p 10 "Scripting Reality – Integrating 3D Point Clouds in parametric design workflows".
This research-based workshop will introduce participants to thegeometrical class of point clouds and ways to handle, manipulate, analyse and script with them. Participants will as well have the chance to get first-hand knowledge in the handling of 3d capturing devices and to link their outputs directly into a design environment.
The workshop poses especially the question of how changes on architectural scale can be tracked over time. Related algorithmic concepts and the Volvox plugin, allow for the first time to directly access and manipulate point clouds in a parametric design environment, will be introduced to the workshop participants. A 1:1 experiment on the ETH campus will provide a testbed. Participants will learn point cloud processing and learn to track objects solely on the base of point cloud analysis, find deviations against the planned and visualise the results.
The workshop is led by Mateusz Zwierzycki, Martin Tamke and Henrik Leander Evers. FARO provides several 3d scanners with helical adapters and acccess to the FARO SDK for the workshop. The workshop is modestly priced with 160CHF.
register now.
http://www.aag2016.ch/workshop-10/
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d object1. Traceback: line 96, in join, "c:\Program Files\Rhinoceros 5 (64-bit)\Plug-ins\IronPython\Lib\ntpath.py" line 102, in openStudioPath, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\config.py" line 247, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\config.py" line 2, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\radiance\command\_commandbase.py" line 2, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\radiance\command\gendaymtx.py" line 3, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\radiance\command\__init__.py" line 7, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\radiance\__init__.py" line 3, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\_hbanalysissurface.py" line 1, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\hbsurface.py" line 1, in <module>, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee_grasshopper\hbsurface.py" line 44, in script line 53, in __init__, "C:\Users\Jurrijn\AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\scripts\honeybee\config.py"
It seems a problem with python.. Thanks in advance for any help.…
(tree info, relationships to certain other objects, etc.) after it's been baked, so that our team can hand tool some of the results, delete certain objects, etc. I'm using the doc.objects.find(guid) function right now - which works fine when I feed a string into the VB component and set the input as a GUID, but am having a hard time casting my strings from Excel into the GUID directly in the VB component. Hopefully it's easy to do and I can whack my palm on my face, as often I do. Here's my script...I get the "specified cast is not valid" error at: Dim obj As Guid = xlSheet.Range(strGUIDColumn & I).Value.
If activate = True Then
Dim xlApp, xlSheet As Object
xlApp = System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.GetActiveObject("Excel.Application")Dim strSheet As String = "MEM_6"
Dim strGUIDColumn As String = "C"
Dim strDeleteColumn As String = "F"
Dim intCheck As Int16 = xlApp.Worksheets("META").Range("B4").Value
Dim I As Int16
xlSheet = xlApp.Worksheets(strSheet)
For I = 2 To intCheck + 1
Dim obj As Guid = xlSheet.Range(strGUIDColumn & I).Value <- returns my casting error
If doc.Objects.Find(obj) Is Nothing Then
xlSheet.Range(strDeleteColumn & I).Value = "X"
End If
Next
End If
thanks!…
Added by David Stasiuk at 8:05am on December 15, 2010
" (idiomatic) and easy way of doing things.So here come some basic questions:
Is there a way to create custom components by grouping an existing sub-network together? I'm looking for a way to re-use parts of a program (something similar to subroutines), and to make the network look less cluttered. I found that it is possible to group components (ctrl-g), but this still displays them as separate blocks (too much clutter), and provides no way to re-use a sub-network in such a way that if it is modified in one place, all it's instances (all the places where it is re-used) also get modified.
Is there a component that does nothing, just passes a signal through? Suppose I need to connect block A to blocks B1, B2, B3 (all three get the same input). Then I change my mind, and I decide to connect block C to these three, not A. In this case it will be necessary to change three connections, not just one. I'm looking for an easy way to do this by a single rewiring, not three. (This came up in a practical situation).
Finally, a related question: is there a component that acts as a switch, so I can choose which signal it passes through out of a possible set of choices? For example, suppose that a set of objects can be coloured based on a number of different properties (size, positions, rotation, etc.) I'm looking for a way to switch between these very easily, without the need to do much rewiring.
Thank you in advance for any replies / useful comments, even general ones on how to easily structure a large Grasshopper program/network.…
n than not tested in a wind tunnel to accurately predict loading wind loading actions. CFD is still often not accurate enough (but can be used as an initial estimation to be confirmed in a wind tunnel).
If you want to dabble with wind CFD, I would recommend testing it with Vasari (given it's a AD lab preview and free). Conceptual massing can be done in Revit (or using my IFC links from GH/Rhino). The results are pretty credible from my experience, certainly for the purpose of study and research.
Also if you're in an applicable climate, snow drifts can be critical on roofs, influenced by simultaneous winds. I believe this is still a very challenging prediction using CFD.
…
Added by Jon Mirtschin at 12:40am on August 11, 2012
component is checking ad, as, ar and aa values. This is just to make sure that the results are accurate enough.Good to go!Current working directory is set to: c:\ladybug\unnamed\DF\Runtime error (FileNotFoundException): Le fichier 'c:\ladybug\unnamed\DF\error.log' est introuvable.Traceback: line 327, in script
I never had this problem before... and I don't see the link between your python component and this error.
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p; 3D Urban ModelingOn the topography subject I get the next message: "One or more boundaries may be outside the bounds of the topo dataset" I'm not sure if it's the .IMG file I'm loading since I found so many IMG files nearing my polyline area (Miami Lat:26 Lon:-81 aprox.) or maybe my polygon doesn't match the topo area? I have no idea why it isn't working :(On the Shapefile subject, haven't been able to find a Building Height SHP File, so far have downloaded around 8 SHP files which only contain Polylines, my solution is to meanwhile randomize Z heights, but of course this data is not "technically" correct.P.S.: I've already tried all example links and also the ones posted by you and Benjamin in this video.Been strugling last few days, hope you can help me, thanks in advance!!…
Simpsons episode were Bart goes into a mall and in the time he goes in and out of a shop all others have been turned into Starbucks.
I personally don't like it but you can't say they are crushing all competitors because, as far as i know, all owners of those software packages voluntarily sold their property for a good price. I would actually be more worried that an antitrust lawsuit was filed against Autodesk.
For example, this is what happened with Rockefeller's Standard Oil:
The antitrust case against Standard Oil also seems absurd because its share of the petroleum products market had actually dropped significantly over the years. From a high of 88 percent in 1890, Standard Oil's market share had fallen to 64 percent by 1911, the year in which the US Supreme Court reaffirmed the lower court finding that Standard Oil was guilty of monopolizing the petroleum products industry.[32]
The court argued, in essence, that Standard Oil was a "large" company with many divisions, and if those divisions were in reality separate companies, there would be more competition. The court made no mention at all of the industry's economic performance; of supposed predatory pricing; of whether industry output had been restrained, as monopoly theory holds; or of any other economic factors relevant to determining harm to consumers. The mere fact that Standard Oil had organized some thirty separate divisions under one consolidated management structure (a trust) was sufficient reason to label it a monopoly and force the company to break up into a number of smaller units.
To economists, "predatory pricing" is theoretical nonsense and has no empirical validity, either.
In other words, the organizational structure that was responsible for the company's great efficiencies and decades-long price cutting and product improving was seriously damaged. Standard Oil became much less efficient as a result, to the benefit of its less efficient rivals and to the detriment of consumers.
From: http://mises.org/daily/2317
(Beware, that site is very ideologically charged)…
points within the bounds of the site boundary and use each location as an attractor point controlling a variable at each point in the grid (radius of a circle/height of a cube/colour based on a gradient etc.).This would be based on proximity to the attractor points with the effect of each attractor point essentially scaled by the percentage associated with it. For example a location with 88% visitor rates would have a more dramatic effect than a location with 26% visitor rates.
I've had a bit of a play around but can't seem to get beyond the point of what is shown in basic point attractor tutorials online. I'm definitely a novice.
Here's how I figured it would be done:
1) Create a grid of source points within a boundary curve.
2) Select 18 pre-defined attractor points.
2) Measure the distance between the source points and the attractor points.
3) Invert this data so that variables increase with proximity rather than decrease.
4) Give each of the attractor points a strength value from 1-100% based on the visitor rates.
5) Use the scaled data to control a variable at each of the source points.
6) Create some way to control the drop-off rate of the effect from each point.
It is at step 3 that I get completely lost.
I hope my description is clear. Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Adam
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