urs x 365 days ), and with modulus in the screenshot above, i could manage to do for every hour. but sometimes in my definition, i have a range from 1 to 35040, which is 365 x 24 x 4 ( 4 here defines every 15 minutes), on other word, when the number is one, then i have 01:00 O'Clock, when the number is 2 then i have 01:15 O'clock, when the number is 3 then i have 01:30 O'Clock...etc , so when the number is 97, which is the next day ( and after the number 96 which is equal 24 hours x 4), then I should have again 01:00 O'Clock.
I hope my idea is clear, thanks in advance!
Nassif…
KangaMark Score: 107PC model: DELL PRECISION T1600Operating system: Windows 7 Professional x 64Processor model and speed: Intel Xeon E3 1245 @ 3.30GHzAmount and speed of RAM: 8 GB DDR3 -1333Mhz
): 'Rhino.Geometry.TextEntity' does not contain a definition for 'FontIndex' and no extension method 'FontIndex' accepting a first argument of type 'Rhino.Geometry.TextEntity' could be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) (line 92) 2. Error (CS1061): 'Rhino.Geometry.TextEntity' does not contain a definition for 'AnnotativeScalingEnabled' and no extension method 'AnnotativeScalingEnabled' accepting a first argument of type 'Rhino.Geometry.TextEntity' could be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) (line 94)…
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;
…
ide into 80 branches, and 80 outputs of explode and 80 dispatches - its my nightmare. Is there any way to do this with parametric Number of brunches? …
for waves, that is done with a 'phase shift', add 2*pi/4 radians (for a 90 deg shift) to your sin curve, could also be done using cos instead of sin for an inherent 90 deg shift
Added by mark zirinsky at 7:37pm on November 9, 2016