Generation of Time-Varying Geometrical Models
Carlo H. Séquin
EECS Department, University of California, Berkeley
Technical Report No. UCB/CSD-93-729
, 1993
http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/1993/CSD-93-729.pdf
This is a report on the sixth offering of a special graduate course on geometric modeling and computer graphics, CS 285: "Procedural Generation of Geometrical Objects." This document is a collection of the student's course projects with a brief introduction. The projects described include: demonstrations such as a constant-velocity universal joint, a 3-ball juggler, or the muscles and bones associated with a human elbow; interactive objects such as jitterbug mechanisms or a 3-dimensional maze; generator programs for patterning a stone wall or for growing evolving plant models; and utilities such as an efficient convex hull generator or an interactive display program for 4-dimensional objects. Most projects have been developed on SGI personal IRIS workstations, and the geometric descriptions of the objects use the Berkeley UniGrafix language.
BibTeX citation:
@techreport{Séquin:CSD-93-729, Author= {Séquin, Carlo H.}, Title= {Generation of Time-Varying Geometrical Models}, Year= {1993}, Month= {Feb}, Url= {http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/1993/6018.html}, Number= {UCB/CSD-93-729}, Abstract= {This is a report on the sixth offering of a special graduate course on geometric modeling and computer graphics, CS 285: "Procedural Generation of Geometrical Objects." This document is a collection of the student's course projects with a brief introduction. The projects described include: demonstrations such as a constant-velocity universal joint, a 3-ball juggler, or the muscles and bones associated with a human elbow; interactive objects such as jitterbug mechanisms or a 3-dimensional maze; generator programs for patterning a stone wall or for growing evolving plant models; and utilities such as an efficient convex hull generator or an interactive display program for 4-dimensional objects. Most projects have been developed on SGI personal IRIS workstations, and the geometric descriptions of the objects use the Berkeley UniGrafix language.}, }
EndNote citation:
%0 Report %A Séquin, Carlo H. %T Generation of Time-Varying Geometrical Models %I EECS Department, University of California, Berkeley %D 1993 %@ UCB/CSD-93-729 %U http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/1993/6018.html %F Séquin:CSD-93-729