ed according to list C.
I tried replace members, but it consists of geometry, so it doesn't worked.
In list C I filtered all the indices that need to be replaced.
All items in {0;0} from C need to be replaced by List B {0;0}
All items in {0;1} from C need to be replaced by List B {0;1}
And so on...
In the end everything needs to be fed into a orient component.
G is the geometry behind list B
A is the new list (but I don't know how to create)
B is the list A of all 60 panels
To wrap up the question:
I need to have entry 1 from list B in a new list on position: 0 1 2 3 5 6 7 10 11 12 15 16 21
I need to have entry 2 from list B in the same new list on position: 4 8 9 13 14 etc. etc. etc.
I wonder how I can do this :) Thanks in advance!
…
Dim S As New NurbsSurface
Dim k1 As New Integer Dim k2 As New Integer Dim k3 As New Integer
Dim pt_2 As New point3d Dim pt_3 As New point3d Dim pt_4 As New point3d
k1 = 13 k2 = 14 k3 = 15
For i As Integer = 0 To 7 If k1 > 15 Then k1 = k1 - 15 End If pt_2 = L_pts(k1)
If k2 > 15 Then k2 = k2 - 15 End If pt_3 = L_pts(k2)
If k3 > 15 Then k3 = k3 - 15 End If pt_3 = L_pts(k3)
S = nurbsSurface.CreateFromCorners(centre, pt_2, pt_3, pt_4) TAB.add(S)
k1 = k1 + 3 k2 = k2 + 3 k3 = k3 + 3
Next
A = S
You dont realy need to understand the script but I want to be able to declare a dim as a Surface and on the core creat different surface from 4 pt.
Thanks for your Help,
Best regards,
Renaud Ganière…
eled in rhino. The building was Jean Nouvel's 100 11th avenue in New York. The piece of this building I plan on documenting is the rotation of the windows on the building because all of them are either rotated up, down, left, or right, and either at 2, 3, 4, or 5 degrees. Ive looked up as many tutorials as I can find, anyone have any suggestions? much appreciated
-Stew…
reated.
The Appdata Folder is 'on' a windows junction. I run 3 diffrent PC that way and never had an Autosave issue with grasshopper.
Any ideas anybody?
Windows 8.1
Rhino 5SR11
Grasshopper 0.9 Rev 14…
、、、不同角度的理解、诠释、运用和发掘规律、、、
新闻或者幻觉:马王堆墓穴中发掘出了丝绸做的鞋,不算是现代意义上真正的鞋,但是完成了一个完整的公式。
有一部分需要是共同的,在离开了沙滩和草地的时候。
找一个成熟的不一样的数学思维合作者,(可以一起申请参加sg2014活动,也可以不)
我想听到人们写给自己的语言,我不害怕听不懂;
也不在意你能看到我的美丽的脚和我们美丽的城市。
你存在?存在0.1%?如果≥1/4
With the two version of the PDF in the file upload, doubt, 10th should be able to see the many PDF.
There are some scruples, confusion ——"The additional property of professional activities",——Subject classification, commercial, regional、、、
There is a place Africa, people don't wear shoes, A few people with grass or leather on the foot (and buildings——In order to spatial density) winding,
the manufacture of shoes, two sales do two judgment:
A There is no life belongs to shoes
B this is the market.
I spent a lot of energy explained to students, which is not to do programming people do、、、 the different angle understanding, interpretation, application and explore the law、、、
The news or illusion:Mawangdui tomb unearthed silk shoes , is not the modern sense of true shoes, but the completion of a complete formula.
There is a need is common, when they leave the beach and grass.
Find a mathematically mature different thinking partners,(Can apply to participate in the activities of the sg2014, also can not)
I want to hear people wrote their own language, I am not afraid of don't understand;
Don't care what you can see my beautiful feet and our beautiful city.
Do you have? There are 0.1%? If ≥1 / 4 You know what I did wheni found out about you?
msxf6688@163.com
…
component I just used different components and GH tools to do the same - and this become part of my short paper submission for SimAUD 2016). My solution compares the height of the same points of different solar envelope and then chose the lowest one. I read about the improvement you are working on and it is good but I think it is not yet what I need (or how the solar envelope tool could be more complete).
What I need is a solar envelope that would guarantee on different facades with different orientations (the example I sent you) a certain amount of direct sunlight, say 4h per day in a given period for example all the month of June at 60°N. So to guarantee the south facing facade I should chose the vectors from 10 to 14. But these are not ok for all the other facades because in this timeframe the East and West facing facades get only 2 hours and the North get 0 hours.
So the fist step would be have the possibility to chose different sun vectors for different facades. For the example I did (the 4 hours in June at 60°N) the south facing facade would need from 10 to 14, the East facing for example from 8 to 12, the West facing facade from 12 to 16 and the North facing facade from 6 to 8 and from 18 to 20.
If I would chose a single longer time frame that could get all these hours, from 8 to 20 then the resulting solar envelope would result probably smaller than the sum of the four solar envelopes.
But this is not complete yet. I mean the use of different sun vectors on different facades. The reason is that for example when I chose the sun vectors from 8 to 12 for the four hours on the East facing facade how do I know that the sun hit on the facade in that time frame or maybe it is obstructed by surrounding buildings? Since the sun at 60°N (where I live) in June rise at around 3.15 then maybe for that specific facade the sun hit from 4 to 8 and not from 8 to 12.
I did an extreme case talking about 60°N and that maybe the sun hit on a facade at 4 instead than 12, but it is just to make understand the logic. My suggestion for a more advanced solar envelope it should be integrated with the Sunlight Hours tool of ladybug. So the input should not be the sun vectors because I don't know when the sun hit on the facade but the input should be just the desired number of hours and the possibility to specify different number of hours for each facade. Then this last component that sum different solar envelope (I didn't use it yet but I understood what it does) should be integrated yes so the result would be one single solar envelope more likely using the lowest points (the highest I don't understand what for).
Let me know what you think!
…