dotproducing
Dotproducing is the act or process of generating images, patterns, or signals by placing discrete dots. In digital and print contexts it refers to rendering where each dot represents a unit of color or brightness and the overall image emerges from their arrangement. The term is not standardized and its use varies across disciplines, often describing either manual techniques or algorithmic generation.
Manual dotproducing includes stippling and pointillism, where artists apply dots of ink or paint to build form
Algorithmic dotproducing employs computer graphics to generate dot patterns via pointillism-inspired algorithms, Poisson disk sampling, jittered
History: Georges Seurat's pointillism popularized dot-based rendering in painting; halftone processes emerged in print in the
Related topics include pointillism, stippling, halftone, dithering, and rasterization.