opening a simple file with 30 curves being lofted took like 2 minutes to complete and Rhino crashed afterwards saying:"Windows is out of memory and Rhino will close after you click ok."evethough I still had 7GB of free physical memory and my page file is set also to 16 GB just to be shure...I then switched to Rhino 5.0 Version 5 SR14 64-bit (5.14.522.8390, 05/22/2017) which also had big problems to display the lofted surface. It was unresponsive after loading the file for a minute and a half and then it normally displayed the lofted surface. Every move of camera takes at least 10 seconds to update, but at least it runs. GH profiler says the loft took only 12 ms (90%).
So I'm suspected my graphics card, because the Windows are just three weeks from a clean install. I've also updated my Graphics Driver from the stock Windows one to Intel HD one, but nothing changed.Is there something I'm missing??? What can I try next?My specs:CPU: i5-3320M @ 2.60 GHzRAM: 16 GBGPU: Intel HD Graphics 4000, driver: 07.04. 2017, version 10.18.10.4653
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Added by Šimon Prokop at 10:39am on October 21, 2017
rce of power.
A fortified emplacement for heavy guns.
Synonyms
accumulator
And use component:
com·po·nent
/kəmˈpōnənt/
Noun
A part or element of a larger whole, esp. a part of a machine or vehicle.
Adjective
Constituting part of a larger whole; constituent.
Synonyms
noun.
constituent - element - ingredient - part
adjective.
constituent - constitutive
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n to finding a concave contour polyline (which is in general what you need). In your case each contour section contains a series of points of which you do not know the order and you need to sort them so that by connecting them you find the contour. This is fairly easy to do when the contour is convex (basically you find the average point then calculate the vectors from the average to the points and sort the vectors by angle - sorting the points by the same angle gives you the right order for the contour), but generally impossible to find uniquely when the contour is concave (PS: convex means that, for ANY 2 points inside the figure, a straight line connecting them doesn't intersect with the border curve - i.e. circles, ellipses, rectangles, triangles - concave shapes are a star, a crescent moon, an arrow, a boomerang, etc.).
The problem goes like this: given a generic list of points:
Each of these configurations for a perimeter equally fits the above:
Laurent already went for another possible solution, the stochastic approach (by subdividing the connecting lines), I slightly adjusted a few things over his solution:
namely, I added a rounding option to adjust for some weird tolerance issues (some points that should be at Y=80 were at Y=79.99998 or something) and a more straightforward solution to group them by section plane using sets logic. This, coupled with alpha shape, gives a quite good approach, still very coarse in terms of results but that depends on the sampling resolution of the field (i.e. number of height sections in which you calculate the metaballs) and sampling length of the connecting lines.
Definition attached.…
Diffraction , I left it, how it is.
For the unusual issues that comes in the image source component, so, is it something strange? But, I still have the same issues when I sets any integer component (single or multiple) in the “reflection order” of the image source component, in the “image source order” in the ray tracing component, and again, when I connect the output “Direct sound data” of Direct Sound component in the Energy Time Curve.
Do I wrong something with the integer component? I used it already in the first parts, for sets “grasshopper layers”, in the “Scene” component, but here it works. Should I start with a new file?
For the multi-object optimization, thank you for all suggestions. Yes, I red PHD thesis work of Tomas Mendez and the article “ EDT, C80 and G Driven Auditorium design” and still others. Thank you to all these articles, I decided where to focus my thesis.
I understand the potential of Multi-object optimization, and problems that I can finding without using it. Actually, in the beginning of my thesis, I tried to jet in contact with the Politecnico di Torino, but was not easy because I’m not a Politecnico student.
Here, in University of Florence (Building engineering), there isn’t a department or someone that is already familiar with these field of study, so, as you can image, for design my thesis, I can confide on online resources. So far, my Professor suggest me to begin with a Nonlinear Global optimization like Galapagos, and only after see the multi-object. In this way, step by step if something doesn’t work is easier to understand way and where something is going wrong: if are problems due to the setting of the programs, because we are not practical about these, or if there is a wrong in the simulations or in the algorithm and ect.
Do you think is a good way for go on?
Thank you very much,
Kind Regards
Giulia
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ve jewelry design course teaching Rhino, Grasshopper, Keyshot and 3D printing in collaboration with mything and ShapeDiver. Taught by Eva Blšáková - Zaha Hadid Studio Vienna Andrei PAdure - DesignMorphine / Digital Matters Apply Now and view details at: www.designmorphine.com/workshop/future/algorithmic-accessories-v3/ Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/designmorphine and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/designmorphine/…
e has a sharp break
2) The Curvature "flips"
The curvature graph component creates exactly what I need, but unfortunately it only visualizes the new curve (lets call this c1), without actually making it usable. If it were usable, I could just test for curve-curve intersections, and discontinuities in (c1). I have more or less replicated the behavior of the curvature graph component, except that my imitation is too smooth (lets call my imitation curve c2). I attached two images to demonstrate what I mean.
Is there a way to get exactly what the Curvature graph makes? How is it creating c1? Is it just a much larger sampling of points? Or does it somehow operate (calculus?) on the underlying formula of the curve (c0)?
Any guidance is hugely appreciated. …
Added by Matthew Breau at 11:37am on August 14, 2017
ty lots as extrusions with their height depending on perimeter length. Then I added a 'Cull Duplicates' group to avoid properties that had duplicate 'Area' centroid points. That reduced the number of properties from 364 down to 331, though five of those have 'Area' values between 88 and 205, ten have values less than 500 while the average is ~1.3 million!
So the data is still suspect. Some appear to be nested inside of others? But using those 331 properties, I now find 32 that intersect the 'Zoning Districts'. But that's not the same as a list of properties that span two or more 'Zoning Districts'... Not having fun anymore. :)
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Added by Joseph Oster at 10:40am on January 14, 2016
ts. Ideally, I'd like to set the exact number of points populating the region, ie 211 in GH = 211 visible in rhino.
(I was able to achieve the exact number of points using populate2d instead of sdivide, but could only get this to work with a simple rectangular region)
2) After I have exactly 211 points, I'd like to populate each of the points with a block made in rhino (for example: the stick figure man seen in the view)
(One idea is that I build a dummy geometry and replace later with my block in rhino. But how do I make this change universally over the 211 points?)
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raw a single line that intersects them all. I'm also not certain what the metric for "closest" would be if you have more than three lines all intersecting each other. What groups of three can you find here:
This is not just splitting hairs, when designing a new algorithm it is important to always figure out whether:
There is ever a case with more than one possible solution.
There is ever a case with no possible solutions.
Does the algorithm change the state of the problem while it runs, i.e. whether run order matters.
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…