I will write an article about this when I get time. It will all become clear.Piotr wrote:I think "shearing distortion" means tilting in some direction, as opposed to stretching.
— daan
I will write an article about this when I get time. It will all become clear.Piotr wrote:I think "shearing distortion" means tilting in some direction, as opposed to stretching.
We'll just have to agree to disagree about whether you said that.daan wrote:Ossipoff, really, seriously? Seriously? Do you not grasp how toxic your modes of discourse end up being? I never said any such thing.RogerOwens wrote:daan:
Suppose that a globe’s surface, made from an easily deformable material, were cut along one of its meridians (from pole to pole). I’ll call that that globe’s surface a “cut globe”. You said, at that time, that a flat map has shear if deforming a cut globe surface into that flat map requires shearing of the material of that globe surface.
Now you say that you said (then) that conformal maps are an exception to that statement that all maps have "shear", as you defined it, quoted directly above.
What I can assure you of is that you defined map-shear as the need for shearing of a cut-globe’s surface, in order to deform it into a map.
No, daan, that isn't something that I'd come up with myself. That definition of map-shear wouldn't occur to me. You said it.You are relying, again, on your own distorted memory
I didn't fabricate it. You said it., fabricating things and expecting other people to believe them
Again you're showing us your typical Internet flamewarrior namecalling behavior.in order to support your own delusional version of reality.
Incorrect. For one thing, you didn't say it somewhere elsewhere on the Internet, you said it at this forum.Where is the due diligence here? If I ever wrote such a thing in a form that you could consume it, then it exists on the Internet and can be searched.
There's no way that that definition (the one that I quoted you on) would occur to me. You said it.Just pulling stuff out of your brain is not credible.
If that statement is still in your post, then maybe a search could find it.Where is your evidence?
I can't speak for what someone else would conclude.Why would you imagine anyone should take assertions like this seriously?
If you cannot even manage to engage a simple matter of fact in a credible way...
I don't ask people to trust or agree with my preferences. Their preferences are often different from mine. I tell why certain properties are useful. I tell why a property is unrealistic, and aesthetically a minus (A real skinny Africa might not bother you, but you can't call it an aesthetic plus). However I can't tell someone else which considerations are more important to them. Only they can decide that...., why would you imagine people should trust your judgment in balancing your rhetorical arguments about the value of this or that map projection trait?
.."imbalanced" if I don't value the various arguments, properties, and considerations in the same way you do.My huge beef with your arguments has always been how imbalanced they are
If you have a preference different from mine, and if you don't change it when you hear my arguments, then you must be "fixating" on what you like, because, if you were really open and fair, you'd change your preference to match mine. Is that how it goes?, fixating
So, you're saying that I should value the various considerations, properties, pro-and-con arguments, with the same weights that you do. ...otherwise my judgement of the matter must be imbalanced, and I must be biased....on highly specific characteristics and ignoring or arbitrarily discounting whatever traits do not pique your interest.
On the page on which was talked about »shear« a lot, I see no difference in the version that’s stored here in the forum and the one that was captured by the wayback machine.RogerOwens wrote: Incorrect. For one thing, you didn't say it somewhere elsewhere on the Internet, you said it at this forum.
"It exists and can be searched". Oh really?
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Yes, a search at this forum could prove to you what you did or didn't say.
Of course it couldn't prove it to someone else.
You see, this forum has a nice feature called editing. Anyone can edit any of their posts at any time.
Need I say more?
You are on notice.RogerOwens wrote:"It exists and can be searched". Oh really?
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Yes, a search at this forum could prove to you what you did or didn't say.
Of course it couldn't prove it to someone else.
You see, this forum has a nice feature called editing. Anyone can edit any of their posts at any time.
Need I say more?
Why have two words for the same thing?Well, that’s just exactly what daan said, in the thread he linked to above:
Shear normally refers to angular distortion.
And since conformal maps are the only ones having no angular distortion – so yes, »shear« is another word for non-conformality.