FW: Fractint Digest, Vol 23, Issue 1
What is an "all in none" and why would one keep an "all in none" on one's hard drive? I don't see what post you are referring to -- and you didn't quote it in your post. - Hal Lane ######################### # hallane@earthlink.net <mailto:hallane@earthlink.net> # #########################
Date: Mon, 3 Jan 2005 03:45:32 -0700 (MST) From: Rawzhuh <brewhaha@freenet.edmonton.ab.ca> Subject: [Fractint] Late FOTD (fwd) To: Advanced Paint By Number <Fractint@mailman.xmission.com>
Am I the only one that keeps an "all in none" on my hard drive? If I were writing Jim's Column, that would be a link to a zipfile on the server he uses. ________ Mathematicians don't believe in a bigger half. Physicists can't avoid the bigger half. It always looks better on paper than in practice.
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On Tue, 4 Jan 2005, Hal Lane wrote:
What is an "all in none" and why would one keep an "all in none" on one's hard drive? I don't see what post you are referring to -- and you didn't quote it in your post.
It's not a spelling. It's a pronunciation of unbridled optimism in the file-name "allinone.frm". There simply isn't a formula for every fractal. I know of no escape-time fractals that look anything like latoocarfian fractals, for instance. The reason I would sujest that Jim stop posting his formulas is simply for brevity. They would be much more compact as a link than as a routine part of cutting and pasting. _______ pi=acos(-1,0), I think. <a href="http://ecn.ab.ca/~brewhaha/comp/FracTint/@parmfile.zip"
This entire directory moved.</a>
participants (2)
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Hal Lane -
Rawzhuh