r itself is compiled against .NET 3·5.
I recommend you use Rhino4, .NET 3·5 and VS 2008 as a debugging platform.
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…
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
dont get you, i am saying sleect numbers in range 1 to 10, starting from 1 with a step of 2.
1 to 10 by 3 = 1 4 7 10
1 to 10 by 5 = 1 6
1 to 10 by 1 = 1 to 10 = 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Added by Steve Lewis at 3:15pm on November 11, 2013
work. If you have been looking for an opportunity to get into a new part of the software or just want to get updated on the latest developments in a 90-minute presentation, then these webinars are for you. Starting this Thursday at 12:30 EST, the workshops will begin by covering basic Ladybug capabilities and will provide a survey of the latest community resources. Each Thursday, there will be another presentation covering progressively advanced topics. In total there will be 5 workshops, each of which you can register for by clicking below:
1 - Ladybug Climate Analysis - August 25th, 12:30 PM EST2 - Ladybug Facade + Shade Design - September 1st, 12:30 PM EST3 - Honeybee Energy, HVAC + Indoor Comfort Modeling - September 8th, 12:30 PM EST4 - Honeybee Daylight + Electric Light - September 15th, 12:30 PM EST5 - Honeybee THERM + WINDOW - September 22nd, 12:30 PM EST
Notably, workshops 2, 3, 4 and 5 will feature substantial coverage of capabilities that do not currently have tutorial videos. This includes new view analysis and tips and tricks for radiation studies in webinar 2, newly-released HVAC capabilities for webinar 3, electric lighting capabilities with webinar 4, and all of webinar 5 will be brand-new hot-off-the-press development! Hope that you can attend!…
lues. What I want to do is combine them so that the structure would be something like:
{4;0}
{4;1}
{4;2}
{4;3}
{5;0}
{5;1}
{5;2}
{5;3}
I tried the method here, but it didn't give me what I wanted, it was just tacking the new values onto the end, and not maintaining their paths. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!…
Added by Dennis Goff at 8:13am on February 10, 2016
shift. I realize I can use 'replace branch' but I do not have an available mask to utilize. I have simplified the problem to its simplest form so my question is understandable, however, the tree I am trying perform this operation on is a much larger 3 digit path address.
{1;3;2}
{2;3;4}
{3;5;4}
{4;3;7}
Change the above list to the list below.
{0;3;2}
{1;3;4}
{2;5:4}
{3;3;7}
I wish for a more robust arsenal of branch manipulation components. Most of the things I need to do are possible with the existing components, however, many operations take several components to perform even simple manipulations. Since branch/path manipulation is so integral to using GH successfully, it seems the GH community would be well served by enhancing the available path manipulation components.
Thanks,
Stan
…