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create a circle using only the radius and without using sine and cosine

DonRoonin_0-1749433166281.png

I have tried to complete this but I have no idea where I am going wrong, the weird thing is that after the number 50, I think, it creates a half circle but it starts at number 8 of the Y.

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Message 1 of 12
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I can't open your code unless you do a "save for previous" (2020 or below).

 

If complex data is allowed, all you probably needs is the following:

 

altenbach_0-1749437930981.png

 

Message 2 of 12
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or alternatively something like this, maybe:

circleSnip.png

circleFP.PNG

 

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I love you very much, I started to base myself on your code to make it in the form of a block diagram since I was asked to do it that way and not with code or something else that makes it much easier. I am already making progress, you have helped me a lot.

DonRoonin_0-1749441715445.png

but as you can see I'm still missing

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Message 4 of 12
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You still did not do a "save for previous", But try something like this...

 

altenbach_0-1749442595247.png

 

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Message 5 of 12
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@DonRoonin wrote:

 

but as you can see I'm still missing


Try this way:

circleSnip2.png

 

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Message 6 of 12
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where that orange/cafe array is located/created

DonRoonin_0-1749443939979.png

 

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Message 7 of 12
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It is an array of points where a point is a cluster of two DBLs, one for x and one for y.

 

 

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@DonRoonin wrote:

where that orange/cafe array is located/created

DonRoonin_0-1749443939979.png

 


Technically, you can avoid this if you compute the upper and lower halves of the circle in a single for loop, something like this:

Snip3.png

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Message 9 of 12
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I would even do a loop free solution.

 

altenbach_0-1749483101312.png

 

I still strongly prefer my first suggestion because the circle is guaranteed to close and the points are evenly distributed around the circumference.

Attached are both versions.

Message 10 of 12
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