1'$, $A$ and $B$.


  4. The intersection point of this circle with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here



Method 5



This method makes use of the parabola, i.e. goes beyond compass-ruler constructions.



  1. Construct the unit parabola $(x,y)$ with $y = x^2$.


  2. Construct $B'$.


  3. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $A$.


  4. Construct the line perpendicular to $O1$ through $B'$.


  5. Draw the line through the intersection points of these two lines with the parabola.


  6. The intersection point of this line with the line $O1'$ is the product $A times B$.


enter image description here




For me it's something like a miracle that these five methods – seemingly very different (as recipes) and not obviously equivalent – yield the very same result (i.e. point).




Note that the different methods take different amounts $sigma$ of Euclidean space (to completely show all intermediate points and (semi-)circles involved, assuming that $a >b$):



  • Method 1: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 2: $sigma sim ab$


  • Method 3: $sigma sim ab^2$


  • Method 4: $sigma sim a^2b^2$


  • Method 5: $sigma sim a^3b$


This is space complexity. Compare this to time complexity, i.e. the number $tau$ of essential construction steps that are needed:



  • Method 1: $tau sim a$


  • Method 2: $tau sim ab$


  • Method 3: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 4: $tau sim 1$


  • Method 5: $tau sim 1$


From this point of view method 3 would be the most efficient.




Once again:




I'm looking for other geometrical methods to multiply two numbers
given as points on the number line $O1$ (is there one using the
hyperbola?) and trying to understand better the "deeper" reasons why
they all yield the same result (i.e. point).





Those answers I managed to visualize I will add here:



Method 6 (due to Cia Pan)



enter image description here



Method 7 (due to celtschk)



enter image description here



Method 8 (due to Accumulation)



enter image description here







euclidean-geometry arithmetic conic-sections big-list geometric-construction






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited Mar 21 at 12:56







Hans-Peter Stricker

















asked Mar 20 at 16:42









Hans-Peter StrickerHans-Peter Stricker

6,69443995




6,69443995







  • 3




    $begingroup$
    IMVHO methods 1 and 2 do not count: when you use the word 'count', the method becomes arithmetical instead of geometrical.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 17:06






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @CiaPan So methods that count don't count?
    $endgroup$
    – Acccumulation
    Mar 20 at 21:37






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    When you say 'count it – let $n$ be the numer – do something $n$ times' you introduce some counter $n$ and some variable 'iteration number' running from 1 through $n$. In my feeling this goes beyond classic constructions and I would translate it into purely geometric actions. For example in Method 1: construct a chain of consecutive copies of the segment $O1$ along the line, until you reach $A$; at each constructed endpoint construct a copy of $OB$ perpendicular to the line; construct a chain of consecutive copies of... (to be continued)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (cont.) ...all those segments along the line; the final endpoint is the point sought. This way we iterate over some set of concrete objects (segments or their endpoints). We can say 'I proces this one, and now this one... And I processed all of them so here is the result.' as opposite to 'I do one construction, and the second one... And I remember I was to make five of them, so now I'm done.' which involves some criterion not visible in the drawing.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    According to the Mohr–Mascheroni theorem (Wikipedia), any point classicaly constructible by a straightedge and a compass can also be constructed by a compass alone. Applying this would turn all points in your recent list to "circle". :)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 21 at 12:17












  • 3




    $begingroup$
    IMVHO methods 1 and 2 do not count: when you use the word 'count', the method becomes arithmetical instead of geometrical.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 17:06






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @CiaPan So methods that count don't count?
    $endgroup$
    – Acccumulation
    Mar 20 at 21:37






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    When you say 'count it – let $n$ be the numer – do something $n$ times' you introduce some counter $n$ and some variable 'iteration number' running from 1 through $n$. In my feeling this goes beyond classic constructions and I would translate it into purely geometric actions. For example in Method 1: construct a chain of consecutive copies of the segment $O1$ along the line, until you reach $A$; at each constructed endpoint construct a copy of $OB$ perpendicular to the line; construct a chain of consecutive copies of... (to be continued)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (cont.) ...all those segments along the line; the final endpoint is the point sought. This way we iterate over some set of concrete objects (segments or their endpoints). We can say 'I proces this one, and now this one... And I processed all of them so here is the result.' as opposite to 'I do one construction, and the second one... And I remember I was to make five of them, so now I'm done.' which involves some criterion not visible in the drawing.
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 20 at 23:38






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    According to the Mohr–Mascheroni theorem (Wikipedia), any point classicaly constructible by a straightedge and a compass can also be constructed by a compass alone. Applying this would turn all points in your recent list to "circle". :)
    $endgroup$
    – CiaPan
    Mar 21 at 12:17







3




3




$begingroup$
IMVHO methods 1 and 2 do not count: when you use the word 'count', the method becomes arithmetical instead of geometrical.
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 20 at 17:06




$begingroup$
IMVHO methods 1 and 2 do not count: when you use the word 'count', the method becomes arithmetical instead of geometrical.
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 20 at 17:06




2




2




$begingroup$
@CiaPan So methods that count don't count?
$endgroup$
– Acccumulation
Mar 20 at 21:37




$begingroup$
@CiaPan So methods that count don't count?
$endgroup$
– Acccumulation
Mar 20 at 21:37




1




1




$begingroup$
When you say 'count it – let $n$ be the numer – do something $n$ times' you introduce some counter $n$ and some variable 'iteration number' running from 1 through $n$. In my feeling this goes beyond classic constructions and I would translate it into purely geometric actions. For example in Method 1: construct a chain of consecutive copies of the segment $O1$ along the line, until you reach $A$; at each constructed endpoint construct a copy of $OB$ perpendicular to the line; construct a chain of consecutive copies of... (to be continued)
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 20 at 23:38




$begingroup$
When you say 'count it – let $n$ be the numer – do something $n$ times' you introduce some counter $n$ and some variable 'iteration number' running from 1 through $n$. In my feeling this goes beyond classic constructions and I would translate it into purely geometric actions. For example in Method 1: construct a chain of consecutive copies of the segment $O1$ along the line, until you reach $A$; at each constructed endpoint construct a copy of $OB$ perpendicular to the line; construct a chain of consecutive copies of... (to be continued)
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 20 at 23:38




1




1




$begingroup$
(cont.) ...all those segments along the line; the final endpoint is the point sought. This way we iterate over some set of concrete objects (segments or their endpoints). We can say 'I proces this one, and now this one... And I processed all of them so here is the result.' as opposite to 'I do one construction, and the second one... And I remember I was to make five of them, so now I'm done.' which involves some criterion not visible in the drawing.
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 20 at 23:38




$begingroup$
(cont.) ...all those segments along the line; the final endpoint is the point sought. This way we iterate over some set of concrete objects (segments or their endpoints). We can say 'I proces this one, and now this one... And I processed all of them so here is the result.' as opposite to 'I do one construction, and the second one... And I remember I was to make five of them, so now I'm done.' which involves some criterion not visible in the drawing.
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 20 at 23:38




2




2




$begingroup$
According to the Mohr–Mascheroni theorem (Wikipedia), any point classicaly constructible by a straightedge and a compass can also be constructed by a compass alone. Applying this would turn all points in your recent list to "circle". :)
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 21 at 12:17




$begingroup$
According to the Mohr–Mascheroni theorem (Wikipedia), any point classicaly constructible by a straightedge and a compass can also be constructed by a compass alone. Applying this would turn all points in your recent list to "circle". :)
$endgroup$
– CiaPan
Mar 21 at 12:17










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















6












$begingroup$

  1. Construct the point $A'$ on the given line such that $O$ is a midpoint of the line segment $AA'$.

  2. Construct the perpendicular at $O$.

  3. Construct the semicircle on the diameter $A'B$.

  4. Find $H$ at the intersection of the semicircle and the perpendicular.
    $(OH)^2 = OA'cdot OB = OAcdot OB$.

  5. Draw line $1H$ and construct a perpendicular to it through $H$.

  6. Find point $K$ at the intersection of the last constructed line and the first given line. We have $(OH)^2 = 1cdot OK,$ hence $OK = OAcdot OB.$





share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$




















    4












    $begingroup$

    The following is quite similar to your method 3, but only requires you to draw parallels, not circles (see remark below).



    1. Draw an arbitrary line $g$ other than the number line through $O$. (The “number line” here is the line through $O$ and $1$).

    2. Select on $g$ an arbitrary point $P$ other than the origin.

    3. Draw a line through $1$ and $P$.

    4. Draw a parallel to that line through $A$. Call the intersection with $g$ $Q$.

    5. Draw a line through $P$ and $B$.

    6. Draw a parallel to that line through $Q$. The intersection with the number line is then $Atimes B$.

    Remark: In standard geometry (that is, construction with compass and ruler), you of course need to draw circles to construct the parallel. But one might instead consider using no compass, but a “parallels-ruler" (I have no idea what it is actually called; it's basically a ruler that has a built-in roll, allowing you to move the ruler without rotating, and thus to construct parallels).



    With only a parallels-ruler you cannot construct circles (so it's strictly weaker than compass and ruler), but as the construction above shows, you can multiply.






    share|cite|improve this answer











    $endgroup$




















      1












      $begingroup$

      If you construct two similar triangles $X_1Y_1Z_1$ and $X_2Y_2Z_2$ such that $X_1Y_1=1$, $Y_1Z_1 = A$, and $X_2Y_2 = B$, then $Y_2Z_2=A*B$.



      Also, if you take any angle, mark $1$ and $A$ on one side, mark $B$ on another, draw a line from the $A$ point to the $B$ point, then construct a line parallel through that line through the $1$ point, it will intersect the other side a distance $frac B A$ from the vertex. And $A*B$ is of course equal to $A/(1/B)$.






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$












      • $begingroup$
        I added your construction to my big list.
        $endgroup$
        – Hans-Peter Stricker
        Mar 21 at 8:28










      • $begingroup$
        Isn't it the Method 3?
        $endgroup$
        – CiaPan
        Mar 21 at 12:28










      Your Answer





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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

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      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

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      6












      $begingroup$

      1. Construct the point $A'$ on the given line such that $O$ is a midpoint of the line segment $AA'$.

      2. Construct the perpendicular at $O$.

      3. Construct the semicircle on the diameter $A'B$.

      4. Find $H$ at the intersection of the semicircle and the perpendicular.
        $(OH)^2 = OA'cdot OB = OAcdot OB$.

      5. Draw line $1H$ and construct a perpendicular to it through $H$.

      6. Find point $K$ at the intersection of the last constructed line and the first given line. We have $(OH)^2 = 1cdot OK,$ hence $OK = OAcdot OB.$





      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$

















        6












        $begingroup$

        1. Construct the point $A'$ on the given line such that $O$ is a midpoint of the line segment $AA'$.

        2. Construct the perpendicular at $O$.

        3. Construct the semicircle on the diameter $A'B$.

        4. Find $H$ at the intersection of the semicircle and the perpendicular.
          $(OH)^2 = OA'cdot OB = OAcdot OB$.

        5. Draw line $1H$ and construct a perpendicular to it through $H$.

        6. Find point $K$ at the intersection of the last constructed line and the first given line. We have $(OH)^2 = 1cdot OK,$ hence $OK = OAcdot OB.$





        share|cite|improve this answer









        $endgroup$















          6












          6








          6





          $begingroup$

          1. Construct the point $A'$ on the given line such that $O$ is a midpoint of the line segment $AA'$.

          2. Construct the perpendicular at $O$.

          3. Construct the semicircle on the diameter $A'B$.

          4. Find $H$ at the intersection of the semicircle and the perpendicular.
            $(OH)^2 = OA'cdot OB = OAcdot OB$.

          5. Draw line $1H$ and construct a perpendicular to it through $H$.

          6. Find point $K$ at the intersection of the last constructed line and the first given line. We have $(OH)^2 = 1cdot OK,$ hence $OK = OAcdot OB.$





          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          1. Construct the point $A'$ on the given line such that $O$ is a midpoint of the line segment $AA'$.

          2. Construct the perpendicular at $O$.

          3. Construct the semicircle on the diameter $A'B$.

          4. Find $H$ at the intersection of the semicircle and the perpendicular.
            $(OH)^2 = OA'cdot OB = OAcdot OB$.

          5. Draw line $1H$ and construct a perpendicular to it through $H$.

          6. Find point $K$ at the intersection of the last constructed line and the first given line. We have $(OH)^2 = 1cdot OK,$ hence $OK = OAcdot OB.$






          share|cite|improve this answer












          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer










          answered Mar 20 at 17:19









          CiaPanCiaPan

          10.1k11247




          10.1k11247





















              4












              $begingroup$

              The following is quite similar to your method 3, but only requires you to draw parallels, not circles (see remark below).



              1. Draw an arbitrary line $g$ other than the number line through $O$. (The “number line” here is the line through $O$ and $1$).

              2. Select on $g$ an arbitrary point $P$ other than the origin.

              3. Draw a line through $1$ and $P$.

              4. Draw a parallel to that line through $A$. Call the intersection with $g$ $Q$.

              5. Draw a line through $P$ and $B$.

              6. Draw a parallel to that line through $Q$. The intersection with the number line is then $Atimes B$.

              Remark: In standard geometry (that is, construction with compass and ruler), you of course need to draw circles to construct the parallel. But one might instead consider using no compass, but a “parallels-ruler" (I have no idea what it is actually called; it's basically a ruler that has a built-in roll, allowing you to move the ruler without rotating, and thus to construct parallels).



              With only a parallels-ruler you cannot construct circles (so it's strictly weaker than compass and ruler), but as the construction above shows, you can multiply.






              share|cite|improve this answer











              $endgroup$

















                4












                $begingroup$

                The following is quite similar to your method 3, but only requires you to draw parallels, not circles (see remark below).



                1. Draw an arbitrary line $g$ other than the number line through $O$. (The “number line” here is the line through $O$ and $1$).

                2. Select on $g$ an arbitrary point $P$ other than the origin.

                3. Draw a line through $1$ and $P$.

                4. Draw a parallel to that line through $A$. Call the intersection with $g$ $Q$.

                5. Draw a line through $P$ and $B$.

                6. Draw a parallel to that line through $Q$. The intersection with the number line is then $Atimes B$.

                Remark: In standard geometry (that is, construction with compass and ruler), you of course need to draw circles to construct the parallel. But one might instead consider using no compass, but a “parallels-ruler" (I have no idea what it is actually called; it's basically a ruler that has a built-in roll, allowing you to move the ruler without rotating, and thus to construct parallels).



                With only a parallels-ruler you cannot construct circles (so it's strictly weaker than compass and ruler), but as the construction above shows, you can multiply.






                share|cite|improve this answer











                $endgroup$















                  4












                  4








                  4





                  $begingroup$

                  The following is quite similar to your method 3, but only requires you to draw parallels, not circles (see remark below).



                  1. Draw an arbitrary line $g$ other than the number line through $O$. (The “number line” here is the line through $O$ and $1$).

                  2. Select on $g$ an arbitrary point $P$ other than the origin.

                  3. Draw a line through $1$ and $P$.

                  4. Draw a parallel to that line through $A$. Call the intersection with $g$ $Q$.

                  5. Draw a line through $P$ and $B$.

                  6. Draw a parallel to that line through $Q$. The intersection with the number line is then $Atimes B$.

                  Remark: In standard geometry (that is, construction with compass and ruler), you of course need to draw circles to construct the parallel. But one might instead consider using no compass, but a “parallels-ruler" (I have no idea what it is actually called; it's basically a ruler that has a built-in roll, allowing you to move the ruler without rotating, and thus to construct parallels).



                  With only a parallels-ruler you cannot construct circles (so it's strictly weaker than compass and ruler), but as the construction above shows, you can multiply.






                  share|cite|improve this answer











                  $endgroup$



                  The following is quite similar to your method 3, but only requires you to draw parallels, not circles (see remark below).



                  1. Draw an arbitrary line $g$ other than the number line through $O$. (The “number line” here is the line through $O$ and $1$).

                  2. Select on $g$ an arbitrary point $P$ other than the origin.

                  3. Draw a line through $1$ and $P$.

                  4. Draw a parallel to that line through $A$. Call the intersection with $g$ $Q$.

                  5. Draw a line through $P$ and $B$.

                  6. Draw a parallel to that line through $Q$. The intersection with the number line is then $Atimes B$.

                  Remark: In standard geometry (that is, construction with compass and ruler), you of course need to draw circles to construct the parallel. But one might instead consider using no compass, but a “parallels-ruler" (I have no idea what it is actually called; it's basically a ruler that has a built-in roll, allowing you to move the ruler without rotating, and thus to construct parallels).



                  With only a parallels-ruler you cannot construct circles (so it's strictly weaker than compass and ruler), but as the construction above shows, you can multiply.







                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer








                  edited Mar 20 at 17:53

























                  answered Mar 20 at 17:41









                  celtschkceltschk

                  30.4k755101




                  30.4k755101





















                      1












                      $begingroup$

                      If you construct two similar triangles $X_1Y_1Z_1$ and $X_2Y_2Z_2$ such that $X_1Y_1=1$, $Y_1Z_1 = A$, and $X_2Y_2 = B$, then $Y_2Z_2=A*B$.



                      Also, if you take any angle, mark $1$ and $A$ on one side, mark $B$ on another, draw a line from the $A$ point to the $B$ point, then construct a line parallel through that line through the $1$ point, it will intersect the other side a distance $frac B A$ from the vertex. And $A*B$ is of course equal to $A/(1/B)$.






                      share|cite|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$












                      • $begingroup$
                        I added your construction to my big list.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Hans-Peter Stricker
                        Mar 21 at 8:28










                      • $begingroup$
                        Isn't it the Method 3?
                        $endgroup$
                        – CiaPan
                        Mar 21 at 12:28















                      1












                      $begingroup$

                      If you construct two similar triangles $X_1Y_1Z_1$ and $X_2Y_2Z_2$ such that $X_1Y_1=1$, $Y_1Z_1 = A$, and $X_2Y_2 = B$, then $Y_2Z_2=A*B$.



                      Also, if you take any angle, mark $1$ and $A$ on one side, mark $B$ on another, draw a line from the $A$ point to the $B$ point, then construct a line parallel through that line through the $1$ point, it will intersect the other side a distance $frac B A$ from the vertex. And $A*B$ is of course equal to $A/(1/B)$.






                      share|cite|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$












                      • $begingroup$
                        I added your construction to my big list.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Hans-Peter Stricker
                        Mar 21 at 8:28










                      • $begingroup$
                        Isn't it the Method 3?
                        $endgroup$
                        – CiaPan
                        Mar 21 at 12:28













                      1












                      1








                      1





                      $begingroup$

                      If you construct two similar triangles $X_1Y_1Z_1$ and $X_2Y_2Z_2$ such that $X_1Y_1=1$, $Y_1Z_1 = A$, and $X_2Y_2 = B$, then $Y_2Z_2=A*B$.



                      Also, if you take any angle, mark $1$ and $A$ on one side, mark $B$ on another, draw a line from the $A$ point to the $B$ point, then construct a line parallel through that line through the $1$ point, it will intersect the other side a distance $frac B A$ from the vertex. And $A*B$ is of course equal to $A/(1/B)$.






                      share|cite|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$



                      If you construct two similar triangles $X_1Y_1Z_1$ and $X_2Y_2Z_2$ such that $X_1Y_1=1$, $Y_1Z_1 = A$, and $X_2Y_2 = B$, then $Y_2Z_2=A*B$.



                      Also, if you take any angle, mark $1$ and $A$ on one side, mark $B$ on another, draw a line from the $A$ point to the $B$ point, then construct a line parallel through that line through the $1$ point, it will intersect the other side a distance $frac B A$ from the vertex. And $A*B$ is of course equal to $A/(1/B)$.







                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer










                      answered Mar 20 at 21:59









                      AcccumulationAcccumulation

                      7,1752619




                      7,1752619











                      • $begingroup$
                        I added your construction to my big list.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Hans-Peter Stricker
                        Mar 21 at 8:28










                      • $begingroup$
                        Isn't it the Method 3?
                        $endgroup$
                        – CiaPan
                        Mar 21 at 12:28
















                      • $begingroup$
                        I added your construction to my big list.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Hans-Peter Stricker
                        Mar 21 at 8:28










                      • $begingroup$
                        Isn't it the Method 3?
                        $endgroup$
                        – CiaPan
                        Mar 21 at 12:28















                      $begingroup$
                      I added your construction to my big list.
                      $endgroup$
                      – Hans-Peter Stricker
                      Mar 21 at 8:28




                      $begingroup$
                      I added your construction to my big list.
                      $endgroup$
                      – Hans-Peter Stricker
                      Mar 21 at 8:28












                      $begingroup$
                      Isn't it the Method 3?
                      $endgroup$
                      – CiaPan
                      Mar 21 at 12:28




                      $begingroup$
                      Isn't it the Method 3?
                      $endgroup$
                      – CiaPan
                      Mar 21 at 12:28

















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