More information on the animate function – HP 48gII User Manual
Page 745
Page 22-29
otherwise quiescent water that gets reflected from the walls of a circular tank
back towards the center. Press
$ to stop the animation.
Example 2 - Animating the plotting of different power functions
Suppose that you want to animate the plotting of the functions f(x) = x
n
, n = 0,
1, 2, 3, 4, in the same set of axes. You could use the following program:
«
Begin
program
RAD
Set
angle
units
to
radians
131 R B 64 R B PDIM
Set PICT screen to 131
×64 pixels
0 2 XRNG 0 20 YRNG
Set x- and y-ranges
0 4 FOR j
Start loop with j = 0,1,…,4
‘X^j’ STEQ
Store ‘X^j’ in variable EQ
ERASE
Erase current PICT
DRAX LABEL DRAW
Draw axes, labels, function
PICT RCL
Place current PICT on stack
NEXT
End
FOR-NEXT
loop
5
ANIMATE
Animate
»
Store this program in a variable called PWAN (PoWer function ANimation).
To run the program press
J (if needed) @PWAN. You will see the calculator
drawing each individual power function before starting the animation in
which the five functions will be plotted quickly one after the other. To stop
the animation, press
$.
More information on the ANIMATE function
The ANIMATE function as used in the two previous examples utilized as input
the graphics to be animated and their number. You can use additional
information to produce the animation, such as the time interval between
graphics and the number of repetitions of the graphics. The general format of
the ANIMATE function in such cases is the following:
n-graphs { n {#X #Y} delay rep } ANIMATE
n
represents the number of graphics, {#X #Y} stand for the pixel coordinates
of the lower right corner of the area to be plotted (see figure below), delay is
the number of seconds allowed between consecutive graphics in the
animation, and rep is the number of repetitions of the animation.