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How do I make a sine wave in illustrator?

Community Beginner ,
Oct 31, 2013 Oct 31, 2013

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Hi,

I started a thread earlier this evening but I think that I accidentally flagged it as "solved" or something like that (I'm new to this forum). So I'm trying this again. I want to know if there's a way of creating a sine wave in illustrator. I've managed to create a cosine wave by using the zig zag effect on a line and choosing "smooth". But I can't seem to find a good way to make a sine wave.

This is the difference for anyone wondering:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/71/Sine_cosine_one_period.svg/600px-Sine_cosine_one_period.svg.png

I want a sine wave just like the picture above.

Thanks for the help!

ekmanch

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Nov 11, 2013 Nov 11, 2013

ekmanch,

 

As I (mis)understand it, to create a single full sine wave, you may:

 

1) Create a horizontal line 2.5 times the length of the desired full sine wave (or you may adapt the length later);

2) Effect>Distort & Transform>Zig Zag with 4 Ridges per segment and Smooth Points and the desired height as the Size (or you may adapt later);

3) Object>Expand Appearance;

4) Object>Path>Add Anchor Points;

5) With the Scissors Tool cut where the sine wave starts and ends;

6) Ungroup if needed and dele

...

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Community Expert ,
Oct 31, 2013 Oct 31, 2013

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I think all the replies in the previous thread tried to say that the sine and the cosine curves are exactly the same

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Community Beginner ,
Oct 31, 2013 Oct 31, 2013

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They are the same except that they are shifted to eachother. I need my curve to start at 0 (origin), not at the top. And I can't crop, use the knife tool etc. because of the effect. So I don't really know what to do.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 01, 2013 Nov 01, 2013

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expand appearence?

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Community Expert ,
Nov 01, 2013 Nov 01, 2013

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if they are just the same but shifted along the x axis, you'd probably be best off applying a transform effect to move a copy of the original line whatever distance horizontally, then put a clipping mask on the result.

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Community Beginner ,
Nov 11, 2013 Nov 11, 2013

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How do I apply a transform that offsets the line horizontally so I can put a clipping mask on it? The clipping mask seems to work but it doesn't allow me to just take a part in the middle. Only at the ends of the line.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 11, 2013 Nov 11, 2013

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ekmanch,

 

As I (mis)understand it, to create a single full sine wave, you may:

 

1) Create a horizontal line 2.5 times the length of the desired full sine wave (or you may adapt the length later);

2) Effect>Distort & Transform>Zig Zag with 4 Ridges per segment and Smooth Points and the desired height as the Size (or you may adapt later);

3) Object>Expand Appearance;

4) Object>Path>Add Anchor Points;

5) With the Scissors Tool cut where the sine wave starts and ends;

6) Ungroup if needed and delete the end bits (and adapt the length/height if needed).

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Community Beginner ,
Nov 11, 2013 Nov 11, 2013

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Thanks so much! It worked beautifully.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 11, 2013 Nov 11, 2013

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You are welcome, ekmanch.

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LEGEND ,
Nov 11, 2013 Nov 11, 2013

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To make a sine wave you just wave and hope the sine waves back.

Sorry folks. Gone midnight here.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 12, 2013 Nov 12, 2013

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I missed that higher level effortless solution yesterday, Steve, because it was gone one here.

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New Here ,
Mar 20, 2018 Mar 20, 2018

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Thank you-- this is excellent!

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Community Expert ,
Mar 20, 2018 Mar 20, 2018

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You are welcome, russc.

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New Here ,
Dec 20, 2022 Dec 20, 2022

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This does indeed give you a wave that looks a bit like a sine wave - but it is NOT a sine wave. the shape is very different. you can see it if you overlay it with a real sine wave that the curvature generated by the zig zag distortion is to low on the high- and low points and the curve is too steep where it crosses the x axis. The shape also changes with amplitude (a sine curve keeps its characteristics regardless of amplitude).

So, as a scientific, mathematical or technical drawing using the zig zag distortion to create a sine wave is not an option.

You can easily see it yourself: look at the comparison of a real sine wave and the result of the zig zag distortion in the attached image.

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Community Expert ,
Dec 21, 2022 Dec 21, 2022

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Right you are, Nuklearwanze.

 

I made a similar post with this image on 6th September 2009, and took some flak from then leading members of the newly merged Mac/Win tribe following the forum switch to the Jive; unfortunately, it was among the 70% of threads that were deleted in connexion with the next switch to Khoros in 2019, so this old GIF is the only thing left.

 

Since then, I (and undoubtedly others) have become (too) used to see the term sine wave being used rather loosely, often about a repeated wavy shape for purely decorative purposes.

 

It is good to have a reminder.

 

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New Here ,
Apr 02, 2023 Apr 02, 2023

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LATEST

wave.png

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LEGEND ,
Nov 01, 2013 Nov 01, 2013

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Since there’s really no difference you could use a (probably rectangular) clipping mask to define where the wave begins and ends.

Or, if you don’t mind expanding the effect, just do that and then edit (knife, scissors whatever) the path.

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Community Expert ,
Dec 21, 2022 Dec 21, 2022

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You could try this script, and see if it works for you.

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