Sujet : Re: desmos 3d fractals
De : titang78 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Kuan Peng)
Groupes : sci.mathDate : 07. Jun 2024, 15:42:04
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Nemoweb
Message-ID : <SFHRi4B11nonwCWAxosNRy8BQF4@jntp>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Nemo/0.999a
Le 07/06/2024 à 05:44, sobriquet a écrit :
Op 06/06/2024 om 14:02 schreef Kuan Peng:
Le 20/05/2024 à 01:38, sobriquet a écrit :
Op 20/05/2024 om 01:32 schreef sobriquet:
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Thx.. I was kind of inspired by this movie someone shared on fb.
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https://imgur.com/rPon7KJ
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It seems imgur blocks movie links somehow..
Maybe the fb link works..
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https://www.facebook.com/groups/tiling/permalink/1828197020937168/
Please see the 100s of 3D fractalshttps://pengkuanonmaths.blogspot.com/2022, /04/rendering-of-3d-mandelbrot-lambda-and.html
https://www.academia.edu/92516029/Rendering_of_3D_Mandelbrot_Lambda_and_other_sets_using_3D_complex_number_system
Thanks, they look interesting.
I hope in the near future we can use desmos to create similar graphics.
At the moment the 3d version of desmos is still in beta, so it's a bit limited, but desmos is really great for sharing interactive visualizations.
A video can potentially show more information than an image, just like
an image can show more than a bunch of text.
An interactive demonstration in turn can show more than a video, because
you can explore a whole range of things depending on slider settings and being able to pan around and zoom in or out.
You can also change any particular expression and instantly see how
that affects things.
Here is a video showing the 3D Mendelbrot set in rotation.
I knew that Desmos was a scientific calculator online. Now it can do fractals? Wow!