I was swiping through old pictures the other day and found this pixelated waterfowl, a poignant reminder that calculator art is fleeting and is deleted from your RAM after the next math exam, no matter how many minutes you spent meticulously navigating your cursor pixel-by--pixel with the arrow keys. Also, don't forget to set the viewing window away from the axes. Oops. Can't say the wipe-your-calculator statute is unfair, though. With all the things you can do on these fancy graphing types, it'd be easy to store entire an entire record of the test.
I used my trusty (and only--which is why I can't save these on the actual calculator) TI-84 Plus graphing calculator's draw option. How to get there: [2nd] [DRAW] (A: Pen). Also, you can't erase once you've filled in a pixel, unless you erase the entire drawing. A quick Google search will give you lots of impressive works people have done. There's even a Mona Lisa. During my time on the Stanford campus this summer, I noticed that a lot of dorm room windows had those kinds of pixel art designs done in colored sticky notes. It's a neat idea. Cheers! Clem
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