Sujet : Re: blender to visualize math (Penrose tiling as a projection from higher to lower dimensions
De : dohduhdah (at) *nospam* yahoo.com (sobriquet)
Groupes : sci.mathDate : 15. Jun 2024, 22:59:58
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v4l2su$3lci8$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Op 15/06/2024 om 22:44 schreef Chris M. Thomasson:
On 6/15/2024 1:42 PM, Chris M. Thomasson wrote:
On 6/15/2024 4:17 AM, sobriquet wrote:
Op 15/06/2024 om 08:06 schreef Chris M. Thomasson:
On 6/14/2024 6:02 PM, sobriquet wrote:
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Hi!
This is a neat video that shows the power of blender (geometry nodes) to visualize math.
To illustrate how aperiodic Penrose tilings can be viewed as a projection from a 5 dimensional to a 2 dimensional space.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJOTM2UGx70
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Thanks for that. Also, creating weighted bones for animation... Very fun. Actually, I need to get back into my python code I created for blender. Fwiw it generated the following fractal:
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https://skfb.ly/oqPIU
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Cool.. I have a sphere version:
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https://www.desmos.com/3d/apuqykzkbo
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Oh, that's nice. Can you move a camera into the fractal structure? Here is an inside shit of my sketchfab experiment:
Ahhh man. I meant inside shot. Argh! Damn typos!
Sorry sobriquet. ;^o
[...]
You can look from inside one of the spheres, but that wouldn't yield an interesting view. By zooming in you can see the insides of the spheres where they intersect the bounding box.
I hope that more features will become available when desmos 3d is no longer in the beta stage of development.