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RE: The Hidden Beauty of the Two Times Table.

in #mathematics8 years ago

It is a very beautiful application of number theory, topology and geometry. These three fields perhaps are my personal three favourite streams of mathematics, the most fundamental, simple and very tightly interrelated. I am a visual thinker and these kinds of diagrams are representations of the network maps that appear in my mind when I think about numbers.

Thanks to @voluntary for pointing me to this post.

@pedrosgali I would be particularly interested to see a sequence of these number patterns for special number sequences also, Fibonacci, Primes, and so forth. The number 9 is particularly interesting, because its multiples also all sum to 9 due to the decimal system. By selecting clock patterns based on these multiples you can show other patterns as well. Part of what makes the pretty patterns in the middle is also to do with aliasing across the grid of pixels you are using, this acts as a moire type filter.

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Hey @l0k1 Thanks for that great comment.
I was playing with this program last night and now use a different method for drawing the lines. Basically I got rid of the static points and now just calculate where the point would be which allows me to increment the points by an arbitrary value, in this case I'm trying 0.1 which shows the transition between 1 and 5 in 50 frames.
I'm going to try making some animations of this tonight for my next post but I'm currently having some trouble with the arbitrary number of points. It seems that over 50 or so points the patterns get too complex to show the progression to the next state so I may have to fiddle with that a bit more. Anyways, I hope you'll like it.
Just for you here's everyone's favorite transcendental, Pi to 10 decimals with 3041 points. :)