guitarplay
New member
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2006
- Messages
- 3
hey, Im new and probably wont be asking a lot of questions. I dont know if im in the right place, but I belive i need some help with trigonometry, but it might be something else.
I have a point, and I can determine that it is going to translate along a certain slope. I can get the slope, and the distance, but what im ineterested in, is fiding the sine value and converting to degrees.
It will start facing down (this is in flash), because there is gravity, so it will be facing down. Now, when i do something to change the direction, I can determine how it will be mooving before it has moved, and what I want to do, Is right before it actualy makes the move in the direction, I want to have the figure facing it.
Easily, I can change the rotation in degrees, so if it is headed up, I can change it to 180 and when to right, I can change to 90, and when to left, I can change to 270. What I need is to be able to fill in the rest. I have a sine table to convert sine to degrees 0-89, and I can determine the rest of the 271 using simple tests and adding either 90, 180, or 270 degrees to the number.
So if you could tell me how to find the sine (what it exactly is in the first place) and how do I use it, that would be awsome. I know it has something to do with the side opposite some angle and next to the cosin thingy but im only in geometry as a freshman so Im sort of lost.
I have a point, and I can determine that it is going to translate along a certain slope. I can get the slope, and the distance, but what im ineterested in, is fiding the sine value and converting to degrees.
It will start facing down (this is in flash), because there is gravity, so it will be facing down. Now, when i do something to change the direction, I can determine how it will be mooving before it has moved, and what I want to do, Is right before it actualy makes the move in the direction, I want to have the figure facing it.
Easily, I can change the rotation in degrees, so if it is headed up, I can change it to 180 and when to right, I can change to 90, and when to left, I can change to 270. What I need is to be able to fill in the rest. I have a sine table to convert sine to degrees 0-89, and I can determine the rest of the 271 using simple tests and adding either 90, 180, or 270 degrees to the number.
So if you could tell me how to find the sine (what it exactly is in the first place) and how do I use it, that would be awsome. I know it has something to do with the side opposite some angle and next to the cosin thingy but im only in geometry as a freshman so Im sort of lost.