Navigation

    Fuze Arena Logo
    • Register
    • Login
    • Search
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Help
    • Discord

    Maths and stuff.

    General Discussion
    8
    10
    461
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • PickleCatStars
      PickleCatStars F last edited by

      Sometimes I have a thing that I’d like to do, and I can just do it no problem, or maybe it’ll mostly work but it’s backwards or upside-down and I have to change a + to a - somewhere. Easy peasy. 20 mins.

      Sometimes though, I think I’m doing something the right way, but it’s way off, so I put in fudges and fixes and it’s still not working but it’s a little bit better and then I start getting a feel for what the numbers are doing and then it just clicks And I can suddenly see what I’m supposed to be doing and I can take all the fudges back out and simplify things and it works great. Phew! All done, but it took a whole day of fiddling, or an evening then a sleep and a day of thinking about it then fixing it the next evening.

      Some stuff I have to read about and watch videos for a week, then try them out in their own separate program before trying it out in my own. Sometimes even successfully!

      Some stuff I’m just like ’WTF are these alien glyphs?’

      I dunno what my point is. I’m just chatting...

      spt games 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 6
      • Retrocade_media
        Retrocade_media F last edited by

        Yea one time I spent all day coming up with this equation:
        round(sin( (180/pi) * (pi*loopindex – 4.712) ) * 0.5 + 0.5)

        And the very next day I found out it can be replaced using mod:

        loopindex%2

        Sure I was mad, but at least I know about mod now!

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • moonflower
          moonflower last edited by

          sometimes i spend all day trying really hard to find a solution to a problem and nothing works, but then the next day i'll be doing something unrelated, like going for a bike ride or making my lunch, and... boom, the answer just comes to me lmao this brain just needs time

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
          • DomDom
            DomDom F last edited by

            The subconcious knows the answers. Unfortunately,most of the time its voice is being drowned out by the conscious.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • Martin
              Martin Fuze Team last edited by

              For some strange reason that I have no clue why, answers and ideas usually come to me in the shower. It's always been like that. And 99% of the time by the time I'm dried and dressed I've completely forgotten them. Sometimes they come back to me during some shower further down the line, other times they're lost forever. Maybe if I'm really, really lucky (or unlucky if it involves a lot of work) the idea or solution will make it onto paper. Usually not though.

              It's like the shower is some other existence but I struggle to poke the ideas through to this reality. I knew I was never keen on water :D

              P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • P
                petermeisenstein F @Martin last edited by

                @Martin Water is nice :D

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • pugmartin
                  pugmartin F last edited by

                  Check out ‘The Macgyver Secret’ by Lee Zlotoff. He’s the guy who wrote Macguyver TV series all those years ago.
                  It’s a subconscious way of unlocking your mind and... ties in with your shower revelations.
                  In a nutshell it explains certain activities you do put your brain into a certain state where it starts to chomp through the problems you’ve been storing. Listening to music is usually a no no, driving can work, showering works, reading or watching a film won’t etc... it’s putting your mind to an almost automatic task without it having to work on anything too complex, and it’ll get to work without you realising it. Before you know it you’ve come up with the answer you didn’t even know you were working on.

                  spt games 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • spt games
                    spt games @pugmartin last edited by

                    @pugmartin It was driving to work for me. I usually have to drive 30 miles to work every weekday (not lately though). On the motorway I tend to cruise in the slow lane which gives me a chance to problem solve while driving in "almost autopilot".

                    pugmartin 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • spt games
                      spt games @PickleCatStars last edited by

                      @toxibunny Sometimes you do have to just go with what works, even if it looks crazy at the time. Provided you have the patience and the motivation you can always refactor your code later.

                      I code as part of my job and have found (that as with a lot of things), if something is giving you a headache then put it down, do something else and come back with fresh eyes.

                      Many times I have been working and near the end of the work day I hit a problem that I cannot seem to solve. I come back the next day having slept and have a "Aha!" moment.

                      Hope that is a bit helpful.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • pugmartin
                        pugmartin F @spt games last edited by

                        @spt-games
                        Same here more times than I would have thought possible. It’s crazy how being away from the screen helps to form something properly

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • First post
                          Last post