I am very impressed by your work on EXCEL. I`m working on a special projection Excel, to display data in 3D and then move them with a mouse as a joystick. But it has been 2 months that I try, with a mouse, to dive into the data like a plane flying throught a cloud. I tried to understand how you do this in this flight simulator but I can`t. I`m not an expert in Excel but I would like to know it, if it’s ok with you.
Gabriel, This is not a try-it-once-and-it-works deal. It took me years to get here and you could get it in just a few hundred hours if you read my tutorials carefully and try to apply the knowledge yourself. There is a whole series I published about this simulator and many more 3D tutorials. If you come up and say, George in tutorial X, at page Y, I don’t get Z, I can help you. If your background however is too low then this blog might not be for you, at least the advanced models (like the flight simulators). Good luck, George
This is definitely quite impressive. I’ve used Excel before as a simple integrator (such as in http://www.particleincell.com/2011/finite-volume/) but I had no idea something like this was even possible. Very neat!
Hi Sir,
I am very impressed by your work on EXCEL. I`m working on a special projection Excel, to display data in 3D and then move them with a mouse as a joystick. But it has been 2 months that I try, with a mouse, to dive into the data like a plane flying throught a cloud. I tried to understand how you do this in this flight simulator but I can`t. I`m not an expert in Excel but I would like to know it, if it’s ok with you.
Thanks a lot in advance,
Gabriel
Gabriel, This is not a try-it-once-and-it-works deal. It took me years to get here and you could get it in just a few hundred hours if you read my tutorials carefully and try to apply the knowledge yourself. There is a whole series I published about this simulator and many more 3D tutorials. If you come up and say, George in tutorial X, at page Y, I don’t get Z, I can help you. If your background however is too low then this blog might not be for you, at least the advanced models (like the flight simulators). Good luck, George
This is definitely quite impressive. I’ve used Excel before as a simple integrator (such as in http://www.particleincell.com/2011/finite-volume/) but I had no idea something like this was even possible. Very neat!
Thanks lubos, I bookmarked your page since there is a lot of good theoretical info I can learn in a graphical way. Cheers, George