> but it is not right to speak of 10 radians, because in Radians, the
> angles range from 0 to 2*Pi (numerically speaking from 0 to 6,2831...)

I'm not sure, but i don't think that radians/degrees are limited to a
specific domain. Higher/lower values can be useful if you want to keep
count of the number of revolutions and not just the angle.

On Feb 1, 8:22 pm, klint <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for clarifying, I see now that I didn't understand the initial
> problem...
>
> On 1 Feb, 13:58, baldino <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Sin 10 radians is -0,54
> > Sin 10 degrees is 0,1736
>
> > but it is not right to speak of 10 radians, because in Radians, the
> > angles range from 0 to 2*Pi (numerically speaking from 0 to 6,2831...)
> > so 10 radians actually are equivalent to approx. (1,183 * Pi)
> > and in Degrees, the angles range from 0 to 360°
>
> > 10 Radians are equivalent to 10*(180/Pi) = 572,95 Degrees = 212,95
> > Degrees ....
>
> > in GH, all angles are in Radians.
>
> > On Feb 1, 1:41 pm, klint <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > sin(10) IS -0.544021111
>
> > >http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b2/Sin.svg/250p...
> > > <img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b2/
> > > Sin.svg/250px-Sin.svg.png">
> > > /Lars
>
> > > On 1 Feb, 03:38, CMRHM <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > See the attached picture:
>
> > > >http://grasshopper3d.googlegroups.com/web/test_component_sin.JPG?hl=e...
>
> > > > I am very curious about how this sin component works. In the
> > > > definision file, x value is 0,10,20,30,40,50 and 60. Y value also
> > > > output 7 values, but some of them are negative numbers.  Like it gave
> > > > me sin10= -0.544. How could this be?

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