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Manim Video — Manim CE animations: 3Blue1Brown math/algo videos

Manim CE animations: 3Blue1Brown math/algo videos.

SourceBundled (installed by default)
Pathskills/creative/manim-video
Version1.0.0

Info The following is the complete skill definition that Hermes loads when this skill is triggered. This is what the agent sees as instructions when the skill is active.

Use when users request: animated explanations, math animations, concept visualizations, algorithm walkthroughs, technical explainers, 3Blue1Brown style videos, or any programmatic animation with geometric/mathematical content. Creates 3Blue1Brown-style explainer videos, algorithm visualizations, equation derivations, architecture diagrams, and data stories using Manim Community Edition.

This is educational cinema. Every frame teaches. Every animation reveals structure.

Before writing a single line of code, articulate the narrative arc. What misconception does this correct? What is the “aha moment”? What visual story takes the viewer from confusion to understanding? The user’s prompt is a starting point — interpret it with pedagogical ambition.

Geometry before algebra. Show the shape first, the equation second. Visual memory encodes faster than symbolic memory. When the viewer sees the geometric pattern before the formula, the equation feels earned.

First-render excellence is non-negotiable. The output must be visually clear and aesthetically cohesive without revision rounds. If something looks cluttered, poorly timed, or like “AI-generated slides,” it is wrong.

Opacity layering directs attention. Never show everything at full brightness. Primary elements at 1.0, contextual elements at 0.4, structural elements (axes, grids) at 0.15. The brain processes visual salience in layers.

Breathing room. Every animation needs self.wait() after it. The viewer needs time to absorb what just appeared. Never rush from one animation to the next. A 2-second pause after a key reveal is never wasted.

Cohesive visual language. All scenes share a color palette, consistent typography sizing, matching animation speeds. A technically correct video where every scene uses random different colors is an aesthetic failure.

Run scripts/setup.sh to verify all dependencies. Requires: Python 3.10+, Manim Community Edition v0.20+ (pip install manim), LaTeX (texlive-full on Linux, mactex on macOS), and ffmpeg. Reference docs tested against Manim CE v0.20.1.

ModeInputOutputReference
Concept explainerTopic/conceptAnimated explanation with geometric intuitionreferences/scene-planning.md
Equation derivationMath expressionsStep-by-step animated proofreferences/equations.md
Algorithm visualizationAlgorithm descriptionStep-by-step execution with data structuresreferences/graphs-and-data.md
Data storyData/metricsAnimated charts, comparisons, countersreferences/graphs-and-data.md
Architecture diagramSystem descriptionComponents building up with connectionsreferences/mobjects.md
Paper explainerResearch paperKey findings and methods animatedreferences/scene-planning.md
3D visualization3D conceptRotating surfaces, parametric curves, spatial geometryreferences/camera-and-3d.md

Single Python script per project. No browser, no Node.js, no GPU required.

LayerToolPurpose
CoreManim Community EditionScene rendering, animation engine
MathLaTeX (texlive/MiKTeX)Equation rendering via MathTex
Video I/OffmpegScene stitching, format conversion, audio muxing
TTSElevenLabs / Qwen3-TTS (optional)Narration voiceover
PLAN --> CODE --> RENDER --> STITCH --> AUDIO (optional) --> REVIEW
  1. PLAN — Write plan.md with narrative arc, scene list, visual elements, color palette, voiceover script
  2. CODE — Write script.py with one class per scene, each independently renderable
  3. RENDERmanim -ql script.py Scene1 Scene2 ... for draft, -qh for production
  4. STITCH — ffmpeg concat of scene clips into final.mp4
  5. AUDIO (optional) — Add voiceover and/or background music via ffmpeg. See references/rendering.md
  6. REVIEW — Render preview stills, verify against plan, adjust
project-name/
plan.md # Narrative arc, scene breakdown
script.py # All scenes in one file
concat.txt # ffmpeg scene list
final.mp4 # Stitched output
media/ # Auto-generated by Manim
videos/script/480p15/
PaletteBackgroundPrimarySecondaryAccentUse case
Classic 3B1B#1C1C1C#58C4DD (BLUE)#83C167 (GREEN)#FFFF00 (YELLOW)General math/CS
Warm academic#2D2B55#FF6B6B#FFD93D#6BCB77Approachable
Neon tech#0A0A0A#00F5FF#FF00FF#39FF14Systems, architecture
Monochrome#1A1A2E#EAEAEA#888888#FFFFFFMinimalist
Contextrun_timeself.wait() after
Title/intro appear1.5s1.0s
Key equation reveal2.0s2.0s
Transform/morph1.5s1.5s
Supporting label0.8s0.5s
FadeOut cleanup0.5s0.3s
”Aha moment” reveal2.5s3.0s
RoleFont sizeUsage
Title48Scene titles, opening text
Heading36Section headers within a scene
Body30Explanatory text
Label24Annotations, axis labels
Caption20Subtitles, fine print

Use monospace fonts for all text. Manim’s Pango renderer produces broken kerning with proportional fonts at all sizes. See references/visual-design.md for full recommendations.

MONO = "Menlo" # define once at top of file
Text("Fourier Series", font_size=48, font=MONO, weight=BOLD) # titles
Text("n=1: sin(x)", font_size=20, font=MONO) # labels
MathTex(r"\nabla L") # math (uses LaTeX)

Minimum font_size=18 for readability.

Never use identical config for all scenes. For each scene:

  • Different dominant color from the palette
  • Different layout — don’t always center everything
  • Different animation entry — vary between Write, FadeIn, GrowFromCenter, Create
  • Different visual weight — some scenes dense, others sparse

Before any code, write plan.md. See references/scene-planning.md for the comprehensive template.

One class per scene. Every scene is independently renderable.

from manim import *
BG = "#1C1C1C"
PRIMARY = "#58C4DD"
SECONDARY = "#83C167"
ACCENT = "#FFFF00"
MONO = "Menlo"
class Scene1_Introduction(Scene):
def construct(self):
self.camera.background_color = BG
title = Text("Why Does This Work?", font_size=48, color=PRIMARY, weight=BOLD, font=MONO)
self.add_subcaption("Why does this work?", duration=2)
self.play(Write(title), run_time=1.5)
self.wait(1.0)
self.play(FadeOut(title), run_time=0.5)

Key patterns:

  • Subtitles on every animation: self.add_subcaption("text", duration=N) or subcaption="text" on self.play()
  • Shared color constants at file top for cross-scene consistency
  • self.camera.background_color set in every scene
  • Clean exits — FadeOut all mobjects at scene end: self.play(FadeOut(Group(*self.mobjects)))
Terminal window
manim -ql script.py Scene1_Introduction Scene2_CoreConcept # draft
manim -qh script.py Scene1_Introduction Scene2_CoreConcept # production
Terminal window
cat > concat.txt << 'EOF'
file 'media/videos/script/480p15/Scene1_Introduction.mp4'
file 'media/videos/script/480p15/Scene2_CoreConcept.mp4'
EOF
ffmpeg -y -f concat -safe 0 -i concat.txt -c copy final.mp4
Terminal window
manim -ql --format=png -s script.py Scene2_CoreConcept # preview still
# WRONG: MathTex("\frac{1}{2}")
# RIGHT:
MathTex(r"\frac{1}{2}")
label.to_edge(DOWN, buff=0.5) # never < 0.5
self.play(ReplacementTransform(note1, note2)) # not Write(note2) on top
self.play(Create(circle)) # must add first
self.play(circle.animate.set_color(RED)) # then animate
QualityResolutionFPSSpeed
-ql (draft)854x480155-15s/scene
-qm (medium)1280x7203015-60s/scene
-qh (production)1920x10806030-120s/scene

Always iterate at -ql. Only render -qh for final output.

FileContents
references/animations.mdCore animations, rate functions, composition, .animate syntax, timing patterns
references/mobjects.mdText, shapes, VGroup/Group, positioning, styling, custom mobjects
references/visual-design.md12 design principles, opacity layering, layout templates, color palettes
references/equations.mdLaTeX in Manim, TransformMatchingTex, derivation patterns
references/graphs-and-data.mdAxes, plotting, BarChart, animated data, algorithm visualization
references/camera-and-3d.mdMovingCameraScene, ThreeDScene, 3D surfaces, camera control
references/scene-planning.mdNarrative arcs, layout templates, scene transitions, planning template
references/rendering.mdCLI reference, quality presets, ffmpeg, voiceover workflow, GIF export
references/troubleshooting.mdLaTeX errors, animation errors, common mistakes, debugging
references/animation-design-thinking.mdWhen to animate vs show static, decomposition, pacing, narration sync
references/updaters-and-trackers.mdValueTracker, add_updater, always_redraw, time-based updaters, patterns
references/paper-explainer.mdTurning research papers into animations — workflow, templates, domain patterns
references/decorations.mdSurroundingRectangle, Brace, arrows, DashedLine, Angle, annotation lifecycle
references/production-quality.mdPre-code, pre-render, post-render checklists, spatial layout, color, tempo

Creative Divergence (use only when user requests experimental/creative/unique output)

Section titled “Creative Divergence (use only when user requests experimental/creative/unique output)”

If the user asks for creative, experimental, or unconventional explanatory approaches, select a strategy and reason through it BEFORE designing the animation.

  • SCAMPER — when the user wants a fresh take on a standard explanation
  • Assumption Reversal — when the user wants to challenge how something is typically taught

Take a standard mathematical/technical visualization and transform it:

  • Substitute: replace the standard visual metaphor (number line → winding path, matrix → city grid)
  • Combine: merge two explanation approaches (algebraic + geometric simultaneously)
  • Reverse: derive backward — start from the result and deconstruct to axioms
  • Modify: exaggerate a parameter to show why it matters (10x the learning rate, 1000x the sample size)
  • Eliminate: remove all notation — explain purely through animation and spatial relationships
  1. List what’s “standard” about how this topic is visualized (left-to-right, 2D, discrete steps, formal notation)
  2. Pick the most fundamental assumption
  3. Reverse it (right-to-left derivation, 3D embedding of a 2D concept, continuous morphing instead of steps, zero notation)
  4. Explore what the reversal reveals that the standard approach hides