Draw a clock: Difference between revisions
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The audio, On the Teeth of Wheels by Beat Frequency, is a sonification of the [[Stern-Brocot sequence#Quackery]] It was discovered independently by Moritz Stern (1858) and Achille Brocot (1861), along with its visualisation, the Stern-Brocot tree. Brocot was a watchmaker, and used the sequence to find best approximations for gear ratios. |
The audio, On the Teeth of Wheels by Beat Frequency, is a sonification of the [[Stern-Brocot sequence#Quackery]] It was discovered independently by Moritz Stern (1858) and Achille Brocot (1861), along with its visualisation, the Stern-Brocot tree. Brocot was a watchmaker, and used the sequence to find best approximations for gear ratios. |
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The book "A Treatise On The Teeth of Wheels, Demonstrating The Best Form Which Can Be Given To Them For The Purposes Of Machinery; Such As Clockwork And Millwork, And The Art Of Finding Their Numbers" |
The book "A Treatise On The Teeth of Wheels, Demonstrating The Best Form Which Can Be Given To Them For The Purposes Of Machinery; Such As Clockwork And Millwork, And The Art Of Finding Their Numbers" predates the sequence, being written by Charles Étienne Louis Camus in 1749-1752, (and translated from French to English by John Isaac Hawkins in 1873), but shows a method relying in part on guesswork to achieve the same end. |
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=={{header|Racket}}== |
=={{header|Racket}}== |