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There are a variety of ways to discretely tile objects to create a continuous, flat and finite plane.
For instance, this is a Cartesian method that does it.

And this is a “Golden” method that does it.

That Cartesian method uses 1 tile size whereas this Golden method uses Infinite tile sizes.
Further, this Golden method uses 1 scale for its Infinite tile sizes; as such, its tiles are “scaletiles.”
Like a tile’s size, scale is a magnitude; but scale is the magnitude that modifies the size of a tile.
In other words, size is the variant magnitude and scale is the invariant magnitude.
This Golden method must use the ((5^(1/2))-1)/2 scale in order to fixate Infinite tile sizes on a continuous, flat and finite plane.
For instance, if the Golden method attempts 1/2 scale, there’s a gap and the plane isn’t continuous.

A tile’s size doesn’t need to have a 2:2 ratio.
For instance, a size of 4:2 ratio continuously tiles the plane with ((5^(1/2))-1)/2 scale.

But ratios other than 2:2 have asymmetry and, as such, include a rotation property.
For instance, the 4:2 ratio can rotate into the 2:4 ratio.
If a size of 4:2 ratio attempts ((5^(1/2))-1)/2 scale while rotating for each size change, there’s a gap and the plane isn’t continuous.

Using observational evidence, the formula that determines scale for the simplest form of tile rotation is the (c-b)/a method.
a, b and c are the Pythagorean Theorem (a^2)+(b^2)=(c^2) variables.
Furthermore, because of design considerations, a tile uses the a and b+b=2b variables rather than the a and b variables.
For instance, a tile size of 4:2 ratio continuously tiles the plane with rotation using ((17^(1/2))-1)/4 scale.

And that plane is also a tile size of 2+(4*(((17^(1/2))-1)/4)):4 ratio, which continuously tiles the plane with rotation using (sqrt(2(11 + sqrt(17)))-2)/(1+sqrt(17)) scale.

Or reorganizing the (c-b)/a method “child” and “parent” along a bottom right corner “limit,” rather than tending along a spiral pattern.

The philosophical concept is that the c “irrational” length of the hypotenuse in a right triangle embodies an Infinite energy within a “field of view.”
And at the heart of this perpetual nature of c is the square root of natural numbers.
The fact c usually doesn’t share a “measure” in common with a or b is an inherently recursive aspect of Nature with powerful utility value.
This “nonhalting” aspect of c can guide Infinite expression outside the hypotenuse length.
The “vanishing point” perspective drawing pioneered by Brunelleschi is one of many example use cases.
(c-b)/a is another example use case.
The following are some instances that show how (c-b)/a applies to rotation scale.
Notice the radius measure, in the context of imagining:
two different c hypotenuses as radii angled in relation to the x axis,
with a along the x axis, one b along the y axis and the other b along the -y axis;
a third c hypotenuse as a radius along the -y axis,
with c-b along the -y axis as well.



This image displays a as a yellow line, b as a green line, c as a pink line and c-b as an aqua line.

This has gone over the basics of what a “scaletile” is, and the “diagonal” methods behind it, but has not explained the philosophical “spacetimescale” context.
A follow-up will look at the square roots behind these methods, and explore different ways to geometrically index square roots.
Another follow-up will look at the exponent “power law” index behind these methods, and explore different ways to record this geometric index.
To support ape.mirror.xyz , please consider buying an NFT of this “cyberpoetic” document:
https://ape.mirror.xyz/ZKORQwl7i-BZJGXWp5HZtV02PuzaGhFzDut9iDfxbyI
.
There are a variety of ways to discretely tile objects to create a continuous, flat and finite plane.
For instance, this is a Cartesian method that does it.

And this is a “Golden” method that does it.

That Cartesian method uses 1 tile size whereas this Golden method uses Infinite tile sizes.
Further, this Golden method uses 1 scale for its Infinite tile sizes; as such, its tiles are “scaletiles.”
Like a tile’s size, scale is a magnitude; but scale is the magnitude that modifies the size of a tile.
In other words, size is the variant magnitude and scale is the invariant magnitude.
This Golden method must use the ((5^(1/2))-1)/2 scale in order to fixate Infinite tile sizes on a continuous, flat and finite plane.
For instance, if the Golden method attempts 1/2 scale, there’s a gap and the plane isn’t continuous.

A tile’s size doesn’t need to have a 2:2 ratio.
For instance, a size of 4:2 ratio continuously tiles the plane with ((5^(1/2))-1)/2 scale.

But ratios other than 2:2 have asymmetry and, as such, include a rotation property.
For instance, the 4:2 ratio can rotate into the 2:4 ratio.
If a size of 4:2 ratio attempts ((5^(1/2))-1)/2 scale while rotating for each size change, there’s a gap and the plane isn’t continuous.

Using observational evidence, the formula that determines scale for the simplest form of tile rotation is the (c-b)/a method.
a, b and c are the Pythagorean Theorem (a^2)+(b^2)=(c^2) variables.
Furthermore, because of design considerations, a tile uses the a and b+b=2b variables rather than the a and b variables.
For instance, a tile size of 4:2 ratio continuously tiles the plane with rotation using ((17^(1/2))-1)/4 scale.

And that plane is also a tile size of 2+(4*(((17^(1/2))-1)/4)):4 ratio, which continuously tiles the plane with rotation using (sqrt(2(11 + sqrt(17)))-2)/(1+sqrt(17)) scale.

Or reorganizing the (c-b)/a method “child” and “parent” along a bottom right corner “limit,” rather than tending along a spiral pattern.

The philosophical concept is that the c “irrational” length of the hypotenuse in a right triangle embodies an Infinite energy within a “field of view.”
And at the heart of this perpetual nature of c is the square root of natural numbers.
The fact c usually doesn’t share a “measure” in common with a or b is an inherently recursive aspect of Nature with powerful utility value.
This “nonhalting” aspect of c can guide Infinite expression outside the hypotenuse length.
The “vanishing point” perspective drawing pioneered by Brunelleschi is one of many example use cases.
(c-b)/a is another example use case.
The following are some instances that show how (c-b)/a applies to rotation scale.
Notice the radius measure, in the context of imagining:
two different c hypotenuses as radii angled in relation to the x axis,
with a along the x axis, one b along the y axis and the other b along the -y axis;
a third c hypotenuse as a radius along the -y axis,
with c-b along the -y axis as well.



This image displays a as a yellow line, b as a green line, c as a pink line and c-b as an aqua line.

This has gone over the basics of what a “scaletile” is, and the “diagonal” methods behind it, but has not explained the philosophical “spacetimescale” context.
A follow-up will look at the square roots behind these methods, and explore different ways to geometrically index square roots.
Another follow-up will look at the exponent “power law” index behind these methods, and explore different ways to record this geometric index.
To support ape.mirror.xyz , please consider buying an NFT of this “cyberpoetic” document:
https://ape.mirror.xyz/ZKORQwl7i-BZJGXWp5HZtV02PuzaGhFzDut9iDfxbyI
.
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