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An example on how it looks like when using the graphing sketch together with the Sweetblue android + arduino library for processing.

 

More info and download here: github.com/1scale1/sweetbt

Made by 1scale1.

I'm pretty proud of this graph. The start date is 4/15/2009. The graph should level off in another 20 lbs or so.

 

As a note, the loss/week line is an average from the beginning.

I translated the initial sketch into a design on graph paper, which made subsequent measurements easier. I then made a side view.

Quelques graphs situés en bord de Clain à Poitiers

Quelques graphs situés en bord de Clain à Poitiers

Graphs by;- Ella Wilson

One favourite communication form at the Biennale: This one showing New Orleans storms, population and diversity

Umm, after being farked and found on other websites, Stolen Mix Tape traffic is going through the roof. It's all because of this one page on The True Mix blog: "Top 39 Annoying Things Bands Do."

 

Please digg it if you can.

The MultiCam Graph-X-Cutter is a CNC digital cutting machine intended for the sign, banner, and wide-format digital printing industry.

I asked students to look through their graphing homework and then to go on the web and find 5 examples of line graphs, bar charts, and pie charts.

 

These examples come from my 2019-2020 class. We then defined quantitative and qualitative variable

 

Quantitative involves numbers that can be measured with some sort of scale. The size of the numbers is important, ie, 6 is greater than 5.

 

Qualitative just involves categories. The Air Force is not more than the State Department, they're just different.

 

We then circled all of our qualitative variables. We can see that:

 

Line Charts are good for graphing two quantitative variables

 

Bar Graphs are good for graphing one quantitative and one qualitative variable

 

Pie Charts only show one variable, but show how much of each value there is in a total amount.

 

China Graph, found an old school text book to fill up.

 

Blog Post: alekadzie.blogspot.com/2011/06/china-graph-old-high-schoo...

Quelques graphs situés en bord de Clain à Poitiers

My first electric typewriter, technically a plotter, it used tiny ballpoint pens and every time you typed, it wrote out the letters. It could write in different fonts and sizes, write sideways, and draw pie and bar graphs. Crazy.

ns=numpy.arange(2,21)

pylab.plot(ns, 1.0/ns*numpy.log(ns), 'o-')

pylab.title('1/n*log(n)')

 

on my car's rear window...

 

Inspired by

{wyethhouse} and Wilson Bentley

 

Copyright SteveWilsonModernLight2010

The corporate Badboy

Graph and equation for programming the dash so it gives the correct reading. I did the water boiling and temperature reading, Jeremy did the maths :) so it should be good to go.

Yours Truly. Original photo, fonts, design. Next...

  

In looking at the Collatz Conjecture, I wanted to see what it was actually doing, so I made a diagram/graph of sorts.

 

It's my own weird way of visualizing it, "from the bottom up." It's more of a specific visualization of the two rules of the conjecture than a perfect 'graph.'

 

Rather than doing arcs or whatever, I just use a vertical line to the next value on the vertical axis, and then connect to that value on the horizontal axis.

 

You'll notice that both above and below the horizontal axis are "positive." I could have put both 'n/2' and '3n+1' on the same 'positive/top' side of the horizontal axis, but I thought that would just make it that much more "busy," muddled, and harder to understand what's going on. So, I put 3n+1 transformations on the top, and n/2 transformations on the bottom.

 

Then I decided to highlight powers of 2 in red (since, if you hit one of those, it's a straight shot down to 1), and prime numbers in green (just to see if anything interesting comes of it).

 

[Best viewed at "Original" resolution.]

Quelques graphs situés en bord de Clain à Poitiers

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