                          SLEEPY.TXT

SLEEPY.EXE. Find this file in a Windows file manager and double 
click on it. This will open a dialog box that gives you the option
of selecting the dimensions of the image it was programed to create.
It will save the image in the same directory that the EXE file is now in.
This new bitmap file will be called SLEEPY.BMP.

The picture created is a 256 color palette image. As you might notice,
it automatically scales itself to the size at which you choose to render
it. This mathematical form is not a fractal. It is based on trigonometric
functions. This is one of those pictures that looks best when printed
enlarged, and with random diffusion screening.

When you try to make the picture really big, it will take a long time to
finish. There is a good way to figure out how long it will take.
If you want to make the image 3,000 by 2,000 pixels, for example, then
enter 3,000 for the X dimension and only 4 for the Y dimension.
When the program reports how long it took, multiply this time by 500,
(That is: Y dimesion / 4. The number 500 only applies to this example.)
and that's about how long it will take to finish the full size image.
Then, run the program again and enter 3000 for the X dimension and 2000
for the Y demention. Expect to wait a little while.

When it is done, open your favorite image file editor, find and open
SLEEPY.BMP. There it is!
