A Spiral of numbers











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I am trying to produce a spiral of numbers from 1 through 101 with the following properties:



-- multiples of 5 are in a node shaped like pentagon



-- there is a special starburst node at numbers 3, 6, 11, 13, 17, 23, 29, 37, 43, 52, 56, 61, 63, 68, 69, 71, 72, 80, 91, 99.



(I think one could use the shapes.geometric library to achieve both of these if only I could figure out how to switch styles at specific values of x in the loop below.)



Here is where I am (with help from here):



documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
usepackage{stix}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{shapes.geometric}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usepackage{pifont}
usepackage{wasysym}
usepackage{graphicx}

begin{document}
hspace{0pt} vfill
begin{center}
newcounter{cntRoot}
begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (a) at (0,0);
coordinate (b) at (0:1);
foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
setcounter{cntRoot}{x}
addtocounter{cntRoot}{1}
node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c)
{$thecntRoot$};
coordinate (b) at (c);
};
end{tikzpicture}
end{center}
vfill
end{document}


I tried to implement ideas from this answer without much success. Any help would be much appreciated!










share|improve this question




























    up vote
    4
    down vote

    favorite












    I am trying to produce a spiral of numbers from 1 through 101 with the following properties:



    -- multiples of 5 are in a node shaped like pentagon



    -- there is a special starburst node at numbers 3, 6, 11, 13, 17, 23, 29, 37, 43, 52, 56, 61, 63, 68, 69, 71, 72, 80, 91, 99.



    (I think one could use the shapes.geometric library to achieve both of these if only I could figure out how to switch styles at specific values of x in the loop below.)



    Here is where I am (with help from here):



    documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
    usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
    usepackage{stix}
    usepackage{tikz}
    usetikzlibrary{shapes.geometric}
    usetikzlibrary{calc}
    usepackage{pifont}
    usepackage{wasysym}
    usepackage{graphicx}

    begin{document}
    hspace{0pt} vfill
    begin{center}
    newcounter{cntRoot}
    begin{tikzpicture}
    coordinate (a) at (0,0);
    coordinate (b) at (0:1);
    foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
    coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
    setcounter{cntRoot}{x}
    addtocounter{cntRoot}{1}
    node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c)
    {$thecntRoot$};
    coordinate (b) at (c);
    };
    end{tikzpicture}
    end{center}
    vfill
    end{document}


    I tried to implement ideas from this answer without much success. Any help would be much appreciated!










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      4
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      4
      down vote

      favorite











      I am trying to produce a spiral of numbers from 1 through 101 with the following properties:



      -- multiples of 5 are in a node shaped like pentagon



      -- there is a special starburst node at numbers 3, 6, 11, 13, 17, 23, 29, 37, 43, 52, 56, 61, 63, 68, 69, 71, 72, 80, 91, 99.



      (I think one could use the shapes.geometric library to achieve both of these if only I could figure out how to switch styles at specific values of x in the loop below.)



      Here is where I am (with help from here):



      documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
      usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
      usepackage{stix}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usetikzlibrary{shapes.geometric}
      usetikzlibrary{calc}
      usepackage{pifont}
      usepackage{wasysym}
      usepackage{graphicx}

      begin{document}
      hspace{0pt} vfill
      begin{center}
      newcounter{cntRoot}
      begin{tikzpicture}
      coordinate (a) at (0,0);
      coordinate (b) at (0:1);
      foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
      coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
      setcounter{cntRoot}{x}
      addtocounter{cntRoot}{1}
      node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c)
      {$thecntRoot$};
      coordinate (b) at (c);
      };
      end{tikzpicture}
      end{center}
      vfill
      end{document}


      I tried to implement ideas from this answer without much success. Any help would be much appreciated!










      share|improve this question















      I am trying to produce a spiral of numbers from 1 through 101 with the following properties:



      -- multiples of 5 are in a node shaped like pentagon



      -- there is a special starburst node at numbers 3, 6, 11, 13, 17, 23, 29, 37, 43, 52, 56, 61, 63, 68, 69, 71, 72, 80, 91, 99.



      (I think one could use the shapes.geometric library to achieve both of these if only I could figure out how to switch styles at specific values of x in the loop below.)



      Here is where I am (with help from here):



      documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
      usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
      usepackage{stix}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usetikzlibrary{shapes.geometric}
      usetikzlibrary{calc}
      usepackage{pifont}
      usepackage{wasysym}
      usepackage{graphicx}

      begin{document}
      hspace{0pt} vfill
      begin{center}
      newcounter{cntRoot}
      begin{tikzpicture}
      coordinate (a) at (0,0);
      coordinate (b) at (0:1);
      foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
      coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
      setcounter{cntRoot}{x}
      addtocounter{cntRoot}{1}
      node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c)
      {$thecntRoot$};
      coordinate (b) at (c);
      };
      end{tikzpicture}
      end{center}
      vfill
      end{document}


      I tried to implement ideas from this answer without much success. Any help would be much appreciated!







      tikz-pgf tikz-styles






      share|improve this question















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      share|improve this question








      edited 2 hours ago

























      asked 2 hours ago









      kan

      3,15612154




      3,15612154






















          1 Answer
          1






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          up vote
          5
          down vote













          I am sure that there is a more efficient way of dealing with your starbursts (for example, using LaTeX3), but the code below deals with them by first defining a comma separated list of special numbers and them looping through all of them to see if there is a match. The numbers mod 5 are easy to deal with using pgfmathparseresult.



          The end result is then:



          enter image description here



          Here is the code:



          documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
          usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
          usepackage{stix}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{shapes,shapes.geometric,calc}
          usepackage{pifont}
          usepackage{wasysym}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newififnotfound% to mark the stars as we print them
          newcommandstarbursts{3,6,11,13,17,23,29,37,43,52,56,61,63,68,69,71,72,80,91,99}
          begin{document}

          begin{tikzpicture}
          coordinate (a) at (0,0);
          coordinate (b) at (0:1);
          foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
          coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
          pgfmathparse{int(mod(x,5))}
          ifnumpgfmathresult=0
          node[fill=white,draw,regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          else
          notfoundtrue% this will mark any starbursts
          foreach y in starbursts {% check for stars
          ifnumx=y% a star is born!
          node[fill=white,draw,starburst,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          globalnotfoundfalse% need global as inside a loop
          fi
          }
          ifnotfound% we have not printed a node yet
          node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          fi
          fi
          coordinate (b) at (c);
          };
          end{tikzpicture}

          end{document}





          share|improve this answer





















          • Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
            – kan
            1 hour ago











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          5
          down vote













          I am sure that there is a more efficient way of dealing with your starbursts (for example, using LaTeX3), but the code below deals with them by first defining a comma separated list of special numbers and them looping through all of them to see if there is a match. The numbers mod 5 are easy to deal with using pgfmathparseresult.



          The end result is then:



          enter image description here



          Here is the code:



          documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
          usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
          usepackage{stix}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{shapes,shapes.geometric,calc}
          usepackage{pifont}
          usepackage{wasysym}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newififnotfound% to mark the stars as we print them
          newcommandstarbursts{3,6,11,13,17,23,29,37,43,52,56,61,63,68,69,71,72,80,91,99}
          begin{document}

          begin{tikzpicture}
          coordinate (a) at (0,0);
          coordinate (b) at (0:1);
          foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
          coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
          pgfmathparse{int(mod(x,5))}
          ifnumpgfmathresult=0
          node[fill=white,draw,regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          else
          notfoundtrue% this will mark any starbursts
          foreach y in starbursts {% check for stars
          ifnumx=y% a star is born!
          node[fill=white,draw,starburst,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          globalnotfoundfalse% need global as inside a loop
          fi
          }
          ifnotfound% we have not printed a node yet
          node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          fi
          fi
          coordinate (b) at (c);
          };
          end{tikzpicture}

          end{document}





          share|improve this answer





















          • Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
            – kan
            1 hour ago















          up vote
          5
          down vote













          I am sure that there is a more efficient way of dealing with your starbursts (for example, using LaTeX3), but the code below deals with them by first defining a comma separated list of special numbers and them looping through all of them to see if there is a match. The numbers mod 5 are easy to deal with using pgfmathparseresult.



          The end result is then:



          enter image description here



          Here is the code:



          documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
          usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
          usepackage{stix}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{shapes,shapes.geometric,calc}
          usepackage{pifont}
          usepackage{wasysym}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newififnotfound% to mark the stars as we print them
          newcommandstarbursts{3,6,11,13,17,23,29,37,43,52,56,61,63,68,69,71,72,80,91,99}
          begin{document}

          begin{tikzpicture}
          coordinate (a) at (0,0);
          coordinate (b) at (0:1);
          foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
          coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
          pgfmathparse{int(mod(x,5))}
          ifnumpgfmathresult=0
          node[fill=white,draw,regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          else
          notfoundtrue% this will mark any starbursts
          foreach y in starbursts {% check for stars
          ifnumx=y% a star is born!
          node[fill=white,draw,starburst,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          globalnotfoundfalse% need global as inside a loop
          fi
          }
          ifnotfound% we have not printed a node yet
          node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          fi
          fi
          coordinate (b) at (c);
          };
          end{tikzpicture}

          end{document}





          share|improve this answer





















          • Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
            – kan
            1 hour ago













          up vote
          5
          down vote










          up vote
          5
          down vote









          I am sure that there is a more efficient way of dealing with your starbursts (for example, using LaTeX3), but the code below deals with them by first defining a comma separated list of special numbers and them looping through all of them to see if there is a match. The numbers mod 5 are easy to deal with using pgfmathparseresult.



          The end result is then:



          enter image description here



          Here is the code:



          documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
          usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
          usepackage{stix}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{shapes,shapes.geometric,calc}
          usepackage{pifont}
          usepackage{wasysym}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newififnotfound% to mark the stars as we print them
          newcommandstarbursts{3,6,11,13,17,23,29,37,43,52,56,61,63,68,69,71,72,80,91,99}
          begin{document}

          begin{tikzpicture}
          coordinate (a) at (0,0);
          coordinate (b) at (0:1);
          foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
          coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
          pgfmathparse{int(mod(x,5))}
          ifnumpgfmathresult=0
          node[fill=white,draw,regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          else
          notfoundtrue% this will mark any starbursts
          foreach y in starbursts {% check for stars
          ifnumx=y% a star is born!
          node[fill=white,draw,starburst,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          globalnotfoundfalse% need global as inside a loop
          fi
          }
          ifnotfound% we have not printed a node yet
          node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          fi
          fi
          coordinate (b) at (c);
          };
          end{tikzpicture}

          end{document}





          share|improve this answer












          I am sure that there is a more efficient way of dealing with your starbursts (for example, using LaTeX3), but the code below deals with them by first defining a comma separated list of special numbers and them looping through all of them to see if there is a match. The numbers mod 5 are easy to deal with using pgfmathparseresult.



          The end result is then:



          enter image description here



          Here is the code:



          documentclass[parskip]{scrartcl}
          usepackage[margin=15mm]{geometry}
          usepackage{stix}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{shapes,shapes.geometric,calc}
          usepackage{pifont}
          usepackage{wasysym}
          usepackage{graphicx}
          newififnotfound% to mark the stars as we print them
          newcommandstarbursts{3,6,11,13,17,23,29,37,43,52,56,61,63,68,69,71,72,80,91,99}
          begin{document}

          begin{tikzpicture}
          coordinate (a) at (0,0);
          coordinate (b) at (0:1);
          foreach x in {1,...,100}{%
          coordinate (c) at ($(b)!0.9cm!270:(a)$);
          pgfmathparse{int(mod(x,5))}
          ifnumpgfmathresult=0
          node[fill=white,draw,regular polygon, regular polygon sides=5,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          else
          notfoundtrue% this will mark any starbursts
          foreach y in starbursts {% check for stars
          ifnumx=y% a star is born!
          node[fill=white,draw,starburst,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          globalnotfoundfalse% need global as inside a loop
          fi
          }
          ifnotfound% we have not printed a node yet
          node[fill=white,draw,circle,inner sep=1pt] at (c) {$x$};
          fi
          fi
          coordinate (b) at (c);
          };
          end{tikzpicture}

          end{document}






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 1 hour ago









          Andrew

          29.7k34279




          29.7k34279












          • Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
            – kan
            1 hour ago


















          • Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
            – kan
            1 hour ago
















          Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
          – kan
          1 hour ago




          Thank you so much for your help! Much appreciated!
          – kan
          1 hour ago


















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