In case it is helpful, here are all my Mathematica videos in a single playlist ruclips.net/p/PLxdnSsBqCrrE4j99TtW_zdyED2IVgbBUd. Please let me know what you think in the comments. Thanks for watching!
AE 501: Jesse Perez - Great video of creating videos and animations in Mathematica. Makes me think of the way they used to make cartoons and flip through pages back in the day.
Manipulate is a really useful way to see how each parameter might affect your output. And that was super easy to saved the plots into a video. Mathematica continues to impress me with all of these native functions.
Hi, Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. If you find these videos helpful, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum or via the 'Thanks' button underneath the video. Given your interest in this topic, I'd love to have you a as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with all Patrons. I can also answer any questions, provide code, notes, downloads, etc. on Patreon. Thanks for watching! -Chris
You give a link to the Mathematica notebook you develop here. But i have no clue how to load that type of file and or run it. Any help would be appreciated. And other then this minor hickup (which is clearly my problem) these videos are really a class act, very well done. 74 year old retired programmer still learning!
You're never too old to learn something new 😀. You should be able to right click on the link and download the file to your computer. This will yield a file called "SampleAnimationMathematica.nb" on your hard drive that you should be able to just double click and it will open in Mathematica (assuming you have Mathematica installed). Good luck and thanks for watching!
Acutually , this video is very simple and it has a clear explaination method. It so easy to follow all steps. So thank you so much. If there is any way that allow to change camera angle of the movie, it would be great.
Hi Ahmad, Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. If you find these videos helpful, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum or via the 'Thanks' button underneath the video. Given your interest in this topic, I'd love to have you a as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with all Patrons. I can also answer any questions, provide code, notes, downloads, etc. on Patreon. Thanks for watching! -Chris
There's a wealth of info here. Are you going to do more mathematica videos? Trying to find how to do things in mathematica's documentation isn't often straightforward. Example, I'm trying to figure out how to illustrate several forces acting on a rod by showing each force as an arrow, then show the average force....I don't know how to just draw a simple, single vector. Should be easy, but so far it isn't. Videos like yours go a long way in learning how things are done.
Hi Ram, Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. If the find the these videos to be helpful, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum. Given your interest in this topic, I'd love to have you a as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with all Patrons. Thanks for watching! -Chris
Is there any reason you didn't just use table to generate an array of all the frames and then just call the export function on that with a .avi file extension? It's generally cleaner than using a loop.
Thanks but to just a make a animation in mathematica alll you need is an Animate[ ] command. If you need to do all of this in Matlab so this sofware is terrible. However it seems valuable if you need a greater control on exporting animation to AVI or other format.
Hi Chris, thanks for the video! I have a question for you. Maybe you can answer? Regarding the Input command, when used inside of a notebook it always pops up a dialog box. Is there a way to prevent the dialog box? Can I just enter input using the same type of "command line style" that one usually enjoys in other programming languages? Thanks for the help.
Hi Priya, Thanks for reaching out, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. Unfortunately I'm unable to respond to questions on RUclips due to the sheer volume of inquiries that I receive. That being said, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum as I'll be able to answer questions there. Given your interest in the topic, I'd love to have you as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with Patrons. Thanks for watching! -Chris
AE 501: Hey Professor Lum, do you have an idea of how much companies use Mathematica and Matlab? I personally like Mathematica better for the purpose of this class. It is more intuitive. Thank you for the video, it was really helpful.
Hi Marcos, Matlab is by far the more popular program. That being said I like Mathematica more for analytical computations but I feel Matlab is easier to use for numerical calculations.
Why should I refer to Matlab? This should be a standalone. I switched from Matlab since it's inferior to Mathematica for general math, although it may have better technical toolboxes I don't need since I'm just studying math. Also, I tried to get rid of the sidebar so I would have room to put Mathematica on the same screen, but you have disabled that capability. So I will not continue.
In case it is helpful, here are all my Mathematica videos in a single playlist ruclips.net/p/PLxdnSsBqCrrE4j99TtW_zdyED2IVgbBUd. Please let me know what you think in the comments. Thanks for watching!
thank you very much.
AE501: Mathematica has really become a great tool for me as the semester has gone by. Thank you for the video
Very easy to follow. Thanks for this!
Value packed, concise, and easy to follow!
AE 501: Jesse Perez - Great video of creating videos and animations in Mathematica. Makes me think of the way they used to make cartoons and flip through pages back in the day.
Manipulate is a really useful way to see how each parameter might affect your output. And that was super easy to saved the plots into a video. Mathematica continues to impress me with all of these native functions.
What a great functionality of mathematica! Thank you for walking through this process.
Clearly and well explained. Thank you!
Hi,
Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. If you find these videos helpful, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum or via the 'Thanks' button underneath the video. Given your interest in this topic, I'd love to have you a as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with all Patrons. I can also answer any questions, provide code, notes, downloads, etc. on Patreon. Thanks for watching!
-Chris
[AE501] The summaries and outline of the steps is a great way to follow the entire process start to finish
So interesting to see how differently things are done in Mathematica vs in MATLAB! Thank you for the video.
this is super helpful, key is remembering the Directory command to fins the video in the end
Glad to see mathematica can do this too, Matlab still seems like the tool of choice for design studies or large projects.
Very helpful for people just getting started with Mathematica!
AE501: This is a very helpful demonstration for the HW!
You give a link to the Mathematica notebook you develop here. But i have no clue how to load that type of file and or run it. Any help would be appreciated. And other then this minor hickup (which is clearly my problem) these videos are really a class act, very well done. 74 year old retired programmer still learning!
You're never too old to learn something new 😀. You should be able to right click on the link and download the file to your computer. This will yield a file called "SampleAnimationMathematica.nb" on your hard drive that you should be able to just double click and it will open in Mathematica (assuming you have Mathematica installed). Good luck and thanks for watching!
Really helpful video for new to Mathematica. Thank you
Super useful, I didn't know you could do this in Mathematica!
Great to see this video after watching how to make animations in Matlab
This seems like a really useful feature in Mathematica
Great video on creating mathematica movie files.
Thanks for another great video!!!
Acutually , this video is very simple and it has a clear explaination method. It so easy to follow all steps. So thank you so much. If there is any way that allow to change camera angle of the movie, it would be great.
Hi Ahmad,
Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. If you find these videos helpful, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum or via the 'Thanks' button underneath the video. Given your interest in this topic, I'd love to have you a as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with all Patrons. I can also answer any questions, provide code, notes, downloads, etc. on Patreon. Thanks for watching!
-Chris
This is great for presenting data and adding a wow factor.
There's a wealth of info here. Are you going to do more mathematica videos? Trying to find how to do things in mathematica's documentation isn't often straightforward. Example, I'm trying to figure out how to illustrate several forces acting on a rod by showing each force as an arrow, then show the average force....I don't know how to just draw a simple, single vector. Should be easy, but so far it isn't. Videos like yours go a long way in learning how things are done.
Thanks for more info on movies and animations in mathematica
Helps a lot with the homework, thanks!
Amazing explanation.
Hi Ram,
Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. If the find the these videos to be helpful, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum. Given your interest in this topic, I'd love to have you a as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with all Patrons. Thanks for watching!
-Chris
Thank you for the tutorial! How do you adjust the video file's play speed? I tried adding this:
AnimationRate -> 0.1
but to no effect.
This has been really helpful in the homework!
Very clear, i made muy animation for one of my Physics Project!
Very useful video, congratulations. May I suggest you to make a video about constructing slides for virtual classes. Thanks a lot.
Is there any reason you didn't just use table to generate an array of all the frames and then just call the export function on that with a .avi file extension? It's generally cleaner than using a loop.
Thanks but to just a make a animation in mathematica alll you need is an Animate[ ] command. If you need to do all of this in Matlab so this sofware is terrible. However it seems valuable if you need a greater control on exporting animation to AVI or other format.
Great video
The formatting is a little different but it's good to see the similarities to Matlab plotting
Very helpful for homework!!
AE 501 Daniel Ahn, thank you for the video
Thank you sir..I really needed this..
You're welcome, thanks for watching!
Thank you for showing us this useful tips
didn't know you could do this, cool
Wow mathematica is great!
Super helpful
Hi Chris, thanks for the video! I have a question for you. Maybe you can answer? Regarding the Input command, when used inside of a notebook it always pops up a dialog box. Is there a way to prevent the dialog box? Can I just enter input using the same type of "command line style" that one usually enjoys in other programming languages? Thanks for the help.
It will be handy for HW8.
I'm facing a problem while plotting graphs..It just plots the axis and the values but not the curves. Does it occur using mathematica online?
Hi Priya,
Thanks for reaching out, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. Unfortunately I'm unable to respond to questions on RUclips due to the sheer volume of inquiries that I receive. That being said, I hope you'll consider supporting the channel via Patreon at www.patreon.com/christopherwlum as I'll be able to answer questions there. Given your interest in the topic, I'd love to have you as a Patron as I'm able to talk/interact personally with Patrons. Thanks for watching!
-Chris
Mathematica can do this?? Wow!
This is a great tool to vizualize data
Not sure if i like matlab or mathematica more for creating movies.
Thanks for the tutorial!
AE501: Helpful tutorial on movies and animations in Mathematica
Getting another heads start, I like it!
very useful
Very interesting to see, thanks!
The sliders are very useful
thanks for video. It is a helpful tutorial
Very helpful, thanks!
Great video!
AE 501: Hey Professor Lum, do you have an idea of how much companies use Mathematica and Matlab? I personally like Mathematica better for the purpose of this class. It is more intuitive. Thank you for the video, it was really helpful.
Hi Marcos, Matlab is by far the more popular program. That being said I like Mathematica more for analytical computations but I feel Matlab is easier to use for numerical calculations.
Thanks for the great video!
Thank you for the video!
Thank you for the lecture
I didn't know you could do this!
15:05 Setup container
good explanations
Is it complete playlist of mathematica?
nice
great video, This is Martin Gonzalez, credit plz
I did not know that you could export animations from mathematica until I saw this video. Thank you for covering this feature.
What is this sorcery? Amazing!
Go to 25:10 to see the magic of mathematica come to life like in a disney movie
Great vid
good video!
AE501:
This will be a great reference for the upcoming homework on animating the solution for a vibrating guitar string.
Why should I refer to Matlab? This should be a standalone. I switched from Matlab since it's inferior to Mathematica for general math, although it may have better technical toolboxes I don't need since I'm just studying math. Also, I tried to get rid of the sidebar so I would have room to put Mathematica on the same screen, but you have disabled that capability. So I will not continue.
Fun!
#AE501 11/22/21 Abram Girgis
didnt realize you could do this in mathematica. Matlab is still better though!
Pqp q bgg pika mano krl
The visual quality of the animation does not look very good, in my opinion. But it's free, so I should remain silent.