void setup() {
size (600, 600);
background (255);
}
void draw(){
strokeWeight(5);
background(255);
line(300,0,300,600);
line(0,300,600,300);
if (((mouseX>=0) && (mouseX=0) &&(mouseY=300) && (mouseX=300) &&(mouseY=300) && (mouseX=0) &&(mouseY=0) && (mouseX=300) &&(mouseY
int[] numbers = new int[255];
int i = 0;
int[] numbers2 = new int[255];
int i2 = 0;// Pointer to update random numbers
int[] numbers3 = new int[255];
int i3 = 0;
int[] numbers4 = new int[255];
int i4 = 0;
void setup() {
//void returns nothing back - expecting nothing
size (700, 700);
background (255);
}
void draw() {
for (int i = 0; i < numbers.length; i++) {
numbers[i] = ceil(random(255));
}
for (int i2 = 0; i2 < numbers.length; i2++) {
numbers2[i2] = ceil(random(255));
}
for (int i3 = 0; i3 < numbers.length; i3++) {
numbers3[i3] = ceil(random(255));
}
for (int i4 = 0; i4 < numbers.length; i4++) {
numbers4[i4] = ceil(random(255));
}
hazizlirandom( numbers [i], numbers2 [i2], numbers [i4], numbers2 [i2] , numbers2 [i2], numbers2 [i2], numbers2 [i2], numbers [i3]);
}
void hazizlirandom( int op, int r, int g, int b, int op1, int r1, int g1, int b1) {
if(mousePressed) {
//detects if mouse is pressed or not - if it is pressed then condition
fill (op, r, g, b);
//position according to the mouse
}
else
{
fill (op1, r1, g1, b1);
}
ellipse (mouseX,mouseY, 50, 50);
save(“linecolours2.jpg”);
}

chris_bruni’s video on Instagram
It’s the depth of practice of an arts degree that sets it apart and makes graduates so unique, these degrees open more doors than ever before, says Mat Hunter
I was thinking that I wish my sketchbooks looked like this, rather than the pages of scattered letters and notes that they are, but of course these are a project in their own right.
I like the addition of the red character.Lettering
by Xelo Garrigós Pina
Created by Israel-based designer Amit Sturlesi, these animal desktop night lights and lamps are made from laser cut acrylic glass that is lit from below with hidden LEDs. They have a number of different geometric designs available, see more here. (Lost at E Minor)
Do drugs, pick up girls and fight with the band in this loving tribute to the 80s NYC underground
Behavioral economist Dan Ariely, the author of Predictably Irrational, uses classic visual illusions and his own counterintuitive (and sometimes shocking) research findings to show how we’re not as rational as we think when we make decisions.
Intervista a cura di Virginia Ciccone Quando si pensa all’istituzione “museo” è automatica l’associazione di idee con un luogo consacrato al sapere, alla conservazione ed all’esposizione di oggetti che testimoniano l’identità e la cultura di civiltà antiche o contemporanee. Nella maggior parte dei casi nell’immaginario collettivo il termine implica anche, necessariamente, un certo quale imprescindibile… Read more »