Ivy & origamis - Grasshopper2024-03-29T14:09:38Zhttps://www.grasshopper3d.com/forum/topics/ivy-origamis?groupUrl=ivy&commentId=2985220%3AComment%3A1592468&xg_source=activity&groupId=2985220%3AGroup%3A1452247&feed=yes&xn_auth=noHi Ante,
Sorry for the respon…tag:www.grasshopper3d.com,2016-09-02:2985220:Comment:15924682016-09-02T18:19:29.455ZAndrei Nejurhttps://www.grasshopper3d.com/profile/deaarh
<p>Hi Ante,</p>
<p>Sorry for the response delay. </p>
<p>Ivy is not meant for origami. For origami your best bet is Kangaroo. I think Daniel Piker has some nice examples there.</p>
<p>Ivy works with graph trees and this means that the pieces to be unrolled have simple (single edge) connections between faces. In other words Ivy segments the mesh from a dual graph to a tree graph where there is only one way to walk from any given face to any other given face in the same piece. </p>
<p>Digital…</p>
<p>Hi Ante,</p>
<p>Sorry for the response delay. </p>
<p>Ivy is not meant for origami. For origami your best bet is Kangaroo. I think Daniel Piker has some nice examples there.</p>
<p>Ivy works with graph trees and this means that the pieces to be unrolled have simple (single edge) connections between faces. In other words Ivy segments the mesh from a dual graph to a tree graph where there is only one way to walk from any given face to any other given face in the same piece. </p>
<p>Digital Origamis assume a different thing, that a given mesh can have multiple geometries for the same topological connections and face sizes. </p>
<p>Hope I made myself clear. </p>
<p></p>
<p>Best, </p>
<p></p>
<p>Andrei </p>