![]() You can try it out yourself on Khan Academy’s Programming Natural Simulations course. The book uses Processing which has a built-in function for generating Perlin Noise. Until a few weeks ago I’d never heard of Perlin Noise, but I’ve just read the first couple of chapters of Nature of Code which has a chapter on using pseudo-random numbers to simulate physical forces and generate textures. a sine wave) and Perlin Noise seemed like a good fit for this. not totally random numbers), but something that didn’t contain too much repetition (e.g. ![]() I’ve been working on testing some realtime data visualisation architecture (SignalR / In-Memory Caching vs Ajax / Redis Queue) and I needed some test data. ![]()
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