simon-git: puzzles (main): Simon Tatham

Commits to Tartarus hosted VCS tartarus-commits at lists.tartarus.org
Mon Apr 10 15:02:12 BST 2023


TL;DR:
  6fb890e Reference my just-published article about aperiodic tilings.

Repository:     https://git.tartarus.org/simon/puzzles.git
On the web:     https://git.tartarus.org/?p=simon/puzzles.git
Branch updated: main
Committer:      Simon Tatham <anakin at pobox.com>
Date:           2023-04-10 15:02:12

commit 6fb890e0ea20a3c366ffd2de45d26a0c1c454dd6
web diff https://git.tartarus.org/?p=simon/puzzles.git;a=commitdiff;h=6fb890e0ea20a3c366ffd2de45d26a0c1c454dd6;hp=71cf891fdc3ab237ecf0e5d1aae39b6c9fe97a4d
Author: Simon Tatham <anakin at pobox.com>
Date:   Mon Apr 10 14:56:34 2023 +0100

    Reference my just-published article about aperiodic tilings.
    
    In commit 8d6647548f7d005 I added the Hats grid type to Loopy, and
    mentioned in the commit message that I was very pleased with the
    algorithm I came up with.
    
    In fact, I was so pleased with it that I've decided it deserves a
    proper public writeup. So I've spent the Easter weekend producing one:
    
      https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/quasiblog/aperiodic-tilings/
    
    In this commit I adjust the header comments in both penrose.c and
    hat.c to refer to the article (replacing a previous comment in
    penrose.c to a much less polished page containing a copy of my
    jotting-grade personal notes that I sent James Harvey once). Also,
    added some code to hatgen.c to output Python hat descriptions in a
    similar style to hat-test, which I used to generate a couple of the
    more difficult diagrams in the new article, and didn't want to lose.

 auxiliary/hatgen.c | 45 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 hat.c              | 15 +++++++++++----
 penrose.c          |  5 +++--
 3 files changed, 59 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)



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