How to make videos like 3Blue1Brown [closed]











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You can watch this video by 3Blue1Brown (which is one of my favorite YouTube videos) and many other video by this channel. I can't doubt that it is made with LaTeX.



But the animation in the video is so fantastic and wonderful, especially in the figures and the way the word 3Blue1Brown appears in the intro, that I can't do the same, even on MS Powerpoint, etc.



Now I want to make a similar video for my colleagues, but I don't know where to start with. I don't like videos with no animation, or too simple animation.



Can you help me? Thank you very much!





If this question is a duplicate, I'm sorry about that! I have seen many question here about videos and animation, but I think that I haven't seen what I want now.










share|improve this question













closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Stefan Pinnow, Zarko, Mico, siracusa Nov 18 at 6:50



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 1




    I don’t think Grant Sanderson uses LaTeX for his animation. However, I must admit that any text in the Computer Modern font looks like it is coming from LaTeX. I recommend that you read this FAQ on his channel homepage.
    – Ruixi Zhang
    Nov 18 at 5:00






  • 2




    The videos are made using Python which requires LaTeX to be installed. See the Manim github page, used to create the video content.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:05










  • Well, the graphs and texts are so perfectly made that I got it wrong! Thank Zhang and Werner!
    – Dũng Vũ
    Nov 18 at 5:14






  • 4




    Questions asking us to recommend or find a package, font, tool, book or other off-site resource are off-topic as they usually do not revolve around an abstract issue. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it or, if applicable, ask on Software Recommendations SX.
    – Henri Menke
    Nov 18 at 5:18






  • 2




    @DũngVũ: I'm pretty sure the code for those videos would compile some LaTeX content and include them as images into a sequence to form certain parts of the video.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:29















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












You can watch this video by 3Blue1Brown (which is one of my favorite YouTube videos) and many other video by this channel. I can't doubt that it is made with LaTeX.



But the animation in the video is so fantastic and wonderful, especially in the figures and the way the word 3Blue1Brown appears in the intro, that I can't do the same, even on MS Powerpoint, etc.



Now I want to make a similar video for my colleagues, but I don't know where to start with. I don't like videos with no animation, or too simple animation.



Can you help me? Thank you very much!





If this question is a duplicate, I'm sorry about that! I have seen many question here about videos and animation, but I think that I haven't seen what I want now.










share|improve this question













closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Stefan Pinnow, Zarko, Mico, siracusa Nov 18 at 6:50



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 1




    I don’t think Grant Sanderson uses LaTeX for his animation. However, I must admit that any text in the Computer Modern font looks like it is coming from LaTeX. I recommend that you read this FAQ on his channel homepage.
    – Ruixi Zhang
    Nov 18 at 5:00






  • 2




    The videos are made using Python which requires LaTeX to be installed. See the Manim github page, used to create the video content.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:05










  • Well, the graphs and texts are so perfectly made that I got it wrong! Thank Zhang and Werner!
    – Dũng Vũ
    Nov 18 at 5:14






  • 4




    Questions asking us to recommend or find a package, font, tool, book or other off-site resource are off-topic as they usually do not revolve around an abstract issue. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it or, if applicable, ask on Software Recommendations SX.
    – Henri Menke
    Nov 18 at 5:18






  • 2




    @DũngVũ: I'm pretty sure the code for those videos would compile some LaTeX content and include them as images into a sequence to form certain parts of the video.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:29













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











You can watch this video by 3Blue1Brown (which is one of my favorite YouTube videos) and many other video by this channel. I can't doubt that it is made with LaTeX.



But the animation in the video is so fantastic and wonderful, especially in the figures and the way the word 3Blue1Brown appears in the intro, that I can't do the same, even on MS Powerpoint, etc.



Now I want to make a similar video for my colleagues, but I don't know where to start with. I don't like videos with no animation, or too simple animation.



Can you help me? Thank you very much!





If this question is a duplicate, I'm sorry about that! I have seen many question here about videos and animation, but I think that I haven't seen what I want now.










share|improve this question













You can watch this video by 3Blue1Brown (which is one of my favorite YouTube videos) and many other video by this channel. I can't doubt that it is made with LaTeX.



But the animation in the video is so fantastic and wonderful, especially in the figures and the way the word 3Blue1Brown appears in the intro, that I can't do the same, even on MS Powerpoint, etc.



Now I want to make a similar video for my colleagues, but I don't know where to start with. I don't like videos with no animation, or too simple animation.



Can you help me? Thank you very much!





If this question is a duplicate, I'm sorry about that! I have seen many question here about videos and animation, but I think that I haven't seen what I want now.







animations video






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 18 at 4:16









Dũng Vũ

1,12120




1,12120




closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Stefan Pinnow, Zarko, Mico, siracusa Nov 18 at 6:50



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Henri Menke, Stefan Pinnow, Zarko, Mico, siracusa Nov 18 at 6:50



  • This question does not fall within the scope of TeX, LaTeX or related typesetting systems as defined in the help center.

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 1




    I don’t think Grant Sanderson uses LaTeX for his animation. However, I must admit that any text in the Computer Modern font looks like it is coming from LaTeX. I recommend that you read this FAQ on his channel homepage.
    – Ruixi Zhang
    Nov 18 at 5:00






  • 2




    The videos are made using Python which requires LaTeX to be installed. See the Manim github page, used to create the video content.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:05










  • Well, the graphs and texts are so perfectly made that I got it wrong! Thank Zhang and Werner!
    – Dũng Vũ
    Nov 18 at 5:14






  • 4




    Questions asking us to recommend or find a package, font, tool, book or other off-site resource are off-topic as they usually do not revolve around an abstract issue. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it or, if applicable, ask on Software Recommendations SX.
    – Henri Menke
    Nov 18 at 5:18






  • 2




    @DũngVũ: I'm pretty sure the code for those videos would compile some LaTeX content and include them as images into a sequence to form certain parts of the video.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:29














  • 1




    I don’t think Grant Sanderson uses LaTeX for his animation. However, I must admit that any text in the Computer Modern font looks like it is coming from LaTeX. I recommend that you read this FAQ on his channel homepage.
    – Ruixi Zhang
    Nov 18 at 5:00






  • 2




    The videos are made using Python which requires LaTeX to be installed. See the Manim github page, used to create the video content.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:05










  • Well, the graphs and texts are so perfectly made that I got it wrong! Thank Zhang and Werner!
    – Dũng Vũ
    Nov 18 at 5:14






  • 4




    Questions asking us to recommend or find a package, font, tool, book or other off-site resource are off-topic as they usually do not revolve around an abstract issue. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it or, if applicable, ask on Software Recommendations SX.
    – Henri Menke
    Nov 18 at 5:18






  • 2




    @DũngVũ: I'm pretty sure the code for those videos would compile some LaTeX content and include them as images into a sequence to form certain parts of the video.
    – Werner
    Nov 18 at 5:29








1




1




I don’t think Grant Sanderson uses LaTeX for his animation. However, I must admit that any text in the Computer Modern font looks like it is coming from LaTeX. I recommend that you read this FAQ on his channel homepage.
– Ruixi Zhang
Nov 18 at 5:00




I don’t think Grant Sanderson uses LaTeX for his animation. However, I must admit that any text in the Computer Modern font looks like it is coming from LaTeX. I recommend that you read this FAQ on his channel homepage.
– Ruixi Zhang
Nov 18 at 5:00




2




2




The videos are made using Python which requires LaTeX to be installed. See the Manim github page, used to create the video content.
– Werner
Nov 18 at 5:05




The videos are made using Python which requires LaTeX to be installed. See the Manim github page, used to create the video content.
– Werner
Nov 18 at 5:05












Well, the graphs and texts are so perfectly made that I got it wrong! Thank Zhang and Werner!
– Dũng Vũ
Nov 18 at 5:14




Well, the graphs and texts are so perfectly made that I got it wrong! Thank Zhang and Werner!
– Dũng Vũ
Nov 18 at 5:14




4




4




Questions asking us to recommend or find a package, font, tool, book or other off-site resource are off-topic as they usually do not revolve around an abstract issue. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it or, if applicable, ask on Software Recommendations SX.
– Henri Menke
Nov 18 at 5:18




Questions asking us to recommend or find a package, font, tool, book or other off-site resource are off-topic as they usually do not revolve around an abstract issue. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it or, if applicable, ask on Software Recommendations SX.
– Henri Menke
Nov 18 at 5:18




2




2




@DũngVũ: I'm pretty sure the code for those videos would compile some LaTeX content and include them as images into a sequence to form certain parts of the video.
– Werner
Nov 18 at 5:29




@DũngVũ: I'm pretty sure the code for those videos would compile some LaTeX content and include them as images into a sequence to form certain parts of the video.
– Werner
Nov 18 at 5:29















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