The angles at which isocurves meet are not necessarily 90 degrees. Rectangles always have 90 degree angles. So what needs to happen when your isocurves are skewed?
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Added by David Rutten at 3:59pm on January 17, 2014
d 'outletBoundary' components in which the 'temperatures_' represents?
The 2nd ques is more about thinking how to achieve more potentials by BF. I am doing a project that is trying to implement the construction method of 'DOUBLE-GLAZED' facade, which will conduct air flow inside a building and save more energy. Since I also use LB&HB for time-based analyses, so I`m wondering if BF could use time-based-srf-temperature to achieve a more dynamic simulation in a day, let`s say, a hot summer day, 10:00 to 16:00?
And the last what is the definition of these recipes(pic no.2)? what do they mean?
Thanks in advance for the helps!
Best wishes,
Lei…
ases where you have angled shades and the component is doing trigonometry to figure out how close the blinds could be to the glass without touching. I just re-wrote the code so that, now you cannot have the blinds closer to the glass than half of the blind slat depth, which seems to be the limit of what E+ will tolerate.
Also, E+ does not like it when you input blinds that are perfectly at 90 degrees so I changed the component to automatically write out shades at 89 degrees when you connect up 90.
Using the Shade geometry as context worked perfectly for me and I am not sure what was wrong in your situation.
See your working file attached.
-Chris…