you want each "element" to be a single Item or a single item for ALL elements. See Below
0. 20
1. 30
2. 59
3. 60
4. {9,45,29}
5. 0.0
6. 3.0
7. 6.0
Or
0. 20 30 59 60 {9,45,29} 0.0 3.0 6.0
…
Added by Danny Boyes at 3:13am on October 29, 2013
etc.
Group 2 - 1, 6, 11, 16, 21 etc.
Group 3 - 2, 7, 12, 17, 22 etc.
Group 4 - 3, 8, 13, 18, 23 etc.
Group 5 - 4, 9, 14, 19, 24 etc. "
except in data, the branches start at 0, so 'group 1' is branch 0
as for the order of your points, that depends on the input prior sorting...
yrs …
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!…
ap value = True
Shift List = 1 --> (B,C,D,A)
Shift List = 2 --> (C,D,A,B)
You can also use negative values.
Shift List = -1 --> (A,B,C)
Shift List = -2 --> (A,B)
and with Wrap = True
Shift List = -1 --> (D,A,B,C)
Shift List = -2 --> (C,D,A,B)
The most useful Shift List action I use is to either get rid of the first or last item in a list and sometimes both.
Shift list = -1 --> (A,B,C) Shift list = 1 --> (B,C)
In the example posted above you are creating a shift list value equal to its location along the curve. The first section = 0 doesn't get shifted, the second section gets a shift = 1, third = 2, forth = 3 and because the wrap value is set to true the fifth section gets back to 0, sixth = 1 etc etc. creating the twisting effect.
The "one more stupid question" answer is Mass Addition. You will find the component on the Math tab or you can type it into the Keyword search feature (by double clicking the canvas). This component has two outputs a total amount for each list and a partial set of results giving:
List (3,6,9,12)
{0} = 3
{1} = 3+6 = 9
{2} = 3+6+9 = 18
{3} = 3+6+9+12 = 30…