This image comes from Michael Trott's Mathematica Guidebook for Programming. It's just a chapter image though, and he doesn't show the code. I was wondering what would be the best approach to reproduce it.

|
This image comes from Michael Trott's Mathematica Guidebook for Programming. It's just a chapter image though, and he doesn't show the code. I was wondering what would be the best approach to reproduce it.
|
|||||||||
|
|
Trott does give the code for this image in another volume of the series. Look on page 21 of his Mathematica Guidebook for Graphics. |
||||
|
|
How about this approach:
|
|||||||||
|
|
I started a different approach, but I didn't anticipate perspective issues...:)
|
|||
|
|
|
To make this thread self-contained, here's a reimplementation of Trott's method to produce art in the style of Vasarely:
It should not be too hard to modify the code given to produce an animated version like this one; this extension is left as an exercise for the interested reader (hint: |
||||
|
|
|
A slightly different approach,
which comes from the following.
The little dots aren't precisely circles, but: meh. |
||||
|
|