square units. Then you have an integral number of fragments on each side. This means that if all fragments need to have the same surface area, you can only have the following possibilities for side A:
1 fragment = 100 square units
2 fragments = 50 square units each
3 fragments = 33⅓ square units each
4 fragments = 25 square units each
5 fragments = 20 " "
6 fragments = 16⅔ " "
etc.
For side B, the numbers are mostly different
1 fragment = 300 unit²
2 fragments = 150 unit²
3 fragments = 100 unit²
4 fragments = 75 unit²
For side C they are different still. Unless you join fragments across on both sides of the edges of the box, I very much doubt you'll be able to pull this off.
The solution I attached will create fragments as identical as possible, but it's a very boring outcome...
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…
(without the flaps on the edge). 1. How can I make this "piece" behave like a segment with multiple folds? 2. How can I add more of the same segments (join them on the sides) in order to create a closed object? 3. I would also like to be able to change the number of border edges as well and to be able to control the position of those points in order to make differently shaped "planar pieces" and different objects in the end.
All ideas are appreciated. Thank you. Jiri…
the geometries in a component ("set multiple 'geometries'"). If you have 100 curves and would like to add(/remove) 1, you need to select 101(/99) curves in Rhino, it could be annoying.
2) you use the "manage 'geometry' collection" with the Object ID but I don't like this way.
3) you create a new component with the new geometries and you merge the two components.
My point is that it would be useful to add/remove geometries like you set them by picking them up in Rhino, the current collection being selected automatically.…
osest points, not just the closest one, this will require another data structure.
3. When evaluating distances to the closest point, with the chosen gridsize, the tolerance needs to be around 100 to get an effect.
See attached
This definition is quite simple and you will not get exactly the solution you might be looking for, but you are quite a long way. If you skip merging the flipped grid you will get curves in one direction only, but you will still get a few mistakes. This is something you can detail more, to get the result you want.
Cheers Rasmus
…
: C = 100-200
Animation start with A=1, B=50 and C goes from 100-200 : then A=1, B=51 and C = 100-200 and once B gets to 600, A turns to 2... and so forth
-Khizer…
, this (or that). That's the difference between 10 minutes of coding VS 100++.
Anyway ... provide the dataset that caused the issue.
In the mean time get the trad update that proves that the pink color is good for the Pink Planet (after Utopia turn left Math.PI/666.0).
Other type of (rather expected) oops moments:
1. Dupes, 2.Closable (but not closed) "final" (see code) profiles, 3. Shortage of cigars (critical), 4."Unexpected" polylines, 5. Loft failure(s), 6. Not "matching" final profiles (N of nodes) ... 666. ...
…
e image searches on the forum are useful as well:
site:grasshopper3d.com +Boolean +union +fails
https://www.google.com/search?q=site+grasshopper3d+com+Boolean+unio...
…
Added by Nik Willmore at 12:13am on February 27, 2016
1 of 3 sizes. If they are rectangular, you can easily manage to do it without any advanced mathematics (like I did), because you will operate only on 2 dimensions.
But Iam not 100% sure about effect of this in your case. …
the problem with 25 sliders (3 possible positions each), galapagos send me an error when it's running for long time.
I've uploaded a screenshot with the error. Galapagos and Ecotect run and calculate 100 values and then the errors appear ( I guees that 100 values are 50pop*boost).
Using old Galapagos, Geco and Grasshopper there is no problem at all running definition.
Galapagos conf:
Using evolutionary solver.
Max.Stagnant: 40
Population: 50.
Boost: x2
Manintain: 5%
Inbreeding: 75%
25 sliders with 3 possible values: 0.01, 0.09, 0.018
Best Regards.
Ángel.…
Added by Ángel Linares at 11:50am on September 6, 2011