Latest comment: 30 June 20221 comment1 person in discussion
The equation for the semi-major axis a in the section Properties/Cylindric sections appears to be wrong. With the current definition, it would imply that the semi-major axis becomes infinite if the cylinder is aligned with the normal of the secant plane. If the equation is changed to a=r / cos(alpha), then the semi-major axis becomes the radius of the cylinder when the cylinder is normal to the plane. What is the source of this equation and is the equation for eccentricity also incorrect?Grumbins (talk) 04:53, 30 June 2022 (UTC)Reply
definition?
Latest comment: 8 March 20171 comment1 person in discussion
Definition, does the parallell lines need to to be line segments of equal length?
The introduction is wrong. Cylinders are not limited to objects having a surface that is "a fixed distance from the axis" [of the cylinder] - this applies only to a circular cylinder. Can the last author please fix this and any other inconsistencies.
Latest comment: 14 December 20233 comments3 people in discussion
According to James Tanton a cylinder is a made from creating a base shape on a plane, making a congruent shape on a parallel plane and connecting each edge/point to the corresponding edge/point on the other base. This is not the definition that is on the Cylinder page.
Latest comment: 5 May 20243 comments3 people in discussion
In the figure "A solid elliptic cylinder with the semi-axes..." height h indicates the length of the side of the cylinder, which is greater than the real height by 1/cos(φ) times, where φ is the angle of the cilinder axis to the normal to the base AAPoul (talk) 02:36, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
In this particular case, it's clear that the side of the cylinder is perpendicular to the base. This could perhaps be pictured/stated more clearly. –jacobolus(t)06:08, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
The caption in the article says that it is an elliptic cylinder that is represented, but most readers will see a circular cylinder with oblique plane sections (that are therefore elliptic). So, the image is not well suited for illustrating the text, and is more confusing than useful. In commons, the only image that I have found that represents an elliptic cylinder is the one that is displayed here, but its labels do not correspond to this article. So, I'll edit the caption, but I am not very happy with this solution. D.Lazard (talk) 08:43, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply