noerdman@discuss.tchncs.de to Comic Strips@lemmy.world · 5 months agoRecursiondiscuss.tchncs.deimagemessage-square11fedilinkarrow-up1313arrow-down119file-text
arrow-up1294arrow-down1imageRecursiondiscuss.tchncs.denoerdman@discuss.tchncs.de to Comic Strips@lemmy.world · 5 months agomessage-square11fedilinkfile-text
minus-squareZuccalinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up8·edit-25 months agoAdmit it. You just zoomed in to see how accurate the recursion really is.
minus-squarenoerdman@discuss.tchncs.deOPlinkfedilinkarrow-up6·5 months agoLuckily (for me) it’s just raster graphics, so there’s an obvious end after just 4 steps when it all disappears in just a handful of blurry pixels. Thinking about it, this kind of comic maybe should be published as a map tile server so people can zoom in as deep as they want.
minus-squarejdaxe@infosec.publinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up4·5 months agoI found this: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Structured_SVG_self-similarity
minus-squareZuccalinkfedilinkarrow-up1·5 months agoNice. I was thinking svg because it’s scalable, so one could create some recursion with just copy pasting, but this… This makes it much more interesting.
Admit it. You just zoomed in to see how accurate the recursion really is.
Luckily (for me) it’s just raster graphics, so there’s an obvious end after just 4 steps when it all disappears in just a handful of blurry pixels.
Thinking about it, this kind of comic maybe should be published as a map tile server so people can zoom in as deep as they want.
svg could be something…
I found this: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Structured_SVG_self-similarity
Nice.
I was thinking svg because it’s scalable, so one could create some recursion with just copy pasting, but this… This makes it much more interesting.