Drawing ramified coverings with tikzRotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationNumerical conditional within tikz keys?How to draw up this hierarchical diagram?(Or similar way)TikZ: Drawing an arc from an intersection to an intersectionDrawing rectilinear curves in Tikz, aka an Etch-a-Sketch drawingLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themProblems with nested TikZpicturesHow to place nodes in an absolute coordinate system in tikzHow to draw a Block Diagram like thisTikZ picture not centered in figure fbox

2.8 Why are collections grayed out? How can I open them?

Are the IPv6 address space and IPv4 address space completely disjoint?

Why did the EU agree to delay the Brexit deadline?

Redundant comparison & "if" before assignment

The screen of my macbook suddenly broken down how can I do to recover

What should you do if you miss a job interview (deliberately)?

Store Credit Card Information in Password Manager?

What does routing an IP address mean?

lightning-datatable row number error

Count the occurrence of each unique word in the file

How could a planet have erratic days?

Open a doc from terminal, but not by its name

Should I outline or discovery write my stories?

Why can Carol Danvers change her suit colours in the first place?

How do I color the graph in datavisualization?

Start making guitar arrangements

What does "Scientists rise up against statistical significance" mean? (Comment in Nature)

Is there a name for this algorithm to calculate the concentration of a mixture of two solutions containing the same solute?

How can "mimic phobia" be cured or prevented?

Drawing ramified coverings with tikz

Yosemite Fire Rings - What to Expect?

What does chmod -u do?

Why should universal income be universal?

How much character growth crosses the line into breaking the character



Drawing ramified coverings with tikz


Rotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationNumerical conditional within tikz keys?How to draw up this hierarchical diagram?(Or similar way)TikZ: Drawing an arc from an intersection to an intersectionDrawing rectilinear curves in Tikz, aka an Etch-a-Sketch drawingLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themProblems with nested TikZpicturesHow to place nodes in an absolute coordinate system in tikzHow to draw a Block Diagram like thisTikZ picture not centered in figure fbox













2















I want to draw a diagram similar to this one:





For that I started with the following code:



begintikzpicture
draw (0,0) node $Y$;
draw (0,2) node $X$;
draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0);
draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2);
draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5);
draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5);
endtikzpicture


The only thing that I don't know how to do is the curvy parts. I would appreciate some indication.










share|improve this question




























    2















    I want to draw a diagram similar to this one:





    For that I started with the following code:



    begintikzpicture
    draw (0,0) node $Y$;
    draw (0,2) node $X$;
    draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
    draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0);
    draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2);
    draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5);
    draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5);
    endtikzpicture


    The only thing that I don't know how to do is the curvy parts. I would appreciate some indication.










    share|improve this question


























      2












      2








      2


      1






      I want to draw a diagram similar to this one:





      For that I started with the following code:



      begintikzpicture
      draw (0,0) node $Y$;
      draw (0,2) node $X$;
      draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
      draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0);
      draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2);
      draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5);
      draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5);
      endtikzpicture


      The only thing that I don't know how to do is the curvy parts. I would appreciate some indication.










      share|improve this question
















      I want to draw a diagram similar to this one:





      For that I started with the following code:



      begintikzpicture
      draw (0,0) node $Y$;
      draw (0,2) node $X$;
      draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
      draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0);
      draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2);
      draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5);
      draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5);
      endtikzpicture


      The only thing that I don't know how to do is the curvy parts. I would appreciate some indication.







      tikz-pgf






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 2 hours ago









      Cragfelt

      2,96531028




      2,96531028










      asked 3 hours ago









      Gabriel RibeiroGabriel Ribeiro

      25918




      25918




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          The following is a pretty manual way to do this. I only did it for the first two lines, I hope you can apply it to the other occurrences. It uses the in and out keys of the to path construction:



          documentclass[tikz]standalone

          begindocument
          begintikzpicture
          draw (0,0) node $Y$;
          draw (0,2) node $X$;
          draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
          draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5) coordinate(a);
          draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2) coordinate(b);
          draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5) coordinate(c);
          draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0) coordinate(d);
          draw[thick]
          (a) ++(.25,-.25) coordinate(ab) to[out=180,in=0] (a)
          (ab) to[out=180,in=0] (b)
          (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,.25)
          (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,-.25)
          ;
          filldraw
          (ab) circle(.05)
          ;
          endtikzpicture
          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
































            1














            This uses the same in and out trick as Skillmon and puts it into a style dip, which takes as arguments the horizontal position and the depth, where the sign decides whether the dip is a dip (minus) or a bump (plus).



            documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
            usetikzlibrarypositioning
            newcounterdip
            begindocument
            begintikzpicture[dip/.style args=#1/#2/utils/exec=stepcounterdip,
            insert path=-aux1) to[out=0,in=180]
            ++(abs(#2),#2) coordinate(dip-thevaluedip) to[out=0,in=180] (aux3]
            beginscope[thick,local bounding box=dips]
            draw (1,2.5) [dip=5.5cm/-2.5mm]-- (7,2.5);
            fill (dip-1) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
            draw (1,2) [dip/.list=2.5cm/-2.5mm,5.5cm/2.5mm] -- (7,2);
            fill (dip-2) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
            draw (1,1.5) [dip/.list=2.5cm/2.5mm,5.5cm/-5mm] -- (7,1.5);
            fill (dip-5) circle[radius=2pt] node[above right=0pt and 5pt]$b=2$;
            draw (1,1) -- (7,1);
            draw (1,0.5) [dip=5.5cm/5mm] -- (7,0.5);
            endscope
            path (dips.north west) node[anchor=north east] (X) $X$;
            path (dips.south west) node[anchor=south east] (Y) $Y$;
            draw[<-] (Y) -- (X) node[left, midway] $f$;
            endtikzpicture
            enddocument


            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer






















              Your Answer








              StackExchange.ready(function()
              var channelOptions =
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "85"
              ;
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
              createEditor();
              );

              else
              createEditor();

              );

              function createEditor()
              StackExchange.prepareEditor(
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
              convertImagesToLinks: false,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: null,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader:
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              ,
              onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              );



              );













              draft saved

              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function ()
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f481125%2fdrawing-ramified-coverings-with-tikz%23new-answer', 'question_page');

              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes








              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              3














              The following is a pretty manual way to do this. I only did it for the first two lines, I hope you can apply it to the other occurrences. It uses the in and out keys of the to path construction:



              documentclass[tikz]standalone

              begindocument
              begintikzpicture
              draw (0,0) node $Y$;
              draw (0,2) node $X$;
              draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
              draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5) coordinate(a);
              draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2) coordinate(b);
              draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5) coordinate(c);
              draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0) coordinate(d);
              draw[thick]
              (a) ++(.25,-.25) coordinate(ab) to[out=180,in=0] (a)
              (ab) to[out=180,in=0] (b)
              (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,.25)
              (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,-.25)
              ;
              filldraw
              (ab) circle(.05)
              ;
              endtikzpicture
              enddocument


              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer





























                3














                The following is a pretty manual way to do this. I only did it for the first two lines, I hope you can apply it to the other occurrences. It uses the in and out keys of the to path construction:



                documentclass[tikz]standalone

                begindocument
                begintikzpicture
                draw (0,0) node $Y$;
                draw (0,2) node $X$;
                draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
                draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5) coordinate(a);
                draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2) coordinate(b);
                draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5) coordinate(c);
                draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0) coordinate(d);
                draw[thick]
                (a) ++(.25,-.25) coordinate(ab) to[out=180,in=0] (a)
                (ab) to[out=180,in=0] (b)
                (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,.25)
                (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,-.25)
                ;
                filldraw
                (ab) circle(.05)
                ;
                endtikzpicture
                enddocument


                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer



























                  3












                  3








                  3







                  The following is a pretty manual way to do this. I only did it for the first two lines, I hope you can apply it to the other occurrences. It uses the in and out keys of the to path construction:



                  documentclass[tikz]standalone

                  begindocument
                  begintikzpicture
                  draw (0,0) node $Y$;
                  draw (0,2) node $X$;
                  draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
                  draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5) coordinate(a);
                  draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2) coordinate(b);
                  draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5) coordinate(c);
                  draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0) coordinate(d);
                  draw[thick]
                  (a) ++(.25,-.25) coordinate(ab) to[out=180,in=0] (a)
                  (ab) to[out=180,in=0] (b)
                  (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,.25)
                  (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,-.25)
                  ;
                  filldraw
                  (ab) circle(.05)
                  ;
                  endtikzpicture
                  enddocument


                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer















                  The following is a pretty manual way to do this. I only did it for the first two lines, I hope you can apply it to the other occurrences. It uses the in and out keys of the to path construction:



                  documentclass[tikz]standalone

                  begindocument
                  begintikzpicture
                  draw (0,0) node $Y$;
                  draw (0,2) node $X$;
                  draw[<-] (0,0.35) -- (0,1.65) node[left, midway] $f$;
                  draw[thick] (1,2.5) -- (7,2.5) coordinate(a);
                  draw[thick] (1,2) -- (7,2) coordinate(b);
                  draw[thick] (1,1.5) -- (7,1.5) coordinate(c);
                  draw[thick] (1,0) -- (7,0) coordinate(d);
                  draw[thick]
                  (a) ++(.25,-.25) coordinate(ab) to[out=180,in=0] (a)
                  (ab) to[out=180,in=0] (b)
                  (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,.25)
                  (ab) to[out=0,in=180] ++(.25,-.25)
                  ;
                  filldraw
                  (ab) circle(.05)
                  ;
                  endtikzpicture
                  enddocument


                  enter image description here







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 1 hour ago

























                  answered 1 hour ago









                  SkillmonSkillmon

                  23.6k12247




                  23.6k12247





















                      1














                      This uses the same in and out trick as Skillmon and puts it into a style dip, which takes as arguments the horizontal position and the depth, where the sign decides whether the dip is a dip (minus) or a bump (plus).



                      documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
                      usetikzlibrarypositioning
                      newcounterdip
                      begindocument
                      begintikzpicture[dip/.style args=#1/#2/utils/exec=stepcounterdip,
                      insert path=-aux1) to[out=0,in=180]
                      ++(abs(#2),#2) coordinate(dip-thevaluedip) to[out=0,in=180] (aux3]
                      beginscope[thick,local bounding box=dips]
                      draw (1,2.5) [dip=5.5cm/-2.5mm]-- (7,2.5);
                      fill (dip-1) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                      draw (1,2) [dip/.list=2.5cm/-2.5mm,5.5cm/2.5mm] -- (7,2);
                      fill (dip-2) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                      draw (1,1.5) [dip/.list=2.5cm/2.5mm,5.5cm/-5mm] -- (7,1.5);
                      fill (dip-5) circle[radius=2pt] node[above right=0pt and 5pt]$b=2$;
                      draw (1,1) -- (7,1);
                      draw (1,0.5) [dip=5.5cm/5mm] -- (7,0.5);
                      endscope
                      path (dips.north west) node[anchor=north east] (X) $X$;
                      path (dips.south west) node[anchor=south east] (Y) $Y$;
                      draw[<-] (Y) -- (X) node[left, midway] $f$;
                      endtikzpicture
                      enddocument


                      enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer



























                        1














                        This uses the same in and out trick as Skillmon and puts it into a style dip, which takes as arguments the horizontal position and the depth, where the sign decides whether the dip is a dip (minus) or a bump (plus).



                        documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
                        usetikzlibrarypositioning
                        newcounterdip
                        begindocument
                        begintikzpicture[dip/.style args=#1/#2/utils/exec=stepcounterdip,
                        insert path=-aux1) to[out=0,in=180]
                        ++(abs(#2),#2) coordinate(dip-thevaluedip) to[out=0,in=180] (aux3]
                        beginscope[thick,local bounding box=dips]
                        draw (1,2.5) [dip=5.5cm/-2.5mm]-- (7,2.5);
                        fill (dip-1) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                        draw (1,2) [dip/.list=2.5cm/-2.5mm,5.5cm/2.5mm] -- (7,2);
                        fill (dip-2) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                        draw (1,1.5) [dip/.list=2.5cm/2.5mm,5.5cm/-5mm] -- (7,1.5);
                        fill (dip-5) circle[radius=2pt] node[above right=0pt and 5pt]$b=2$;
                        draw (1,1) -- (7,1);
                        draw (1,0.5) [dip=5.5cm/5mm] -- (7,0.5);
                        endscope
                        path (dips.north west) node[anchor=north east] (X) $X$;
                        path (dips.south west) node[anchor=south east] (Y) $Y$;
                        draw[<-] (Y) -- (X) node[left, midway] $f$;
                        endtikzpicture
                        enddocument


                        enter image description here






                        share|improve this answer

























                          1












                          1








                          1







                          This uses the same in and out trick as Skillmon and puts it into a style dip, which takes as arguments the horizontal position and the depth, where the sign decides whether the dip is a dip (minus) or a bump (plus).



                          documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
                          usetikzlibrarypositioning
                          newcounterdip
                          begindocument
                          begintikzpicture[dip/.style args=#1/#2/utils/exec=stepcounterdip,
                          insert path=-aux1) to[out=0,in=180]
                          ++(abs(#2),#2) coordinate(dip-thevaluedip) to[out=0,in=180] (aux3]
                          beginscope[thick,local bounding box=dips]
                          draw (1,2.5) [dip=5.5cm/-2.5mm]-- (7,2.5);
                          fill (dip-1) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                          draw (1,2) [dip/.list=2.5cm/-2.5mm,5.5cm/2.5mm] -- (7,2);
                          fill (dip-2) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                          draw (1,1.5) [dip/.list=2.5cm/2.5mm,5.5cm/-5mm] -- (7,1.5);
                          fill (dip-5) circle[radius=2pt] node[above right=0pt and 5pt]$b=2$;
                          draw (1,1) -- (7,1);
                          draw (1,0.5) [dip=5.5cm/5mm] -- (7,0.5);
                          endscope
                          path (dips.north west) node[anchor=north east] (X) $X$;
                          path (dips.south west) node[anchor=south east] (Y) $Y$;
                          draw[<-] (Y) -- (X) node[left, midway] $f$;
                          endtikzpicture
                          enddocument


                          enter image description here






                          share|improve this answer













                          This uses the same in and out trick as Skillmon and puts it into a style dip, which takes as arguments the horizontal position and the depth, where the sign decides whether the dip is a dip (minus) or a bump (plus).



                          documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
                          usetikzlibrarypositioning
                          newcounterdip
                          begindocument
                          begintikzpicture[dip/.style args=#1/#2/utils/exec=stepcounterdip,
                          insert path=-aux1) to[out=0,in=180]
                          ++(abs(#2),#2) coordinate(dip-thevaluedip) to[out=0,in=180] (aux3]
                          beginscope[thick,local bounding box=dips]
                          draw (1,2.5) [dip=5.5cm/-2.5mm]-- (7,2.5);
                          fill (dip-1) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                          draw (1,2) [dip/.list=2.5cm/-2.5mm,5.5cm/2.5mm] -- (7,2);
                          fill (dip-2) circle[radius=2pt] node[right=3pt]$b=1$;
                          draw (1,1.5) [dip/.list=2.5cm/2.5mm,5.5cm/-5mm] -- (7,1.5);
                          fill (dip-5) circle[radius=2pt] node[above right=0pt and 5pt]$b=2$;
                          draw (1,1) -- (7,1);
                          draw (1,0.5) [dip=5.5cm/5mm] -- (7,0.5);
                          endscope
                          path (dips.north west) node[anchor=north east] (X) $X$;
                          path (dips.south west) node[anchor=south east] (Y) $Y$;
                          draw[<-] (Y) -- (X) node[left, midway] $f$;
                          endtikzpicture
                          enddocument


                          enter image description here







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 21 mins ago









                          marmotmarmot

                          111k5138260




                          111k5138260



























                              draft saved

                              draft discarded
















































                              Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


                              • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                              But avoid


                              • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                              • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                              To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                              draft saved


                              draft discarded














                              StackExchange.ready(
                              function ()
                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f481125%2fdrawing-ramified-coverings-with-tikz%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                              );

                              Post as a guest















                              Required, but never shown





















































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown

































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown







                              Popular posts from this blog

                              Disable / Remove link to Product Items in Cart Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?How can I limit products that can be bought / added to cart?Remove item from cartHide “Add to Cart” button if specific products are already in cart“Prettifying” the custom options in cart pageCreate link in cart sidebar to view all added items After limit reachedLink products together in checkout/cartHow to Get product from cart and add it againHide action-edit on cart page if simple productRemoving Cart items - ObserverRemove wishlist items when added to cart

                              Helsingin valtaus Sisällysluettelo Taustaa | Yleistä sotatoimista | Osapuolet | Taistelut Helsingin ympäristössä | Punaisten antautumissuunnitelma | Taistelujen kulku Helsingissä | Valtauksen jälkeen | Tappiot | Muistaminen | Kirjallisuutta | Lähteet | Aiheesta muualla | NavigointivalikkoTeoksen verkkoversioTeoksen verkkoversioGoogle BooksSisällissota Helsingissä päättyi tasan 95 vuotta sittenSaksalaisten ylivoima jyräsi punaisen HelsinginSuomalaiset kuvaavat sotien jälkiä kaupungeissa – katso kuvat ja tarinat tutuilta kulmiltaHelsingin valtaus 90 vuotta sittenSaksalaiset valtasivat HelsinginHyökkäys HelsinkiinHelsingin valtaus 12.–13.4. 1918Saksalaiset käyttivät ihmiskilpiä Helsingin valtauksessa 1918Teoksen verkkoversioTeoksen verkkoversioSaksalaiset hyökkäävät Etelä-SuomeenTaistelut LeppävaarassaSotilaat ja taistelutLeppävaara 1918 huhtikuussa. KapinatarinaHelsingin taistelut 1918Saksalaisten voitonparaati HelsingissäHelsingin valtausta juhlittiinSaksalaisten Helsinki vuonna 1918Helsingin taistelussa kaatuneet valkokaartilaisetHelsinkiin haudatut taisteluissa kaatuneet punaiset12.4.1918 Helsingin valtauksessa saksalaiset apujoukot vapauttavat kaupunginVapaussodan muistomerkkejä Helsingissä ja pääkaupunkiseudullaCrescendo / Vuoden 1918 Kansalaissodan uhrien muistomerkkim

                              Adjektiivitarina Tarinan tekeminen | Esimerkki: ennen | Esimerkki: jälkeen | Navigointivalikko