Chris Hodapp 94310f0f9d Migrate *all* photos to the cavelab setup. Header/footer still broken.
Completely remove the other image gallery themes.

I now have: image galleries, with lightboxes, and captions, with links
in them (and to Hugo pages), with full images lazy-loaded, with all
thumbnails auto-generated, and the ability to do this on both
individual images *and* with globbing, from page resources, from this
page or any specified one.  See cavelab_notes.txt.

It also has the ability to use Exif data of the photo - if I
preprocess it into a JSON file.

Known issues:
- The theme header/footer are now being overridden.  I am working to
  fix this first.
- I am missing some kind of fonts/images needed for the lightbox to
  show up properly.
2022-09-04 12:31:08 -04:00

2.8 KiB

title, date, author, tags
title date author tags
Processing: DLA, quadtrees 2010-07-04 Chris Hodapp
processing

I first dabbled with Diffusion-Limited Aggregation algorithms some 5 years back when I read about them in a book (later note: that book was Nexus: Small Worlds and the Groundbreaking Theory of Networks). The version I wrote was monumentally slow because it was a crappy implementation in a slow language for heavy computations (i.e. Python), but it worked well enough to create some good results like this:

{{< figure resources="dla2c.png" title="Diffusion Limited Aggregation" caption="Don't ask for the source code to this">}}

After about 3 or 4 failed attempts to optimize this program to not take days to generate images, I finally rewrote it reasonably successfully in Processing which I've taken a great liking to recently. I say "reasonably successfully" because it still has some bugs and because I can't seem to tune it to produce lightning-like images like this one, just much more dense ones. Annoyingly, I did not keep any notes about how I made this image, so I have only a vague idea. It was from the summer of 2005 in which I coded eleventy billion really cool little generative art programs, but took very sparse notes about how I made them.

It was only a few hours of coding total. Part of why I like Processing is the triviality of adding interactivity to something, which I did repeatedly in order to test that the various building-blocks of the DLA implementation were working properly.

The actual DLA applet is at http://openprocessing.org/visuals/?visualID=10799. Click around inside it; right-click to reset it. The various building blocks that were put together to make this are: here, here, here, here, and here.

These are at OpenProcessing mostly because I don't know how to embed a Processing applet in Wordpress; perhaps it's better that I don't, since this one is a CPU hog. (Later note: I wonder if I can just host these examples inline using Processing.js...)

This blog also has an entire gallery of generative art with Processing that I think is great: http://myecurve.wordpress.com/