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Artist's Comments
Category: Literature. (I chose to submit it graphically to assist people without programming experience in reading it. I do have programming experience, and I still find the colors helpful.)
My Inspiration: Programming! I once read an article (I believe it was in a gaming magazine) that said that the people who are out there programming video games would, in an era without computers, be doing art for a living -- music, theater, whatever. I wholeheartedly agree. I'd be trying to become an actor if not for the fact that I want to help bring video games out of the "Oh my God, you're turning our children into antisocial murderers!" spotlight to be placed beside film as a complex art form. It was such thoughts, combined with my Computer Graphics class homework, that made the idea pop into my head: What if I wrote a love poem as if it were a program? The form and point of the poem popped into my head immediately. The real challenge was in trying to make it like an actual program without making it illegible to people who had never looked at -- or even wanted to look at -- a block of code in their life. So it was that in the interest of general readability, I left out some elements necessary to make the program run properly or at all. Helpful Information: Or what some of the code means! The code is divided into four main blocks, with the poem itself starting at the yellow highlighted line. The top three blocks of code are programmer-defined types. Enum - [link] Struct - [link] Near the bottom of the fourth block, on line 80, is a for-loop. For-Loop - [link] |
Details
October 13, 2004
15.6 KB 38.2 KB 186×131 StatisticsShare
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Comments
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Sweeney Todd says (11:09 PM):
DO AS THE ROMANS DO
Believe in the humble that believes in bees says (11:09 PM):
have sex with it?
Sweeney Todd says (11:09 PM):
I GUESS
Ominously Onymous says (11:09 PM):
ample solution
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hazzxcore
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Left it all on the side of the road.
well done
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I think you should make a better preview image for this, it just looks like random scribble, not very inviting. I'd just screenshot the poem and crop a smaller part of it, so that some of the text would be still readable.
I too want to bring about the acknowledgement of games as an acceptable form of entertainment in households everywhere. And I too enjoy expressing myself in literature and art. I like this piece alot, mostly because I find it rare that these two realms of syntax combine in a manner that is actually enjoyable from both sides of the fence.
Well done!
(I noticed that someone else said that this is not an original idea, and that it has been done before. I have never seen it, and indeed, I never knew it existed until now.)
-Ebon
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USB Gaming!!! [link]
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[link]
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"Like this insubstantial pageant faded, leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep." -- Shakespeare's The Tempest
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