Personally, I think nodes like Camel Code, Find-A-Func, GGGraffiti, and even my own Object Oriented? are the epitome of Perl art. Unfortunately, they seem to be a little too large to plaster on every page. Perhaps we can make little one liners like this into ascii art (this is arturo's sig, btw, hope he doesnt mind :P) and have a nodelet that would stick a random one up every time the page loads? I think it would be neat.
perl
-e 'print
"How sweet does
a rose smell? ";chomp
($n = <STDIN>); $rose
="smells sweet to
degree $n";
*degree
=
*rose
;
print
"$
degree
\n
"'
| [reply] [d/l] |
I'm a word man myself, and haven't the visual creativity to action this plan, but I think it's a good wheeze and would love to see it followed up. A twist on this idea, which again I wouldn't be able to put into practice but would love to see done, is a virtual map of the monastery. It would need some kind of interactive graphics package... (I just made up "interactive graphics" - perhaps there's a Business Plan in it for somebody).
My concept is a set of floorplans with zoomable rooms. Some of the rooms are public spaces (Refectory, Library, Chapel etc) which might be designed by designated Higher Monks or committees thereof; and others would be the personal cells of individual monks, which they could add to and alter at will - kind of a visual home node. I dare say higher level monks might get bigger cells, or cells with a better view, or be allowed more articles of furniture. And we would need some kind of flexible zoning to allow topologically possible extensions of the monastery as it grew.
As I say, this is way beyond my ability to put into practice - but if it appeals to some RPG-oriented graphics guru, I'd love to see it done. It could be the most fabulous waste of time since they invented cave-painting :)
PS Whilst I'm on the subject - does any other monk have a visual image in his or her mind of what this place looks like from the outside? I'm not sure what this says about me or the monastery, but I visualise it like this.
§ George Sherston | [reply] |
George: Get yourself a copy of Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose. Inside the flyleaves, there is a plan of a 12th century monastry. Those who have read the book will recall the centrepiece is a fantastic medieval library.
| [reply] |
Stained Class! I seem to have an over abundance of very Stained Class and Stained Class Objects, in fact you could say they were tainted :)
"Nothing is sure but death and taxes" I say combine the two and its death to all taxes! | [reply] |
Wow! That's an icredible idea.
I would ceartainly like to contribute on that effort, by putting up my works...anybody else...
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They also have breweries or vinyards or somesuch(at least the ones I visited in Europe did). | [reply] |