Graphics for the IBM PC


Book Description

Getting started with your PC. Getting stated with BASIC. Introduction to the tutorial. Medium-resolution graphics - the PSET statement. The POINT function. The LINE statement. Ellipses, arcs, and wedges - the CIRCLE statement. The PAINT statement - the artist's brush. A pie chart program. Animation from BASIC - the GET and PUT statements. Blockbuster - an arcade-style game. The DRAW statement - a language within a language. A character generation package. High-resolution graphics mode. A function-graphing program. Text-mode graphics. Racecar - an arcade-style game. Summary of the tutorial. A grab bag of graphics tricks. Inside PC graphics. The set of characters available from BASIC. The full 255 character set of the IBM PC. Decimal, hexadecimal, and binary conversion table. Glossary.




The Art of Graphics for the IBM PC


Book Description




Graphics Gems IV


Book Description

Accompanying disk contains ... "all of the code from all four volumes."--Page 4 of cover.




Graphics Primer for the IBM PC


Book Description

Teaches How to Create Full-Color Graphics on the IBM-PC, for Beginning & Experienced Users




Inside the IBM PC


Book Description







Computer Graphics for the IBM Personal Computer


Book Description

The IBM PC; Basic graphics; Display manipulations; Three dimensions; Applications.




Advanced Graphics with the IBM Personal Computer


Book Description

Presents a comprehensive introduction to computer graphics using BASIC on the IBM PC. Provides in-depth coverage of pixel block and character graphics, video games or low-resolution graphics, the construction of data graphs, two- and three-dimensional graphics, the set-up of complex objects, hidden line and surface algorithms, and perspective and stereoscopic views. Background mathematics such as coordinate geometry and matrix manipulation are explained in detail, and program segments and extensive illustrations are provided.




Computer Graphics for the IBM? PC


Book Description

Line drawing; Updating the screen; Graphics and matrix printers; Writing text in graphics mode; DIG: drawing with interactive graphics.




History of Computer Graphics


Book Description

This book reflects the many changes that computer graphics technology has under gone in my working life time. I graduated from a teachers college in 1963. There was not a computer of any kind on campus, imagine my shock when my very first college employer (Omaha University) required me to know something about an IBM 1620 and a key punch machine! The first part of this book is an account of that experience at Omaha University and later the Nebraska of Nebraska at Omaha. When I moved to Clemson University in 1976, they had a computer and a large Calcomp Plotter but nothing else in the way of computer graphics hardware or software. So, except for a few short sections in chapter one, this history begins with the events of 1963 and proceeds to document what happened to computer graphics for engineering design and manufacturing as practiced by an engineer or technician at Clemson University. The next section of the book contains my experiences as a self-employed consultant (1993-present), my consulting started in 1984 after I completed a PhD in Data Systems Engineering. In 1993, I left full time teaching and became Professor Emeritus at Clemson University. I wanted to start my own consulting company, DLR Associates. Oddly enough, most of my first consulting in computer graphics took place in the Omaha and Pennsylvania areas - not South Carolina. My contacts came from my paper presentations at various ASEE meetings and the annual national distance learning conferences held at the University of Maine. I took a year off to accept a Fulbright Scholarship Nomination from the University of Rookee, India. I was listed as an international member in the Who's Who Directory of the computer graphics industry. In a nut shell, that is who I am. Why, then, did I decide to write this book?