Ben Sparks made his own video showing how you’d do a Lorenz attractor in Geogebra, go check it out! kzbin.info/www/bejne/j6WVqWyohat1Z6c As mentioned in the video, while what I show is my own version, if you want to get started, the community edition will have more stability and friendlier onboarding. For example, you can try it directly in the browser: try.manim.community/ They also have this nice collection of KZbin-scraped list of Manim-made content: www.manim.community/awesome/ You can find more detail on how I set up the workflow shown in this video here: github.com/3b1b/videos?tab=readme-ov-file#workflow
@acuriousmind6217Ай бұрын
I've been waiting for this video for years Grant YEARS ! tysm!!! Also I am surprised you use IOS any technical reason for that ?
@TheBooker66Ай бұрын
Lmao video published 13 minutes ago but comment 10 hours old.
@TheBooker66Ай бұрын
@@Themathfictionaltimeline Yeah I got that that's probably the reason, but it was still kind of funny to me.
@Player_is_IАй бұрын
Hey Grant, I just wanted to say a massive thank you for your amazing work! Your videos have genuinely transformed how I see maths. The way you break down complex topics and bring them to life with your animations is unreal. Keep being awesome!
@SRG-LearnАй бұрын
This is pure gold. Thanks for sharing in every way.
@tesla6422Ай бұрын
'How I make these animations? Oh I built an animation engine' Didn't expect anything less from 3b1b
@sourabh2559Ай бұрын
Haha yeah, absolute legend! 🤣
@BobrLovrАй бұрын
More like assembled some libraries
@ShadyNaviАй бұрын
@@BobrLovr but impressive nonetheless
@aonodensetsuАй бұрын
@@BobrLovr more like stfu, this is all bespoke code there is no 'some libraries' that do this which is why so many youtubers are adopting manim specifically
@denvercity809Ай бұрын
Not only did he create an amazing animation engine, but he shared it with everyone.
@wlockuz4467Ай бұрын
I am a programmer by profession and I don't think I could make something like this on my own and this guy is a mathematician and made his own animation engine to make better videos. Respect.
@PretMetInternetАй бұрын
I'm pretty sure he also has a degree in CS! Having said that, it is still massively impressive what he's created out of sole passion for his field of study.
@JaapVersteeghАй бұрын
"Respect" is the right word. As in: with all due "respect", Grant is _not_ an ordinary person.
@wlockuz4467Ай бұрын
@@PretMetInternet That would explain a lot. CS + Math is a crazy combo!
@jchantrellАй бұрын
I would say do not doubt yourself. 3D, animation, etc. is a field of programming but is still programming none the less. Don't discount your problem solving brain that got you this far, I think you would surprise yourself.
@stephanieezat-panah7750Ай бұрын
me too! I am a programmer, and I am always blown away by 3B1B. thank you for posting this.
@NotJustBikesАй бұрын
Manim is so amazing. I wish it existed when I was in school. My son has been using Manim for a few school projects already and it's been great. Thank you SO much for making this open source.
@TheFrewahАй бұрын
Hopefully your sone made it public.
@appointeddisappointment9676Ай бұрын
Hi mate! I'm a big fan of your content (and your humour in general). I didn't expect to see you here (but it's a welcomed surprise)!
@mu_el_naughtАй бұрын
Woah. Really didn't expect you to be here. Love your content.
@kellymoses8566Ай бұрын
Kids growing up with the internet are going to result in two very distinct groups, one who used computers and the internet and tools like Manim to learn things really intuitively and ones who just rotted their brains on 20,000 hours of TikTok and youtube shorts.
@mastershooter64Ай бұрын
@@kellymoses8566 They aren't as distinct as you might think (also the internet, along with various forms of brainrot has been around for the past 40 years. Way before tiktok and youtube shorts) It's more like a spectrum, maybe it's a normal distribution.
@munoАй бұрын
My biggest takeaway from this video is that I would really love a spinoff channel where you just explain python code
@ekenerobinson3280Ай бұрын
Hey muno. Like your mods and videos.
@berryesseenАй бұрын
I think he sees the Pyton part just as a tool and not as excited as the math behind the videos. Otherwise, he would have made this video much earlier like 5 years ago.
@WilliamAndreaАй бұрын
Check out MCoding! Closest thing I'm aware of.
@beautyofsylenceАй бұрын
Not exactly that but Grant did have a whole lecture series for a university course which he taught in Julia, which is very python-like.
@martijncourteauxАй бұрын
Grant has better things to do than waste time on making the 9000th python video tutorial series.
@erdem1.7Ай бұрын
This channel is a true gem for society. The things one can learn from Grant Sanderson are invaluable. Thank you.
@ashimov1970Ай бұрын
💯%
@ThemathfictionaltimelineАй бұрын
@@ashimov1970 HACKER
@ThemathfictionaltimelineАй бұрын
@@erdem1.7 I GOT NO LIKES AND U HAVE THIS? I HOPE U SUFFER
@joseluislopezguizar9124Ай бұрын
I agree, people don’t even know how valuable these videos are.
@aresaurelianАй бұрын
Agree.
@LuisLascanoValarezoАй бұрын
This is not only a KZbin channel. This guy is a milestone in Academic teaching
@Pulsar77Ай бұрын
I find it hilarious that Grant is showing a million custom manim functions at lightning speed while Ben is asking basic Python questions.
@drkalamity4518Ай бұрын
I wholly appreciate Ben asking these questions, as someone who has experience programming but just has a cursory understanding of python. In fact, a lot of what Grant was talking about went over my head but I got some good value out of this video through Ben's questions.
@stephengriffith140Ай бұрын
I've used a lot of python but never been formally taught it, so I didn't know what that asterisk tuple unpacker did either.
@OrangeC7Ай бұрын
It's also a good reminder that, as always, there's no such thing as a stupid question. As long as you're genuinely trying to learn more and engage with what you're learning, that shows intelligence in its own right
@kellymoses8566Ай бұрын
@@stephengriffith140 I used to be really confused by that too but it is actually pretty simple and VERY useful. you can pass a list args = [1,2,3] as f(*args) and keywords args as kwargs = {'a':1,'b':2,'c':3} f(**kwargs)
@valley-artifactАй бұрын
don't be mean!
@NineInchFailz26 күн бұрын
3B1B you got me through college and now I’m a real life electrical engineer! Your series on imaginary numbers and Euler/Fourier mathematics got me through my Signals And Systems course! You made a real life difference to me and many others. Thank you thank you thank you for all this effort you put in to this
@3blue1brown26 күн бұрын
That is awesome, congrats!
@am-e7967Ай бұрын
Started learning manim a few days ago, made a little animation to show electrons going through a transistor. manim is genuinely one of the biggest boosts to STEM education of this century
@dymastro788Ай бұрын
interested in the animation? would you mind sharing?
@BurztPp28 күн бұрын
I am also interested. I suscribed to your channel in case you upload it. Also turned the notifications on :)
@akaHarvesteRАй бұрын
This sort of hot reloading workflow literally changed my life. My iteration cycle in my project was getting up to a full minute long to recompile and restart the entire thing, to not mention having to recreate the conditions I was working in. That's all GONE with hot reloading. Unless there are unsupported changes, I can modify the code without stopping anything. The difference this makes is truly hard to put into words. Life-changing is underselling it.
@mauriciomandujano5281Ай бұрын
Hey I was intrigued by that. Is it a sublime thing or a python built in functionality ? I mainly use ipynb so I’m trying to understand how this works.
@roddur_dasguptaАй бұрын
Ya, I would love to learn how to set this workflow up on mac with VSCode!
@trulyUnAssumingАй бұрын
How does that work? The video completely skipped that part and the docuementation does not mention that part of the setup either
@akaHarvesteRАй бұрын
@@trulyUnAssuming that's very specific to the language and the environment you are working in. For Grant it seems to be python in sublime. For me it's C# in VS2022 and unity, and it's a plugin called Hot Reloading that makes the magic happen
@mauriciomandujano5281Ай бұрын
@@akaHarvesteR Gotcha. I will look for something similar on VSCode (or if anyone knows how to set it up please let me know). atm I am rendering scenes every time which is very slow and taxing on my RAM
@petermacdonald8479Ай бұрын
| did not realize 3Blue1Brown actually had an eye that was 3 blue 1 brown until this video. Very cool.
@TidepodiousАй бұрын
7Blue1Brown if you count the other eye
@blasttrashАй бұрын
what do you mean? he has only 2 eyes? one eye is blue and the other is brown. so shouldnt he name the channel as 1blue1brown?
@GameboygeniusАй бұрын
@@blasttrash He has a condition called partial heterochromia, or in other words different colors within the same iris. One of his eyes is literally 3/4 blue and 1/4 brown.
@shadowmax889Ай бұрын
I Didn't notice until now
@therealax6Ай бұрын
I never look at eye colors, to the point I don't even remember my relatives'. I had literally never noticed. Thank you for pointing this out!
@StacyMcCabeАй бұрын
Hey Grant. I’m a 16 year old kid who really wants to be an engineer and a math teacher when I grow up. I don’t know how to code but I have a deep love for math and and going to try to learn manim so I can make animations for my peers in class and or in the future use my skills to make lessons for my students. Than you so much for all you’ve given us kids.
@stephanieezat-panah7750Ай бұрын
hey Stacy, as one of your millions of mothers in America, who loves her millions of daughters and grand-daughters, "you go girl". : ) .....from a programmer grandmother ; )
@davidkaye821Ай бұрын
You don't know how to code... YET. If you're the kind of person who enjoys watching 3B1B, learning to code should be possible for you, and a HECK of a lot of fun too!
@cxl5039Ай бұрын
I’m 18 now, and three years ago, I had the exact same idea as you. The difference was that I already knew a bit of Python and C++, so it wasn’t too hard for me to get started. I even made a series of videos explaining math and physics problems to my classmates, and got praised by my teacher. It was a really great learning experience! Unfortunately, I don’t have much spare time for coding now. But if you’re looking to get started quickly or need help with any problems you encounter, you can contact me-I’d love to help. (From a 12th grader in China)
@Diego20529Ай бұрын
This is an unrequested advice, but I'd suggest to learn the basics of python (and linux/unix) before starting with manim, otherwise it will seem overwhelming.
@pruina339528 күн бұрын
@@Diego20529 Fantastic advice, fundamentals can sometimes be forgotten or ignored because they're not as interesting as some higher level concepts, but a solid understanding of the fundamentals can vastly improve your ability to learn said high level concepts. If I may provide an unrequested piece of advice of my own, the Crash Course series on Computer Science is fantastic. It won't teach you to code, but it will provide you with a fantastic understanding of how computers and programming languages work.
@edeshkumar9686Ай бұрын
That's absolutely amazing that you wrote that library yourself, it really shows your absolute love for your work.
@fergicu9703Ай бұрын
I real appreciate this type of content
@NostraDavid2Ай бұрын
A good programmer knows when to write a tool to automate something (which also comes with experience, so newbies shouldn't worry too much about it - stick with learning Python first).
@mastershooter64Ай бұрын
@@NostraDavid2 Real programmers spend 3 hours automating a task that takes 3 minutes😎
@kiranaun9593Ай бұрын
@@mastershooter64 So that everyone else with the same problem can do it in 3 seconds
@shubhamdhapola5447Ай бұрын
@@kiranaun9593 definitely concur with what you stated. But in the end dependencies are a trade-off. Either it's exhaustively written, catering to the myriad varieties of edge cases and contexts in which it's gonna be used or next thing you know you're fighting a bug in production for the code you haven't written on a Friday evening. Seriously have lost the count on how heated the debates over "reinventing-the-wheel" gets when I work in collaboration with others. I think we never reinvent it, as tweaking one part of the dependency to fit your usecase breaks something else, given it's NOT highly malleable/extensible. Never chase a fad that's not battle-hardened !
@hraun1234Ай бұрын
Grant is an incredible educator. I’ve learned so much math from him. But the more I get to know him through these videos, the more he seems like the kindest person on the whole internet. He’ll make a fine grandpa one day.
@Pascal61Ай бұрын
I just realized, the name and logo of your channel is....your right eye 🤯
@florinschuerchАй бұрын
i'm mind blown!
@luisclovis09Ай бұрын
I know that, but I always forget lol.
@rg50868Ай бұрын
My cat has the same eye pattern
@luisroman6745Ай бұрын
The condition is called heterochromia iridum .
@QuanrumPresenceАй бұрын
Whoa I didn't notice! Such a cool origin of the channel name
@ethanchen947222 күн бұрын
I literally wondered the same question every time I watched the videos "How did he make the function animations so precise", but wow I was not expecting this at all. Built a whole library? Respect!
@SellymeYTАй бұрын
It's very impressive how powerful even the simplest built-in functions of this library are. Even as a compsci major, this feels like just being able to cast magic spells.
@unperrier5998Ай бұрын
what functions of this library are not built into the library?
@JaviSotoАй бұрын
I’ve been a profesional software engineer for over 16 years and I find this library and the work Grant has done incredibly impressive. Btw I worked on the ChatGPT macOS app and it made me jump out of my seat when I saw it pop up on a 3blue1brown video this morning 😄
@WarttHogАй бұрын
Being able to cast magic spells is literally the reason I got into programming as a kid! And that magic hasn't faded, despite formidable enemies like SAFe and JIRA.
@GeneralKenobi69420Ай бұрын
Who let the brony out of the basement 💀
@GameboygeniusАй бұрын
@@unperrier5998 That's not what OP said. They said both the simple and advanced built-in functions are powerful. It could for example instead have been the case that the simple built-in functions were not powerful, but only the advanced built-in functions were.
@רויזינגר7 күн бұрын
This video is the single best video that I needed the most. I cannot describe for how many years I was curious how the hell he animates all this math
@GalAxy-u9sАй бұрын
Behold a true genius of pedagogy. You have changed many lives for better. All the best wishes from Spain.
@beta5770Ай бұрын
Agreed pedagogy, originality and something precious
@somethingnessАй бұрын
I genuinely know of no better maths educator alive today.
@upekapremaratne8759Ай бұрын
Truly a genius educator!
@stanicourgetteАй бұрын
Indeed
@andrekotz7803Ай бұрын
Hala Madrid
@raduflorinbarbulescu6095Ай бұрын
Grant seems like the type of guy who would sit down with the python compiler whenever it throws an error, gently explain to the compiler why he should not throw an error, and have the problem solved without needing to change his code.
@snookerbgАй бұрын
hahahha brilliant :D
@iWillRun_KАй бұрын
python have compiler ?
@glockiyana2591Ай бұрын
my internship manager is just like that, she debuggs my code by just looking at it and explain complex topics to my like I'm a monkey, its wonderful
@unusedTVАй бұрын
32:30 Regarding the list comprehension: from the REPL in the bottom right I see you're now on Python 3.12. One of the changes in 3.12 is PEP 709, making list comprehensions are fully inlined as a performance improvement. A side effect is that they have access to the same scope as they're placed in, while they used to effectively be a single-use function call to their own inner scope.
@beauxqАй бұрын
I was going to comment this, but I thought to check to see if someone else comments it first.
@awildted3265Ай бұрын
Can't overstate how useful it is to follow through the fundamentals with a new person in the video. Really helps me wrap my head around where to start and how it is intended to be used. Many thanks!
@andinosaАй бұрын
Grant, your competence is only superseded by your values. You have done so much for the math community. Thank you so much!!!
@baerrachАй бұрын
Watching someone else's workflow, while they elucidate their thoughts is gold. It is how to build up your skill in the craft.
@Ma_X64Ай бұрын
The amount of the labor put in that library is unbelievable considering that it's being written by one man. Also the way it controlled in code is quite pleasant.
@Magnasium038Ай бұрын
I love this kind of chill programming discussion. Nostalgia for when I explain my code to a colleague, complete with random typos and blanking
@ProjectileGrommetАй бұрын
Manim has been one of the most fun tools to play with these last few months. This man is truly one of the most talented men in the industry
@borany375527 күн бұрын
Dear Grant, Your work is truly inspiring, I'm so grateful for your hard work. Wishing you continued success in all your endeavors. 😊
@danielwiratmanАй бұрын
So Grant, not only understands those very complex concepts, but is able to code out the world's best animation simulation tool for mathematics as an undergrads project, is also able to explain it very systematically and able to present the explanation in an interesting video, all while also able to sing and being a great guy overall..😮😮
@stefannordling6872Ай бұрын
11:32 love that "I guess one thing I should mention before we move on" is identical conversation and in explainer videos. I really thought it was narration over the video:)
@AbhinavKumar-nh8dlАй бұрын
It really feels like he is talking to each viewer!!
@ASoggySandalАй бұрын
It's a joy to watch someone who knows Python and Sublime so well. Watching you manipulate changes on the fly leveraging the functionality of Sublime AND Python funtions is very satisfying
@pshr2447Ай бұрын
you'd love vim then
@ASoggySandalАй бұрын
@@pshr2447 Yeah I constantly tell myself I should learn to use vim properly, but never do
@N0Xa880iULАй бұрын
@@pshr2447 Lemme first exit it.
@cl4655Ай бұрын
you'd love emacs then
@kellymoses8566Ай бұрын
@@cl4655 emacs is just stupid. vim is MUCH better.
@masoudtmomeni2977Ай бұрын
I’ve always loved making educational videos on physics and math since I got skilled with motion graphics software, but found it really challenging. Now, your tool feels like magic for that. Thanks for the generosity!
@GijsvanDamАй бұрын
When watching the hologram vid I thought "surely, this isn't still animated with Manim?!" It's hugely impressive that the library has come so far.
@robinbreslin16269 күн бұрын
Just wow. Apart from the years of work you have done building this up, what most strikes me is your generosity in sharing this. Thank you.
@JohnDoe-ms4pvАй бұрын
You're unbelievably gifted, man !!! The way that you achieve to bring things over, the enthusiasm, this ability to make incredibly complex things suddenly appear 'simple', it's just incredible !! You were born to teach/explain... 😅 Please go on with the great work !
@RPEndeavorsАй бұрын
It never ceases to inspire me your mathematical persistence to communicate difficult concepts to simple and elegant visuals. It isn't often that you show us your mathematical and programming process, yet it is entertaining to see the nooks and crannies of how you create your animations. I have been meaning to create statistics animations and I'm excited to dive into and learn Manim.
@thatbigwallАй бұрын
Actually cool to see your problem solving process when you create and explain the code when talking with Ben. Looking forward to trying this tool out for my classroom.
@alessandrocaviola1575Ай бұрын
1) absolutely brilliant stuff 2) sometimes I forget why I felt in love with programming. Thank you for reminding me why it can be extremely entertaining. 3) That Chaos book by Gleick! I was 16 or so when I read it, just started learning programming, and I can still remember that a footnote about the mandelbrot set was all it took to make me jump at the pc and start coding my own mandelbrot renderer in c++/visual studio. One thing I was impressed by was how easy it was to code it.
@ilangatedАй бұрын
As a professional software developer, I'm blown away by how ergonomic Manim is to use. I know it was built up over many years but I still feel like this is the kind of thing that I could only dream of achieving.
@yamimzumara629124 күн бұрын
Dude, my mind is completely blown, you write serious code, make videos, act and you're a math genius.. easily IQ 200
@AntonJanssonАй бұрын
I have been teaching myself to use Manim as i am studying to become a high school math teacher, and want to have something cool like this under my belt. And Holy Crap Grant is fast at writing manim code. It would probably take me like a full day to make this Lorentz attractor with the leading glowing dot and color gradient. Its amazing to see a true master at work when you know what he is doing at every single step.
@dschonhautАй бұрын
Whenever I’m feeling too smart for my own good, I can always rely on the latest 3blue1brown video to remind me what truly impressive skill looks like. Thanks for the intro to Manim, Grant. I can take it the remaining 5% of the way from here
@mac_edmarcoАй бұрын
this is awesome :) You are such a great contributor to humanity. I just started my Ph.D. in computer science, and I definitely wouldn't be here without your videos and your commitment to discovery and the joys of research. Keep being amazing!
@saulocppАй бұрын
Your channel deserves all the success it has earned. There is barely anything as satisfying as building yourself the tools that are an integral part of this success.
@hiitsmelucyАй бұрын
I don't usually comment but I had to today, it's actually insane that we never thought of putting work ourselves to create a tool like this before and you had that idea brought into life. This has to be one of the greatest libraries I have seen. Thank you so much for your contribution to educating millions online and science itself.
@abhinavcАй бұрын
Wow!! Just the ambition of creating a bespoke library/application to make custom animations - and the persistence to see it through. Two hats off!!
@txikitofandangoАй бұрын
What always impresses me about your videos is how human they feel. When you move around a parameter it feels like a human grabbing the slider and shaking it around in 2 or 3 dimensions
@harmanpreetsingh7848Ай бұрын
Is it “bezier” something smoothing?
@txikitofandangoАй бұрын
@@harmanpreetsingh7848 I'm sure smoothing is involved, but I mean the overall gesture, the way it's wagged and wiggled around
@sassefa24 күн бұрын
Your math videos have made me rethink how I try to understand some basic concepts. Then to top it off, you made the tool that animates your videos. This is amazing!
@ShrooblordАй бұрын
I will never forget the video and website you made with Ben Eater about quaternions. For years I had struggled to comprehend them, but desperately wanted to. And then... boom, I did. In one video and a little bit of interactive messing around and some _absolutely stunning_ visualisation, I had grasped the ungraspable. Thank you
@joshcryerАй бұрын
Oh my god I didn't know that was 3b1b!!! I totally remember that site and it helped so much for me as well! That's so cool to know! (I knew Ben Eater was involved but didn't know 3b1b was.)
@fritzhohensee49511 күн бұрын
Lot of comments here but the fact that you can index out an "H" from "Hello World" and then smoothly animate into a circle is neat. Kind of things that seems like magic if you don't know how each of the components individually works, and then happen to work together.
@companyjoeАй бұрын
I literally had to drop the nothing I was doing just to make space for this guy's awesomeness! Frankly I don't know if I can respect any prize or accolade that isn't awarded to this man.
@allstar777824 күн бұрын
Your animations helped me do my masters in technology in machine learning. Thankyou!! RESPECT!!! the first thing I did is starred your repository, I will fork it and play with it in the weekend. Thanks for this, found my new favourite time pass - > MANIM !!!
@BSHammer314Ай бұрын
A follow up video further explaining the workflow you use would be awesome. I've been tinkering with the community edition for a while and would love to improve my workflow if that version is compatible with your workflow.
@singhharmeetАй бұрын
Manim is a blessing. you could be making a ton of money by licensing it yet you chose to keep it open. Thanks for your contributions
@syedrhaque765Ай бұрын
Finally a face to the convincing voice. You have a gift my friend. An extremely clear comprehensible accent with the cleanest , most ear friendly voice. Thats not to say your content is any less convincing. I really wish you do complete courses in ML.
@kokoko569028 күн бұрын
I can't thank and respect people like these enough. these kind of videos require so much work and knowledge and I'm learning all these for free
@florinschuerchАй бұрын
I just noticed that his right eye is the 3Blue1Brown Logo. Its not a random made up logo, its just his real pupil. Such subtle details make me smile :)
@LnX53Ай бұрын
wow!! thanks for pointing that out, i have never even known that such a thing was possible
@threepe0Ай бұрын
Iris
@FundamSrijan26 күн бұрын
Natural or he did something in this eye to make it ?
@foodluvr9721 күн бұрын
@@FundamSrijan condition called heterochromia
@rebokfleetfootАй бұрын
having the project forked and supported by the open source community is a complement :)
@koktszfungАй бұрын
The interactive workflow is genius
@timonskuАй бұрын
As someone who worked with lots of graphics and animation frameworks, this incredibly expressive in the way everything is composable. Very impressive!
@fansdecideАй бұрын
Just so you know, I listen to your videos in the background, and whilst it is background, I still manage to learn things I probably won't use, but it just sparks my interest. Thank you for making them, 3B1B
@highviewbarbellАй бұрын
Literally just last class I showed my Linear Algebra professor your channel for the first time, while he was trying to explain basis vectors with his hands for someone, and he remarked how cool the animation was. cant wait to show him this video on Tuesday!
@aldinbicic1239Ай бұрын
Well... if we think of math as musical theory, then this channel-along with its animations and overall approach-is like a grand piano crafted by Mr. Sanderson and played with the brilliance of Mozart!
@erikziak1249Ай бұрын
Now I get the name of your channel. The portrait (close-up) footage of you made it clear beyond doubt. This is top tier content on KZbin. Best wishes to you and your family/friends! It is a privilege to watch your videos.
@lavanyasoni5265Ай бұрын
Just absolutely mind blowing. This is the perfect example of the exact right set of skills being used together to create something amazing.
@madhavgupta2002Ай бұрын
one of the greatest 3b1b video ever made
@paulgibby6932Ай бұрын
Thanks. That was most fantastic. As a former (retired) programmer who loved/loves Python, I really enjoyed it especially. I admire people like you who are able to share their wisdom/understanding. It helped having Ben there, who asked questions I would have. All the best for the future. Thanks again!
@JaydenGarciaYTАй бұрын
I saw this and thought this video was out for a while because I'm normally hella late to 3blue1brown videos, but I just now realized this was released 2 hours ago. Besides that, your videos are a great source for learning new concepts I never thought I would be able to grasp on my own by chopping them into consumable sections that can be easily understood! I look forward to watching more of your informational videos!
@HansLasserАй бұрын
Would these visualizing tools have existed during my engineering school years 😢 Grant, you are a blessing to this world: creating, teaching, sharing. Hats off to you!
@carnage6606Ай бұрын
Thanks alot :) . Always wondered how simulations were programmed regarding mathematical concepts.
@BradleyG01Ай бұрын
I used manim a few months ago and I was blown away. It truly makes creating professional looking animations incredibly simple
@BlKSIАй бұрын
I always asked myself how he came up with his channel name, but never actually looked it up. Today I realized its literally the color of his eye. Big day for me
@ArneBabАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing! It’s nice to see how simple yet polished it is. It’s visible even in this video that it’s grown and tended to. Sometimes the best code. It’s also cool that this whole video says “you can do this, too. It takes time to build something like this, but if you start now and manage to make the time for it, you can have built something similar in just a few years.”
@foxypiratecove37350Ай бұрын
Thank bro since most Manim tutorials on KZbin kinda suck, a one from the original creator is always the best.
@alexandertownsend5079Ай бұрын
Primary sources for the win.
@johntdaviesАй бұрын
What a fantastic video, I loved this. It's brilliant watching a master using his (or her) tools and Ben did a great job asking questions for those of us who largely code Python with LLMs. Thanks for posting, as always.
@robawrАй бұрын
one of my prized possessions is my graphing calculator which has the autographs of Ben Sparks and Matt Parker on it. Both very cool guys
@SparksMathsАй бұрын
I hope at least one of us didn't graffiti it with binary nonsense.
@weert348527 күн бұрын
Very cool video! I also really liked the fact that the guest Ben Sparks has a good understanding of coding, but still answers good questions when he requires a clarification. Defenitely learned more due to his question too.
@prioratodikingsbridge1717Ай бұрын
No way bro actually PROGRAM his yt videos, outstanding
@helmutalexanderrubiowilson6835Ай бұрын
this dude is true genius he mad his own phyton library to do it
@drewsharp9162Ай бұрын
makes me feel like I haven’t earned my education 👻
@learnbydoingwithstevenАй бұрын
You read my mind! Thank you for sharing. Making everything as visually clearer as possible could bring greater impact to the audience. Everything you express or teach are valuable assets. I wish one day I could make my contents just a little closer to your excellent works! Cheers!
@TheCoolestCrocodileEverАй бұрын
Always been wondering how you make these cool animations. Keep up the Amazing work ❤️
@zarblitzАй бұрын
I used to think I didn't like mathematics, but that was because it was hard for me to understand. Your visuals have made me love and understand mathematics. These are the visualizations I needed when I was younger but never had.
@PaintingPaulАй бұрын
this is just wow 😮 it’s so fulfilling to see how you wrote your own library to be able to make your videos and that you share it openly with the world so that people can use your amazing tools to explain (scientific) concepts
@seasn5553Ай бұрын
This channel made me fall in love with math. I appreciate all this man has done for us. Thank you
@bhbr-xb6poАй бұрын
30:40 "it's not as dangerous" goes on my list of famous last words
@0LoneTechАй бұрын
The real secret to how it's not as dangerous is in the last like of the Zen of Python (import this): "Namespaces are one honking great idea -- let's do more of those!" globals() actually gets you the dictionary of the module you're in. You might shadow builtin names, but that doesn't break them in other places.
@CalbefraquesАй бұрын
This makes the math look so beautiful. As a learning tool for mathematical notations, this is magic. We don’t have imagine an interactive written equation connected to the Python function. This allows us to select an element to be our local POV and see how things evolve. Amazing work. It’s lovely to see ChatGPT being used as interactive documentation. This is of immense value for programmers. So much time is spent loading the necessary info into the front of our mind before we actually work. I feel like what we learn over time is whether or not something is possible rather than the exact way it’s implemented. String, array, and regex capabilities are probably a good example of this. Both of your voices are also very soothing. ❤ Thanks so much for being fabulous role models.
@Jakub1989YTbАй бұрын
I allways enjoy watching the differences between mathematicians and programmers.
@denvercity809Ай бұрын
This is so great, I want to try this myself now. I'm not a good programmer, and any coding takes me ages. But with such cool explanatory videos the motivation rises and you made everything open source and explain everything so nicely 🙏🙏
@kavinduАй бұрын
A word of advice from a software developer of 8 years: the difficulty people have with programming is not the code, it's figuring out the algorithm. If you give an algorithm to a newbie programmer, they will translate that into code in a heartbeat; but if you ask them to figure it out, they struggle. How I get over this is by asking myself "How many independant parts can I split this problem into?" and I solve each of them separately. Since they are smaller problems than the original, it's 10 times easier to find a solution. Since they are independant problems, you can forget about all the other problems when solving each. Finally, you bring all the solutions together for a "One big master solution", which is the algorithm. Then I get a junior dev to translate that into code, which doesn't take a lot of skill.
@N0Xa880iULАй бұрын
Thanks! Been waiting for this a looong time
@sabyasachikashyap2241Ай бұрын
You inspired me all the time, be it in physics, mathematics or coding, learning by visualisation is the best thing in the world. Long live 3b1b ✨
@antoniobaianosvizzero764Ай бұрын
They should name a University after this man. Wonderful.
@ThemathfictionaltimelineАй бұрын
@@antoniobaianosvizzero764 I COMMENTED EARLIER AND I GOT 0 LIKES, I HOPE U SUFFER
@TroubleChute19 күн бұрын
Exactly the kind of nerdy stuff I love. Super interesting. Thanks for sharing this!
@SRG-LearnАй бұрын
32:47 I love cursed lines, you can't stop doing them but never stop talking about them.
@WarttHogАй бұрын
It takes a true master to know when to break the rules!
@JosephHeckАй бұрын
Thank you for this video, it is fantastic to see how you're working through all this! Huge fan of your videos for years!
@ashrafrather-e6tАй бұрын
Math community all over the world is indebted to you. Grant , you added a new perception about math, a true genius. As world is witnessing Math interest is on declining mode but you presented a best antidote to it by introducing manim.
@saultube44Ай бұрын
Daaang. They say Python is slow 'coz interpreted and limited, and other negative adjectives, but I don't see anything of that here; I see a simple yet power language, amazing. Your Library and generosity with your code are commendable. I always wondered: what wonderful ways were your animations. Thank you
@aliciadevlinderАй бұрын
That "future future me" bit is such an apt peak into the process of programming xD
@cefcephatus13 күн бұрын
The development decision to just have a long file with shared locals is actually good practice for animation scripting. Because your actions are already baked in, there is no reason to create any subroutine to separate codes. OOP isn't good for fully sequential scripting, and animation is just that. The question you may ask when to use OOP is "How much do I want to reuse this behavior?".
@k3dr1Ай бұрын
0:12 why does bro have the channel logo on his eye 💀
@akira.h.youtubeАй бұрын
he has heterochromia probably
@thesuomi8550Ай бұрын
That's where the name and logo come from 💀
@istiakawalantik8076Ай бұрын
3Blue1Brown - 👁
@ivanjermakovАй бұрын
So that's what 3B1B means!!!
@MaicolacolaАй бұрын
@@thesuomi8550 whoosh
@joshcryerАй бұрын
This is amazing. We were talking about your animations in the last video. And then you do this. Incredible! Thank you for being so being so transparent and helping people learn. You are a gem. We live in an amazing time with you, Numberphile, Smarter Every Day, Veritasium, Real Engineering, Asinomitry, and so so many others. While it feels we live in oversaturated times, true media still exists.