Fractal Polygons: Difference between revisions
From JSXGraph Wiki
A WASSERMANN (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
</html> | </html> | ||
<jsxgraph width="600" height="600" box="box"> | <jsxgraph width="600" height="600" box="box"> | ||
var brd = JXG.JSXGraph.initBoard('box', { | var brd = JXG.JSXGraph.initBoard('box', {boundingbox: [-250, 250, 250, -250]}); | ||
var t = brd. | var t = brd.create('turtle'); | ||
function run() { | function run() { | ||
brd.suspendUpdate(); | brd.suspendUpdate(); |
Latest revision as of 09:28, 31 January 2013
With turtle graphics it is quite easy to construct regular polygons in a recursive manner.
It is possible to play around with this example: In the last line of the input window there is the command
fracPolygon(5,100,0.4,5);
The meaning of the parameters is
- 5: number of vertices of the regular polygon,
- 100: length of a side of the initial polygon,
- 0.4: shrink factor from one level to the next,
- 5: number of recursion steps.
References
- Peter Baptist, Wolfgang Neidhardt, Alfred Wassermann: Symmetry and Regular Polygons, Prispevki k poucevanju Matematike, The Improvement of Mathematics Education in Secondary Schools: A Tempus Project, Maribor 1996.