By Zevan | August 28, 2018
I have a set of ~100 pictograms that I use for personal notation. When I was actively working on Zeta. I created a few of these with equations:
You can read more about Zeta in this post.
I spam my facebook with images from my sketchbooks if you’re at all interested in seeing more pictograms:
By Zevan | August 26, 2018
Creating a dictionary type object with ES6 Symbols is easy. Yes we have Maps and WeakMaps but this is still interesting for a variety of reasons… Being able to use objects as keys in another object (dictionary) has many great uses…. So how do you use Symbols like this?
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| let a = { id: Symbol('key') },
b = { id: Symbol('key') };
let dictionary = {
[a.id]: 'value by obj a',
[b.id]: 'value by obj b'
};
console.log(dictionary[a.id]);
console.log(dictionary[b.id]);
// outputs:
// 'value by obj a'
// 'value by obj b' |
By using either object a or object b’s `id` symbol, our dictionary points to another value. This old AS3 snippet is similar:
http://actionsnippet.com/?p=426
By Zevan | August 21, 2018
I have so many little snippets like this laying around, at first I didn’t remember writing this when I found it the other day… then it slowly came back to me.
Looks like this is another one from the jQuery days:
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| <!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<title></title>
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-latest.min.js"></script>
<script>
$(function(){
// meaning: http://www.ichingfortune.com/hexagrams.php
// starting hex: ䷀
var flash = $('.flash'),
syms = $('.syms'),
num = $('.num'),
start = 0x4DC0,
total = 64,
tick = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < total; i++) {
$('<div>', {
html: '&#x' + (start + i).toString(16)
}).appendTo(syms);
}
flash.html(syms.html());
flash.find('div').hide().first().show();
setInterval(function() {
var index = tick % total,
curr = flash.children().eq(index)
.show()
.siblings().hide();
curr = syms.children().eq(index)
.css('color', 'red')
.siblings().css('color', 'black');
num.text(index + 1);
tick++;
}, 600);
});
</script>
<style>
* {
font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, sans-serif;
}
.syms div {
position: relative;
float: left;
font-size: 3em;
-webkit-transition: color 300ms ease-out;
-ms-transition: color 300ms ease-out;
-o-transition: color 300ms ease-out;
transition: color 300ms ease-out;
}
.flash {
position: relative;
height: 6em;
}
.flash div {
position: absolute;
left: 0; top: 0;
font-size: 6em;
color: red;
-webkit-transform: rotate(90deg);
-ms-transform: rotate(90deg);
-o-transform: rotate(90deg);
transform: rotate(90deg);
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h2>i ching : <span class="num">1</span></h2>
<div class="flash"></div>
<div class="syms"></div>
</body>
</html> |
The i-ching is a Chinese divinatory system - the “hexagrams” just look very cool, when I noticed they were available starting at `0×4DC0` I made this snippet… think ancient magic 8 ball.
wikipedia article:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Ching
It’s pretty fun to play with this online version:
https://www.eclecticenergies.com/iching/virtualcoins
By Zevan | August 19, 2018
Was just watching this funny video on Numberphile:
Here is the Surreal Numbers book on archive.org:
https://archive.org/stream/SurrealNumbers/Knuth-SurrealNumbers#page/n7
Got a kick out of the story around this stuff… When Knuth shows the notation for surreal numbers I suddenly remembered a weird program I’d written awhile back.
OVM
I had been out drawing in my sketchbook one sunday (almost 2 years ago) and found myself creating a tiny little system of symbols:
A few days later I speed coded a version of the system. Apparently I had posted a screenshot on FB while I was working on it:
See if you can figure out how it works. I’m sure the code could be cleaned up a bit…
While OVM has little/nothing to do with Surreal Numbers - I’m glad the video reminded me it…
Posted in Math, misc | Tagged algebra, Math, numbers |