Computer Science, asked by monis123786, 11 months ago

Write a step that show circle being transformed into sunface

Answers

Answered by ratz5671
0

The best time to start learning how to find your way using the sun is the start of the day itself.

One of the simplest questions in natural navigation is: ‘What direction does the sun rise?’ The answer most people confidently give is, ‘East!’, but bizarrely this answer is both right and wrong at the same time. Understanding why is one of the keys to using the sun to find your way at the start and end of the day.

The sun rises due east on only two days of the year, the equinoxes, near March 21 and September 22 each year. Every other day of the year it rises somewhere else. But where and why?

The answers lie in the tilt of the Earth as it moves around the sun. On midsummer’s day in the northern hemisphere, around June 21st each year (the summer solstice), the North Pole is tilted as much as it ever will be towards the sun. This is why it is summer in the northern hemisphere and winter in the southern. On midwinter’s day, around December 22 each year (the winter solstice), the South Pole is tilted as much as possible towards the sun.

This means that in the middle of a UK summer, when the North Pole is tilted towards the sun, the sun will rise north of east, and we are not talking about a couple of degrees. It will be close to northeast in Britain in late June. Similarly in late December it will rise much closer to southeast than east. The difference between sunrise directions in midsummer and midwinter is a whopping 90 degrees!

When it comes to sunset, the Poles are still tilted the same way as in the morning and so in midsummer the sun sets close to northwest, and in midwinter it sets close to southwest.

The exact bearing of sunrise and sunset is determined by your latitude and the time of year. The greater your latitude and the closer you are to one of the solstices, the further from east and west the sun rises and sets. If you take it to the extreme, then in the Arctic Circle in June the sun rises so far north of east and sets so far north of west that these points actually overlap – in other words the sun doesn’t set.



monis123786: What is this?
Answered by ask2cj
0

Answer:

Open Flash If it is not on the start menu or on the desktop, you can find it on Computer at Boot drive\Program Files\Macromedia\(Macromedia) Flash (version).

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 2

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Draw the first shape.

 

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 3

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Insert a new keyframe To do this, right click (control click for Macintosh computers) the current keyframe and click insert keyframe.

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 4

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Draw the second image on the second keyframe. This is what the first image will morph into.

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 5

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Reselect the first keyframe.

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 6

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Right click on the first keyframe and choose Create Shape Tween.

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 7

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Set the ease There should be a little slider that appears under the menu afterwards. The higher the ease is, the faster it will go at the start and the slower it will go at the end. 0 indicates no ease.

Image titled Create a Shape Tween in Flash Step 8

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Drag the second keyframe to however many frames you want the tween to be.

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