Asymptote: Logical Operators and Loops
Asymptote uses loops and logical operators that are almost identical to those in C++. Loops are absolutely essential if you want to make diagrams that look like this:
This particular example was produced with the following code:
import graph;
real r=5;
size(r*cm);
picture smiley;
filldraw(smiley,Circle((0,0),1),yellow,black);
fill(smiley,Circle((-.3,.4),.1),black);
fill(smiley,Circle((.3,.4),.1),black);
draw(smiley,Arc((0,0),.5,-140,-40));
for (int i=0; i<5; ++i)
{
for (int j=0; j<5; ++j)
{
if (floor((i-j)/2)==((i-j)/2))
{
add(scale(r/10*cm)*smiley,(i,j));
}
}
}
Above, we created a picture called smiley and added it to currentpicture many times using a for loop, as the indices
and
each ranged from
to
. Basically, the arguments in the parentheses for the first for loop first declare
to be an integer and assign to i the value
. Then, if
, it executes what is inside the {} brackets and when it is finished, it adds
to
(++i). This process repeats until the boolean statement
has the value false, i.e. 5 times (hence the 5 columns of smileys). The if statement is self-explanatory; if
(which checks if
and
have the same parity or not), then the smiley is added, and if not it skips the brackets that follow.