6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, etc
In addition to the components in the attached file, I have also tried using Cull Index but that did not do much. I tried using a number slider set to whole numbers with the range equal to the values I have set up in the integer, but it just increases the size by 1 every time. Any help on steps in the right direction would be great thanks.…
e
7. True
8. True <-- this one
9. True
10. False
11. True
12. False
13. True
14. True <-- this one
15. True
16. False
17. True
18. False
19. True
20. True <-- this one
21. True
22. False
23. True
24. False
25. True
26. True <-- this one
27. True
28. False
29. True
30. False
31. True
32. True <-- this one
33. True
Any idea how I can solve this?
Thanks!…
ere a way to set this up in a way that lets say when there are 28 it will go for one of 4, 7 or 14 and if it is a primer number it will exclude enough number of boats to obtain the closest suitable number - lets say there are 29 boats but it will only show 28 and go back to selecting 4,7 or 14.…
Added by Levent Ozruh at 10:40am on October 14, 2014
byte-accuracy red, green, blue channels) = 27 bytes. More likely 28 bytes as colours are probably stored as 32-bit integers, allowing for an unused alpha channel.
28 * 800,000 equals roughly 22 megabytes, which is way down from 9 gigabytes. That's a 400 fold memory overhead, which is pretty hefty.
Grasshopper stores points as instances of classes, so on 64-bit systems it actually takes 64+64+3*8 = 152 bytes per point*, which adds up to 122MB, still way less than 9GB. It would be interesting to know where all the memory goes...
* Grasshopper points also store reference data, in case they come from the Rhino document. This data will not exist, but even so it will require 64-bits of storage.…
Added by David Rutten at 4:13pm on December 11, 2014