Reduce solid mesh to simple planes - Grasshopper2024-03-29T12:54:52Zhttps://www.grasshopper3d.com/forum/topics/reduce-solid-mesh-to-simple-planes?commentId=2985220%3AComment%3A1771222&xg_source=activity&feed=yes&xn_auth=noHi David
I've been trying bu…tag:www.grasshopper3d.com,2017-06-19:2985220:Comment:17711582017-06-19T13:06:45.060ZNico van Loggerenberghttps://www.grasshopper3d.com/profile/NicovanLoggerenberg
<p>Hi David</p>
<p></p>
<p>I've been trying but think this is a bit beyond my Grasshopper capacities. Because some meshes have multiple planes that I want to keep, and some only one, it's hard for me to figure out a way to filter. I've attached a GH definition, would really appreciate any help. </p>
<p>Hi David</p>
<p></p>
<p>I've been trying but think this is a bit beyond my Grasshopper capacities. Because some meshes have multiple planes that I want to keep, and some only one, it's hard for me to figure out a way to filter. I've attached a GH definition, would really appreciate any help. </p> You will always end up with t…tag:www.grasshopper3d.com,2017-06-19:2985220:Comment:17712222017-06-19T12:53:09.611ZDavid Ruttenhttps://www.grasshopper3d.com/profile/DavidRutten
<p>You will always end up with the top and bottom face, one of which you want to keep and one of which you want to discard. This will almost certainly be a manual operation. You can however get rid of the extrusion faces through Grasshopper. Either filter all faces by area, or by corner count.</p>
<p>You will always end up with the top and bottom face, one of which you want to keep and one of which you want to discard. This will almost certainly be a manual operation. You can however get rid of the extrusion faces through Grasshopper. Either filter all faces by area, or by corner count.</p>