7, 9, 12 and 13 to be able to rotate freely around the y axis at nodes 2, 3, 6, 7, 10 and 11 respectively. The last 2 conditions, for elements 12 and 13, doesn't give any problems, but the first 4 does.
Any help?
…
then it's settled, i'm getting a second one!
think i'll go with a 5:4 or 4:3 aspect ratio though, to save some desk space
thanks to all for your input!
the curves on surface issue it's solved seting flatten to the surface control point output. Still didnt know how to group points like:
1;1, 2;2, 3;3.....
1;2, 2;3, 3;4....
1;3, 2;4, 3;5...
....
ep is to understan the logics of what you want to do, in your case, build 4 point surfaces (u also need to know the right direction to build the surfaces). Then you can write an hipotetic list (by hand in a paper) of what you want. In your case the list was (0, 1, 3, 2) (2, 3, 5, 4) (4, 5, 7, 6), etc... if you can imagine building 2 lists, each one with the sequences (0, 2, 4, 6, etcc) and (1, 3, 5, 7, etc..) then you can manage with shift and graft to finally have four lists. A( 0 1 2 3 ...) B (1 3 5 etc..) C(3 5 7 etc..) D (2 4 6 etc..). And to achieve the 2 first lists, you need to get the odd and the pair numbers. The cull pattern does that amazingy well. With a pattern True-False you get de pair numbers, and with the False-True pattern you get de odd numbers.
Hope it was clear enough…
Added by Pep Tornabell at 5:32am on November 19, 2009
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
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Added by Danny Boyes at 3:13am on October 29, 2013