Sie machten ein sehr interessant Projekt, Jens! Mögen Sie
mit Scratch mitspielen? (Uh, yeah, my german grammar is not very good... and some of the Words are not correct, but it should be understandable. I believe it's more polite to Call you "Sie" instead of "du", so, if you have trouble with my german comment in understanding it, I'll tell you the English equivalent).
Hmm, glad you like it, jay. I can't reproduce the glitch you noticed, but there are probably lots of glitches in this project, because I basically coded two 'base' sprites (a sensor pixel and a display pixel) and then copied each 64 times, setting some references within each copied sprite) So there probably will be some typos in these references.
This is sweet. I think there may be a tiny glitch like when I hold the magnifier over the top of the star and look in the magnified screen, it seems to have a completely vertical righthand side, but when I look at the tip of the star it seems to have a slant to it. Anyway I can't even believe you did it. Nice.
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has anyone else had the problem where the white dots end up on top of each other and do not read the background correctly?
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cool! i think i know how you did it.
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its so CUTE!
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That's pretty amazing... I'm going to download and take a look behind the curtain. :-)
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of course, YOURS is NOT primitive
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u can c a very primitive one like this project at (link to project)
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hmmm, none that I know of, Lucario621, any ideas?
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Is there any way to do this without so many sprites?
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very nice!
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Such good use of scratch! I am a good programer! And i cant even do that!
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amazing!
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brilliant!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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This left me speechless. Incredible.
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not much of a secret
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Amazing! You are just phenomenal at Scratch!
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brill!!!
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Cool! This is wonderful. I like the surprise too.
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weird...yet cool! origional too. great job!
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this is amazing!!!
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Oh, I see...you are using the ability to query the costume of another sprite! What an interesting application!
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What??? Where did this capability come from? This is amazing...I'm going to have to study this. What a surprise!
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Wow! This really "pushes the envelope" of Scratch! Pixel manipulation is way beyond the expected uses of Scratch . I'm impressed!
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I just cleaned up the code and added a little secret surprise... now I consider completed.
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cool
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Very nice. Another project that I'll have to study to see how you pulled it off!
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I was thinking of doing something like this, except it just "duplicates" and object.
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This is great! A nice and original idea, too.
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Sie machten ein sehr interessant Projekt, Jens! Mögen Sie mit Scratch mitspielen? (Uh, yeah, my german grammar is not very good... and some of the Words are not correct, but it should be understandable. I believe it's more polite to Call you "Sie" instead of "du", so, if you have trouble with my german comment in understanding it, I'll tell you the English equivalent).
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This is a great project Jens!
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Wow. Runs really smoothly even though you have 64 sensors and 64 display elements. Very cool.
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Hmm, glad you like it, jay. I can't reproduce the glitch you noticed, but there are probably lots of glitches in this project, because I basically coded two 'base' sprites (a sensor pixel and a display pixel) and then copied each 64 times, setting some references within each copied sprite) So there probably will be some typos in these references.
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This is sweet. I think there may be a tiny glitch like when I hold the magnifier over the top of the star and look in the magnified screen, it seems to have a completely vertical righthand side, but when I look at the tip of the star it seems to have a slant to it. Anyway I can't even believe you did it. Nice.
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awesome!!
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I love when the scratch project lets you magnify in things that are black. Can you program it to magnify more stuf?
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