on Tue, 27 Jan 2004 04:48:23 -0800 Jim Hurley wrote:

 I put up an application using the "intersection"
 function which does something quite similar to
 this on my web site some time ago. It was
 a response to a question on the list about colliding
 polygons. You can drag or propel one polygon
 to/at another. They beep or bounce off
 one another when any line of one polygon intersect
 any  line of the other.

 See "Colliding Polygons" at
 http://home.infostations.net/jhurley/

Thanks a lot Jim! I bookmarked your website.


I'll look closely a this function.

Did you noticed that some files does not have
an extension like: .rev or .mc or .txt?

In this page, you have your excellent work with
Turtle graphics.
Do you have plans for an electronic edition of
your book on Turtle graphics?
You can do it all within Rev. Lessons and exercises.

Keep Up your good work!

al


Al,

Thank you for the kind words. Promoting TG can be lonely work.

I keep forgetting the PC world. I presume these suffixes are a necessity there. I have added the appropriate appendages.

I also updated the Colliding Polygons. No end of difficulties there. I want to be able to include the possibility of the (colliding) graphic objects being rectangles. In this case it is a challenge finding the intersection of all those parallel lines :-) (I fake it by altering slightly the coordinates. This allows for the detection of two parallel line segments when they are touching. It is only in this feature that my "intersection" function differs from that of Trevor. His function returns "empty" for parallel lines. Certainly his function is easier to read and understand and can easily be modified to deal with rectangles.)

I gave a (electronic) copy of my Turtle Graphics book to RR. It really isn't what they are looking for in an introduction to programming. Their objective is programming for programmers; mine is programming for science students.

I'm not sure what you mean by "You can do it all within Rev. Lessons and exercises."

I have a (popular) physics book coming out dealing with the second law of thermodynamics and the time-asymmetry paradox. I am doing some work constructing stacks to put on the book's web site. They will be interactive illustrations of some of the physics discussed in the book. I am enjoying the challenge. And thank God for RR. Impossible with this incredible tool. (Also--shameless plug--impossible with the TG addendum to Transcript. Although TG is perceived simply as an educational tool, it is also an indispensable graphics tool.)

Jim



_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution

Reply via email to