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Computer Graphical Design Aids

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2016

W. H. P. Leslie*
Affiliation:
Numerical Control Division, Machinery Group, National Engineering Laboratory, East Kilbride

Extract

The engineering designer may not always be aware of the paramount importance of being able to sketch his ideas as a means of communicating his plans.

An example illustrates the point that drawings, graphs or diagrams convey concepts more easily than a table of figures. Table I gives a series of X and Y values describing a well-known contour, but it is not easy to determine the shape except by plotting the points. One can appreciate at a glance at Fig. 1, however, that it is a well-known shape.

Although the drawing is very graphic, the term graphic will also be taken to include alphabetical and numerical records for the purpose of this paper.

Type
Symposium on the Impact of Digital Computers on Engineering
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1967

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