d "MapWinGIS v4.9.4.2 Win32" version?
On your Windows 10 64 bit you installed "MapWinGIS v4.9.4.2 x64" version?
command unrecognized:
...
Judging by this post on stackoverflow, regsvr32 still needs to be used even in case of 64 bit. I do not understand why is that error raised.
Can you try to search through your hard drive for "regsvr32.exe"?When you find it, can you try to use the following command:
"your_regsvr32_folder_path\regsvr32.exe" "c:\dev\mapwingis\mapwingis.ocx"
…
Added by djordje to Gismo at 4:27am on March 27, 2017
to 10 = color 2
10 to 15 = color 3
15 to 30 = color 4
....
I divide the surface by number of segments. How can I divide the surface by distance between
any help...…
to n (I have to catalogate in this way) and of course the result start from 0 to n-1.
How can I change that? I need that the result 10 mach the paramete 10, and not the 11.
Can you help me ?
Regards
Guido…
run the simulation I get this in the command line:
An error occured in the display pipeline @ 10:35:29(856ms)An error occured in the display pipeline @ 10:35:29(856ms)An error occured in the display pipeline @ 10:35:30(387ms)An error occured in the display pipeline @ 10:35:30(387ms)
etc
etc
I have tried changing between Windows and Open GL in 'Pipeline and Conduits' settings in Options> Appearance> Advanced Settings> Other Settings - doesn't solve the problem.
I am running:
- Rhino 4 SR 8
- Grasshopper 0.80004
- Kangaroo 0.044
rhino model and grasshopper definition attached....
any help would be really appreciated!!
thanks,
Jeg…
n after commenting the lines above out, rebuilding and reloading grasshopper. restarting rhino resolves the tooltip errors though.
So i guess somewhere in the GetDataList something's fucked up... or around...
hope it helps.…
ee 3)
{5}
0 15
{6}
0 16
And I want to place points at every possible combination of these coordinates, treating Tree 1 as X coordinates, Tree 2 as Y coordinates, and Tree 3 as Z coordinates. Also, I would like the list of points to be a tree with paths corresponding to the coordinates. Wouldn't it be nice if I could plug these trees into a Point XYZ, with a new "branch cross reference" method, and get the following result?
{0:3:5}
0 {10.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{0:3:6}
0 {10.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{0:4:5}
0 {10.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{0:4:6}
0 {10.0, 14.0, 16.0}
{1:3:5}
0 {11.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{1:3:6}
0 {11.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{1:4:5}
0 {11.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{1:4:6}
0 {11.0, 14.0, 16.0}
{2:3:5}
0 {12.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{2:3:6}
0 {12.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{2:4:5}
0 {12.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{2:4:6}
0 {12.0, 14.0, 16.0}
In this form of cross referencing, every combination of individual branches from the different lists is used as separate input, and the output for each combination is put onto a branch in the result whose path is the concatenation of the input branch paths used.…
Added by Andy Edwards at 7:03pm on November 3, 2009