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Not all of the examples here seem to be nomograms. Tephigrams, for example are not nomograms, but rather non-linear graphs. The defining characteristic of a nomogram is, I believe, that calculations are performed by drawing a straight line between labelled points on two scaled curves and seeing where the line intersects a third scaled curve. Comments? -- macrakis ( talk) 20:36, 22 January 2009 (UTC)
Actually, I believe this definition of nomograms is too restrictive, and applies to a particular subset of nomograms (alignment nomograms). The term has certainly been used far more broadly. Glenbarnett ( talk) 03:50, 10 December 2012 (UTC)
In Nomogram#Chi-squared_test_computation_nomogram, what does the ABCDE stand for? Mikael Häggström ( talk) 10:31, 14 June 2010 (UTC)
Wow, nomograms are AWESOME. Especially the Parallel-resistance/thin-lens nomogram. Can't believe I've never come across that visualization before. It is soooo insightful.
The article says "A nomogram consists of a set of n scales. Knowing the values of n-1 variables, the value of the unknown variable can be found ... by laying a straightedge across the known values on the scales" which suggests that nomograms can model functions of any number of variables.
But how can this be done for any value of n other than 3? Assuming the nomogram is printed on a flat surface, the straightedge has only 2 degrees of freedom. Therefore 2 known variables define the line (and therefore the result) completely, and no further known variables can influence the result.
The only way I can think of getting around this is to use more straight edges with "intermediate result" scales on the monogram. This would effectively mean combining multiple sequential monograms on the same surface, using, for example, a bivariate function nested within a bivariate function to model a trivariate function. But the article mentions nothing about multiple straightedges, so I'm wondering why it says "n-1 knowns" rather than "2 knowns".
-- Tennenrishin ( talk) 11:12, 4 October 2013 (UTC)
Have a look at http://myreckonings.com/wordpress/2008/01/09/the-art-of-nomography-i-geometric-design/, search for "4-Variable Charts"
-- alex ( talk) 08:28, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
A book of radio/electronic nomograms I once used, they were called ABACs. Doug butler ( talk) 08:28, 11 May 2021 (UTC)