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![Pagemaker 5.0 Windows Xp Pagemaker 5.0 Windows Xp](https://images.sftcdn.net/images/t_app-cover-l,f_auto/p/6605437c-96d3-11e6-827a-00163ec9f5fa/35616213/adobe-pagemaker-screenshot.gif)
The first version did little more than solve the associated circle-packing problem, but gave no clue as to how to fill in the bulk of the creases.
![Pagemaker 5.0 Windows Xp Pagemaker 5.0 Windows Xp](https://softisstupid.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/4/8/124847550/934087199.png)
Initially, TreeMaker was little more than a mathematical curiosity and a tool for exploring the mathematical theory of how to design a base. After several months of work I had succeeded and the result, was a computer program, which I dubbed TreeMaker, since it started with a particular type of stick figure (called a tree in graph theory). Building on these concepts, I set out in the early 1990s to do exactly what I’d speculated on in my E&S article: write a computer program that could “design” a non-trivial origami figure based on a description of the number, lengths, and connectedness of the flaps. The ensuing decade saw this speculation turned into reality (and no one was more surprised than me!) Within the next few years, the powerful design techniques of circle-river packing had been discovered and systematized by multiple folders, including myself, Toshiyuki Meguro in Japan, and others. The light blue lines define the tree the desired lengths are entered as numerical values. A screen shot of the design screen for a scorpion using TreeMaker 4.
![Ukuran foto 4x6](https://kumkoniak.com/67.jpg)