) function if you've already got a boolean value.
This expression:
x < 12
results in exactly the same things as this expression:
If( x < 12, True, False )
If() is only really useful when you want to return non-boolean data, like so:
If( x < 12, x, 100-x )
In this case, the expression will return either x, or 100-x if x is larger than or equal to 12:
x result
1 1
2 2
10 10
11 11
12 88
13 87
14 86
18 82
70 30
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…
Added by David Rutten at 7:22am on August 10, 2011
Hi
I'm trying to write a simple script to offset a curve muliptle times (using a 'for loop') but I don't know the vb dotNet syntax. I'm sure lines 84, 88 & 89 are wrong. Any ideas.
Thanks. P
Added by Paul Wintour at 8:25am on September 28, 2010