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How to draw the figure with four pentagons?


LaTeX equivalent of ConTeXt buffersHow can I put a coloured outline around fraction lines?Rotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?Numerical conditional within tikz keys?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 themHow to draw a square and its diagonals with arrows?beginfigure… endfigure is not working with tikz package













2















I want to make the next figure formed by 4 pentagons.



enter image description here



I can only do with two and still have a space between them. I can't even do the reflection of the two pentagons to get the desired figure.



documentclass[a4paper]article

usepackage[brazil]babel

usepackagegraphicx

usepackagetikz

begindocument

begincenter

beginfigure[!htb]

begintikzpicture

draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

endtikzpicture

endfigure

beginfigure[!htb]

begintikzpicture
draw[ultra thick,rotate around=198:(-0.80,0.58)] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

endtikzpicture

endfigure

endcenter

enddocument


enter image description here










share|improve this question




























    2















    I want to make the next figure formed by 4 pentagons.



    enter image description here



    I can only do with two and still have a space between them. I can't even do the reflection of the two pentagons to get the desired figure.



    documentclass[a4paper]article

    usepackage[brazil]babel

    usepackagegraphicx

    usepackagetikz

    begindocument

    begincenter

    beginfigure[!htb]

    begintikzpicture

    draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

    endtikzpicture

    endfigure

    beginfigure[!htb]

    begintikzpicture
    draw[ultra thick,rotate around=198:(-0.80,0.58)] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

    endtikzpicture

    endfigure

    endcenter

    enddocument


    enter image description here










    share|improve this question


























      2












      2








      2








      I want to make the next figure formed by 4 pentagons.



      enter image description here



      I can only do with two and still have a space between them. I can't even do the reflection of the two pentagons to get the desired figure.



      documentclass[a4paper]article

      usepackage[brazil]babel

      usepackagegraphicx

      usepackagetikz

      begindocument

      begincenter

      beginfigure[!htb]

      begintikzpicture

      draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

      endtikzpicture

      endfigure

      beginfigure[!htb]

      begintikzpicture
      draw[ultra thick,rotate around=198:(-0.80,0.58)] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

      endtikzpicture

      endfigure

      endcenter

      enddocument


      enter image description here










      share|improve this question
















      I want to make the next figure formed by 4 pentagons.



      enter image description here



      I can only do with two and still have a space between them. I can't even do the reflection of the two pentagons to get the desired figure.



      documentclass[a4paper]article

      usepackage[brazil]babel

      usepackagegraphicx

      usepackagetikz

      begindocument

      begincenter

      beginfigure[!htb]

      begintikzpicture

      draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

      endtikzpicture

      endfigure

      beginfigure[!htb]

      begintikzpicture
      draw[ultra thick,rotate around=198:(-0.80,0.58)] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;

      endtikzpicture

      endfigure

      endcenter

      enddocument


      enter image description here







      tikz-pgf






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 6 hours ago







      Benedito Freire

















      asked 6 hours ago









      Benedito FreireBenedito Freire

      1227




      1227




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          7














          You can draw more than one shape in the same tikzpicture:



          documentclass[a4paper]article

          usepackage[brazil]babel

          usepackagegraphicx

          usepackagetikz

          begindocument

          begincenter

          beginfigure[!htb]

          begintikzpicture

          draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
          beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
          draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
          endscope
          beginscope[xshift=3.8cm]
          draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
          beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
          draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
          endscope
          endscope
          endtikzpicture

          endfigure

          endcenter

          enddocument



          To make things easier, you can use predefined pentagons:



          documentclass[a4paper]article

          usepackagetikz
          usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric

          begindocument

          beginfigure[!htb]
          begintikzpicture[every node/.append style=regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5, minimum size=4cm, draw,ultra thick]
          node at (0,0) ;
          node at (3.8,0) ;
          node[rotate=180] at (0,-3.22) ;
          node[rotate=180] at (3.8,-3.22) ;
          endtikzpicture
          endfigure

          enddocument


          enter image description here



          Off-topic: please note that placing a floating figure environment inside a non-floating center environment does not make much sense..






          share|improve this answer
































            5














            Similar answer to @samcarter, but using named nodes -- avoids having to calculate the distances. My motto: Let TikZ do the work!



            documentclassarticle

            usepackagetikz

            usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric
            %% The size can easily altered by changing the minimum size
            tikzsetpgon/.style=regular polygon,regular polygon sides=5,minimum size=1in,draw,ultra thick,outer sep=0pt

            begindocument

            tikz%
            node[pgon] (S) at (0,0) ;
            node[pgon,anchor=corner 2] (A) at (S.corner 5) ;
            %% The yshift accounts for the thickness of an ultra thick rule
            node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (B) at (S.corner 3) ;
            node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (C) at (A.corner 3) ;
            draw[fill=purple!50] (S.corner 5) --
            (A.corner 3) --
            (C.corner 5) --
            (S.corner 4) -- cycle;


            enddocument


            Example of pentagons.






            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

              – sgmoye
              4 hours ago











            Your Answer








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            2 Answers
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            active

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            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            7














            You can draw more than one shape in the same tikzpicture:



            documentclass[a4paper]article

            usepackage[brazil]babel

            usepackagegraphicx

            usepackagetikz

            begindocument

            begincenter

            beginfigure[!htb]

            begintikzpicture

            draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
            beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
            draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
            endscope
            beginscope[xshift=3.8cm]
            draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
            beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
            draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
            endscope
            endscope
            endtikzpicture

            endfigure

            endcenter

            enddocument



            To make things easier, you can use predefined pentagons:



            documentclass[a4paper]article

            usepackagetikz
            usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric

            begindocument

            beginfigure[!htb]
            begintikzpicture[every node/.append style=regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5, minimum size=4cm, draw,ultra thick]
            node at (0,0) ;
            node at (3.8,0) ;
            node[rotate=180] at (0,-3.22) ;
            node[rotate=180] at (3.8,-3.22) ;
            endtikzpicture
            endfigure

            enddocument


            enter image description here



            Off-topic: please note that placing a floating figure environment inside a non-floating center environment does not make much sense..






            share|improve this answer





























              7














              You can draw more than one shape in the same tikzpicture:



              documentclass[a4paper]article

              usepackage[brazil]babel

              usepackagegraphicx

              usepackagetikz

              begindocument

              begincenter

              beginfigure[!htb]

              begintikzpicture

              draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
              beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
              draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
              endscope
              beginscope[xshift=3.8cm]
              draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
              beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
              draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
              endscope
              endscope
              endtikzpicture

              endfigure

              endcenter

              enddocument



              To make things easier, you can use predefined pentagons:



              documentclass[a4paper]article

              usepackagetikz
              usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric

              begindocument

              beginfigure[!htb]
              begintikzpicture[every node/.append style=regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5, minimum size=4cm, draw,ultra thick]
              node at (0,0) ;
              node at (3.8,0) ;
              node[rotate=180] at (0,-3.22) ;
              node[rotate=180] at (3.8,-3.22) ;
              endtikzpicture
              endfigure

              enddocument


              enter image description here



              Off-topic: please note that placing a floating figure environment inside a non-floating center environment does not make much sense..






              share|improve this answer



























                7












                7








                7







                You can draw more than one shape in the same tikzpicture:



                documentclass[a4paper]article

                usepackage[brazil]babel

                usepackagegraphicx

                usepackagetikz

                begindocument

                begincenter

                beginfigure[!htb]

                begintikzpicture

                draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
                draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                endscope
                beginscope[xshift=3.8cm]
                draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
                draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                endscope
                endscope
                endtikzpicture

                endfigure

                endcenter

                enddocument



                To make things easier, you can use predefined pentagons:



                documentclass[a4paper]article

                usepackagetikz
                usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric

                begindocument

                beginfigure[!htb]
                begintikzpicture[every node/.append style=regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5, minimum size=4cm, draw,ultra thick]
                node at (0,0) ;
                node at (3.8,0) ;
                node[rotate=180] at (0,-3.22) ;
                node[rotate=180] at (3.8,-3.22) ;
                endtikzpicture
                endfigure

                enddocument


                enter image description here



                Off-topic: please note that placing a floating figure environment inside a non-floating center environment does not make much sense..






                share|improve this answer















                You can draw more than one shape in the same tikzpicture:



                documentclass[a4paper]article

                usepackage[brazil]babel

                usepackagegraphicx

                usepackagetikz

                begindocument

                begincenter

                beginfigure[!htb]

                begintikzpicture

                draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
                draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                endscope
                beginscope[xshift=3.8cm]
                draw[ultra thick,rotate=18] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                beginscope[yshift=-3.22cm]
                draw[ultra thick,rotate=198] (0:2) -- (72:2) -- (144:2) -- (216:2) -- (288:2) -- cycle;
                endscope
                endscope
                endtikzpicture

                endfigure

                endcenter

                enddocument



                To make things easier, you can use predefined pentagons:



                documentclass[a4paper]article

                usepackagetikz
                usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric

                begindocument

                beginfigure[!htb]
                begintikzpicture[every node/.append style=regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5, minimum size=4cm, draw,ultra thick]
                node at (0,0) ;
                node at (3.8,0) ;
                node[rotate=180] at (0,-3.22) ;
                node[rotate=180] at (3.8,-3.22) ;
                endtikzpicture
                endfigure

                enddocument


                enter image description here



                Off-topic: please note that placing a floating figure environment inside a non-floating center environment does not make much sense..







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 5 hours ago

























                answered 6 hours ago









                samcartersamcarter

                93.8k7105303




                93.8k7105303





















                    5














                    Similar answer to @samcarter, but using named nodes -- avoids having to calculate the distances. My motto: Let TikZ do the work!



                    documentclassarticle

                    usepackagetikz

                    usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric
                    %% The size can easily altered by changing the minimum size
                    tikzsetpgon/.style=regular polygon,regular polygon sides=5,minimum size=1in,draw,ultra thick,outer sep=0pt

                    begindocument

                    tikz%
                    node[pgon] (S) at (0,0) ;
                    node[pgon,anchor=corner 2] (A) at (S.corner 5) ;
                    %% The yshift accounts for the thickness of an ultra thick rule
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (B) at (S.corner 3) ;
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (C) at (A.corner 3) ;
                    draw[fill=purple!50] (S.corner 5) --
                    (A.corner 3) --
                    (C.corner 5) --
                    (S.corner 4) -- cycle;


                    enddocument


                    Example of pentagons.






                    share|improve this answer




















                    • 1





                      @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

                      – sgmoye
                      4 hours ago















                    5














                    Similar answer to @samcarter, but using named nodes -- avoids having to calculate the distances. My motto: Let TikZ do the work!



                    documentclassarticle

                    usepackagetikz

                    usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric
                    %% The size can easily altered by changing the minimum size
                    tikzsetpgon/.style=regular polygon,regular polygon sides=5,minimum size=1in,draw,ultra thick,outer sep=0pt

                    begindocument

                    tikz%
                    node[pgon] (S) at (0,0) ;
                    node[pgon,anchor=corner 2] (A) at (S.corner 5) ;
                    %% The yshift accounts for the thickness of an ultra thick rule
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (B) at (S.corner 3) ;
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (C) at (A.corner 3) ;
                    draw[fill=purple!50] (S.corner 5) --
                    (A.corner 3) --
                    (C.corner 5) --
                    (S.corner 4) -- cycle;


                    enddocument


                    Example of pentagons.






                    share|improve this answer




















                    • 1





                      @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

                      – sgmoye
                      4 hours ago













                    5












                    5








                    5







                    Similar answer to @samcarter, but using named nodes -- avoids having to calculate the distances. My motto: Let TikZ do the work!



                    documentclassarticle

                    usepackagetikz

                    usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric
                    %% The size can easily altered by changing the minimum size
                    tikzsetpgon/.style=regular polygon,regular polygon sides=5,minimum size=1in,draw,ultra thick,outer sep=0pt

                    begindocument

                    tikz%
                    node[pgon] (S) at (0,0) ;
                    node[pgon,anchor=corner 2] (A) at (S.corner 5) ;
                    %% The yshift accounts for the thickness of an ultra thick rule
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (B) at (S.corner 3) ;
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (C) at (A.corner 3) ;
                    draw[fill=purple!50] (S.corner 5) --
                    (A.corner 3) --
                    (C.corner 5) --
                    (S.corner 4) -- cycle;


                    enddocument


                    Example of pentagons.






                    share|improve this answer















                    Similar answer to @samcarter, but using named nodes -- avoids having to calculate the distances. My motto: Let TikZ do the work!



                    documentclassarticle

                    usepackagetikz

                    usetikzlibraryshapes.geometric
                    %% The size can easily altered by changing the minimum size
                    tikzsetpgon/.style=regular polygon,regular polygon sides=5,minimum size=1in,draw,ultra thick,outer sep=0pt

                    begindocument

                    tikz%
                    node[pgon] (S) at (0,0) ;
                    node[pgon,anchor=corner 2] (A) at (S.corner 5) ;
                    %% The yshift accounts for the thickness of an ultra thick rule
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (B) at (S.corner 3) ;
                    node[pgon,rotate=180,anchor=corner 4] (C) at (A.corner 3) ;
                    draw[fill=purple!50] (S.corner 5) --
                    (A.corner 3) --
                    (C.corner 5) --
                    (S.corner 4) -- cycle;


                    enddocument


                    Example of pentagons.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 4 hours ago

























                    answered 5 hours ago









                    sgmoyesgmoye

                    4,01811327




                    4,01811327







                    • 1





                      @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

                      – sgmoye
                      4 hours ago












                    • 1





                      @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

                      – sgmoye
                      4 hours ago







                    1




                    1





                    @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

                    – sgmoye
                    4 hours ago





                    @marmot Good point. Making the change. Thanks.

                    – sgmoye
                    4 hours ago

















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