I made the wheels "turn" - when a particle is in contact with a line segment, and the left or right key is pressed, a force perpendicular to the line is applied to the particle. It's pretty fun to play with.
October 17, 2007
more physics
Another simple physics test:
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uKcwgOkoS9MPfXF_HwVIap-ZxzkRr3ThTO70njfjXBKaYrLY6jBZJexsDCB_5Y_uikqwc3q_aep_23Pm9rQOMq3nw9qt3M7uisGnXdq5kiO7L6di6QHMnHB-IXoT3aNJJvxLAwiQ=s0-d)
I made the wheels "turn" - when a particle is in contact with a line segment, and the left or right key is pressed, a force perpendicular to the line is applied to the particle. It's pretty fun to play with.
I made the wheels "turn" - when a particle is in contact with a line segment, and the left or right key is pressed, a force perpendicular to the line is applied to the particle. It's pretty fun to play with.
3 comments:
Nice work. You have a video?
Nope, but you can try the program if you want.
Some commands I neglected to mention: 'l' loads a file, 's' saves, and delete will delete the currently selected particle. Also here is the level in the screen shot.
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