Greg,
"ahem"
The wiki is missing some items. Suggested additions for the special features that they should highlight:
[ul][li]To create a legend for your plot, the configuration of each trace will require a considerable amount of clicking through menus. We, the creators of Smath have indestructible mouses are are not concerned about wearing them or our knuckles out.[/li]
[li]In rare cases where you want to plot a function on the horizontal axis and the independent values on the vertical axis, don't. We, the creators of Smath find that blasphemous.[/li]
[li]The functions you spent hours creating in body of the Smath analysis are useless when you need a graph. Just start all over again when it's time to prepare your graph. We, the creators of Smath have endless fun typing the same thing all over in numerous intricate ways.[/li]
[li]Once you are done, make sure the graph-defined functions have some flair because you will be forced to look at them forever. We the creators of SMath love math and will force you to look at it. ALL OF IT.[/li]
[li]We just love the word "Augment". It's so cool that the mathematicians of a bygone era chose to use it formally in linear algebra. We the creators of SMath love it so much that we made it almost impossible to make a graph without using "Augment". You don't have to thank us, really.[/li]
[li]If the reader of your report complains that they have already read your work and don't need to see it reprinted all over again below a graph, or they whine that now it's in a different form which must be puzzled over for a while until they figure it out or are told that it's a crutch for the program rather than use the "f(x)" that was already defined in the text to generate the function... well, that's their fault for not falling in love with redundancy at first glance. They should fall in love with redundancy. What's not to love about redundancy when one first glances it? We, the creators of Smath have already explained that we love to do things repeatedly and redundantly and repeatedly.[/li]
[li]Plots zoom out by a factor of 20000x when you scroll your mouse wheel over them. We the creators of Smath are proud of this feature, despite mouse-wheel also being an EXTREMELY common page scroll action. We, the creators of Smath thought it would be fun to provide a way to wipe 8 settings in your plot menu all at once, even if you spent several minutes selecting and setting them just a moment ago. You can have all that same fun setting them again![/li]
[/ul]
I guess, since it's a wiki, I'll have to enter these myself...