Magic Squire Photoshop

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Following its tens of millions of installs for their hit game Super Slime Simulator, Dramaton is proud to present a new generation of anti-stress 3D coloring games. Other jobs related to 5x5 magic square solver online magic square maker 5x5, free magic square printables teachers, punnett square calculator online. Jan 26, 2014 - Capturing magic Disney memories on smartphones, SLR cameras, PhotoPass, and MemoryMaker and documenting them. This square is even more complex than the 3x3. Where as the verticals, horizontals & diagonals of the 3x3 magic square all tally up to the same number, when one.

“In the Western Occult Tradition, each planet has traditionally been associated with a series of numbers, and in particular, the organizations of those numbers. One such method of numerological arrangement is known as the magic square.”

Photoshop Square Brush

Most people will remember the basic magic square from their school days. It looks like a noughts & crosses 3 by 3 grid, but without the Xs and Os.

Through a fluke of nature it is possible to place the numbers 1-9 into the nine cells of the grid in a certain configuration so that the sum of all vertical columns and the sum of all horizontal rows add up to the same number.

That number is 15.

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Would it grab your imagination if I were to tell you that the two diagonals of the 3×3 magic square also amount to 15?

Squire

Anyhow, the point of this post is to highlight a wee obscurity which I came across a few full moons ago, whilst playing with the magic square of 4×4, which constantly produces the number 34 when magically arranged.

This square is even more complex than the 3×3. Where as only the verticals, horizontals & diagonals of the 3×3 magic square all tally up to the same number, when one contemplates the 4×4 magic square, you will see that this square boasts additional qualities; such as any quarter of the square (ie, the four numbers in the bottom left corner or the four numbers in the top right corner) add up to the number 34.

The four numbers in the middle of the square also add up to 34, as do the central two squares on the left & right columns and the central squares on the top & bottom rows. Oh did I mention the four singular corner squares also add up to… Yep! you guessed it, 34.

I was quite taken aback when I first saw how cunningly designed nature had made these numbers to sacredly sit together.

I was even more stunned when my inquisitive mind asked what would happen if I drew a line through the numbers connecting them in numerical order? Similar to the children’s “Dot to Dot” book, where the child joins the numbers to reveal a picture.

The 3×3 was symmetrical on a diagonal axis, but the 4×4 was illuminating! This continuous line created 2 isosceles triangles, one pointing down one pointing up. It also created two five pointed stars, again one pointing down and one pointed up. These four shapes were all on a vertical column in the middle of the magic square. On the left and right of this central four shapes lay two further triangles.

The triangle on the left pointed up and that on the right pointed down. Thoughts of “As above, so below” echoed through the pages of my mind and as I further flicked through those pages I remembered the image of the Baphomet from the front cover of a book which I had read 2 years before. (Transcendental Magic by Eliphas Levi – 1855).

I couldn’t help but notice the initial similarities between the two images. I scanned them into photoshop, dropped the opacity, scaled the grid to sit over the Baphomet image and hey presto! They sat in a manner that to my eyes was not coincidental or pot luck.

Is it possible that the black isosceles triangle represents the head & horns, the red star = the torso, the yellow star = the folded legs, and the white triangle = the half globe that the Baphomet sits on.

Adobe Photoshop Square Brush

It is also interesting to note that the diamond shape in the very centre of the intersecting lines, perfectly overlays the waistline of the trousers and the arch of the rainbow across the stomach. Further to this, hermetic fans please pay attention, just as the Baphomet’s arms point “Above & Below”, so do the blue & green triangles on the left & the right sides of the central column…

I have searched for information on this obscurity, but as of yet have found none.

Photoshop Square Size

I would like to know whether the renowned magician Eliphas Levi knowingly embedded the likeness of the path formed from the 4×4 magic square of Deus Pater (Jupiter) into his drawing of Baphomet or not?

Answers on a postcard to…

Adobe

Eliphas Levi – Magic Squares – Baphomet

Mar 18, 2011

I'm designing a 3 x 3 Magic Square, where the 3 x 3 tables are made of up three adjacent list boxes. Upon starting the program, the 3 x 3 square consists only of the character '?' to represent a variable that has yet to be defined. The user will input through text boxes and button presses the characters 1 to 9, replacing the highlighted undefined '?' with the desired number. I'm required to include a Function procedure that can, at any time scan the 3x3 table and return an integer value of -1 if an undefined character '?' is present, a value of 0 if the rows, columns and diagonals do not sum to the same value, or the sum common to all rows columns and diagonals.
To start with I defined a 2D array and undefined.
Dim mSquare(2,2) As String
Dim undefined As String = '?'
Then I used a Sub to set the 3x3 table as undefined which I did not show to save space. Next I used a Sub to update the highlighted characters, allowing only one list box to be selected at a time and which I hope also assigns the the values to the array as they are updated. I removed parts of the code so this post isn't too big.
If lstCol2.SelectedIndex = -1 And lstCol3.SelectedIndex = -1 Then
lstCol1.Items(lstCol1.SelectedIndex) = input
txtInput.Text = '
End If
For i As Integer = 0 To 2
[Code] .....
What I'm stuck on is the Function design. I'm trying to design something to scan the array, and give back an integer depending on the results, which are to return an integer value of -1 if an undefined character '?' is present, a value of 0 if the rows, columns and diagonals do not sum to the same value, or the sum common to all rows columns and diagonals.
I'm currently trying
Function checkSquare(ByRef mSquare As String) As String
For i As Integer = 0 To 2
[Code] .....
At the moment I keep getting the error 'Public Readonly Default Property Chars(index As Integer) As Char'. I keep getting an error like this even using a single variable and defining each j individually, and I'm wondering if its possible to pass arrays to functions or do I need to do something else. Is what I'm trying to do even possible? I did a longer method in which I just check all the entries individually but I'm hoping there is a more efficient way. Its my plan B for now.