Chris,
Again the number of curves which SubCrv gives me is different from the actual curve on the surface! for example it gives me 80 curves in which there are 20 curves!
rence not set to an instance of an object. (line: 80)
Both .dlls appear to have been successfully imported.
Thanks in advance,
Charles
RStatSystem rs = ri as RStatSystem;
List<Line> slines = new List<Line>();
foreach(RStatBeam b0 in rs.Beams) { <------ line 80
if (b0.StiffnessMultiplier < 0.3) continue;
slines.Add(new Line(b0.P0.ToPoint3d(), b0.P1.ToPoint3d())); }
A = slines;
…
thing deeper? ".. these and then some more.
As this simple search in the source code will tell you, right now at least Honeybee is meant to be run on Windows. There is a cross-platform version already in the works which will run seamlessly across different platforms.
Sarith
(I don't know if what I said above applies to Ladybug as well as I am not involved in that project).…
curve B
B1--------------------------B0
You define distances:
|A0 B0|
|A0 B1|
|A1 B0|
|A1 B1|
And find the smallest one. Then, based on the number of the shortest distance:
Flip A, Leave B
Flip A, Flip B
Leave A, Leave B
Leave A, Flip B
A more advanced metric would be to create all 4 blends, then pick the one that is shortest. Maybe that works better for what you want, maybe not.
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com…
Added by David Rutten at 8:09am on February 11, 2014
hope it will do the job (maybe its not the cleanest way, but it works for me sometimes. Depending on the ending of the lists you should wrap or not the shift component.
Good luck…
Added by Pep Tornabell at 2:05am on November 19, 2009
by its own tangent vector on the curve... and this happens to the last item. Here's the algorithm:
B0 ----> B1
B1 ----> B2
B2 ----> B3
B3 ----> B4
...
…