@AnderBiguri Then you can say “oops, didn’t know eval was so dangerous…”
@flawr Interesting. A colleague from my PhD student days developed a hierarchical partition of the sphere using triangles all the way. Allowed for easy indexing of directions in 3D.
Hexagons are nice on the plane, but don’t really work for the sphere. They point out all these issues, and still didn’t come to the conclusion that it’s not a good solution? There’s some pentagons in there, hexagons don’t subdivide a hexagon, I’m not impressed! :)
haha vi hart just posted about this issue but with octahedral dice: youtube.com/watch?v=-p7C5FrgAzU (the "more data" part is the most interesting where she actually made models of the different graphs of how these d8 are numbered)
@flawr I know. But it’s a coincidence that this is even possible, it’s not a generic solution, not to map other planets, not to map the earth in times of Pangea nor a million years from now, and not to map non-geography things on a sphere, such as what my colleague was working on.
And you know, if it’s not 100% generic it’s useless to me. :D
Nah, It’s a pretty cool system for what they use it for. I’m just disappointed that they keep saying how hexagons are better than rectangles and triangles, but then brush away all the problems that hexagons cause in their system.
Is this neighborhood relationship really so important that they’re willing to ignore scale changes completely breaking up previously drawn boundaries?
@flawr ah! Indeed! I discard any method that cannot be generalized to arbitrary dimensions even if I only need it in 2D!
Well, not really, but DIPlib is full of algorithms that are generalized to any number of dimensions. It’s a much funnier way to implement algorithms. There really are only a few functions that are limited to 2D only or 2/3D.
@flawr From that video I eventually happened on a video by her dad. He does cool practical mathy stuff!
@LuisMendo I think at that point you'd be better off buying a harp:)
@CrisLuengo Actually one of the first things I wrote when learning matlab was a tool to create these polyhedra based structures! (In the meantime I found that stuff like blender exsits:)
@CrisLuengo you're wrong about that. As every machine learning engineer can tell you more parameters are better, so are more gpus, more ssds, more layers, more data, more chocolate, more papers, more coffee etc
@AndrasDeak yup! in this case the base shape is a dodecahedron made from pentagons, and in the program you can draw some shape that will be rotated to each side of the pentagon to get some "star"-shape (with pentagonal symmetry), and one of those is then put on every face of the dodecahedron
if you grind down the edges of a cube at 45° until all each face collapses to a single point, you get a rhombic dodecahedron, made from -- you guessed it -- rhombi
@flawr I didn’t say “more is never better”, I said “more is not always better”. Though you can have too much coffee. I once overdosed and became quite ill for two days.
@AndrasDeak this is not very welcoming! I certainly appreciate beings with a different background and different abilities on the team. Especially mimetic abilities are pretty cool.
@flawr I had a classmate in high school drink something like 12 vending machine coffees over the course of a few hours, she was shaking like a leaf at the end
@AndrasDeak trying to plot polygons in 3d - after what I read online this should work, however I only ever see a triangle instead of a pentagon, can you confirm? pastebin.com/8HHd33sL