If you type with no parenthesis the console will automatically link to the location in which that code executes, and, voila, it's the line 97499 of the prettified code.Īlso, it turns out that if you run ("betchacant") or ("pride") has the exact same effect as if you had typed it into a Desmos expression. Inside that property is a function called triggerEasterEgg. If you see the Calc object in the console, you can see that it has a property called controller. Now how I ended up there is a different story. There is where I started searching for stuff.
Finally, in the much nicer looking code go to line 97499. Then Chrome asks you if you want to "Pretty-print this minified file?". This extension allows for several changes to Desmos graphing calculator including: - change the 9 default Desmos colors to 12 custom colors - Advanced Styling (add a text outline to labels and/or make them editable) - Show/hide/create hidden folders Add any color you want to the menu to make your graphs more informative and colorful Please. Go to Top > assets/build > calculator-desktop.js There you will see a navigation in the left pane
Yeah, all you need to make it much easier is to use google chrome because it can prettify the code. Everything seems local, but take this with a grain of salt. They are fetched through a function aptly named getEasterEggGraphs and when I follow the call stack, there isn't anything suggesting there are more or that they are fetched from a server. I feel like I had too much Reddit today, and I had literally just signed in.Įdit: It seems "betchacant" and "pride" are the only Easter Eggs of this type (since there is also the plaid Easter Egg) that there is in Desmos. Anyway, I just find intriguing how that graph navigated its way through the Internet to end up as a part of an Easter Egg repertoire that I happened to stumble upon and then it linked me back to a Reddit post in which I was part of. The link shared by the user differs from the one in this list, and when I search that link online the results are very few, but seem to point out to a teacher of a Computer Science related subject. The OP claims to have found it online, and the post was a question to understand what was going on in the graph itself. For some reason I forgot that I had replied to the person who posted it. I remembered having seen that one already in this subreddit. However, there is a very interesting tidbit about the Fireworks! graph. These are all the ones I was able to find (I think they are all): Most of them (or at least the ones with the author's name in it), are from someone from twitter called teachwithcode. It serves you a random graphs from a hand picked selection (I guess). So I have been lurking around into the code of Desmos again and found this gem among the sea of code. At Desmos, we imagine a world of universal math literacy. Or, define and evaluate your own functions - all for free. Type "betchacant" in an expression of a clean graph. Move beyond arithmetic with the Desmos scientific calculator In addition to the basic operations, take advantage of a variety of built-in functions for exploring trigonometry, statistics, combinatorics, and more.