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Added by SEED studio at 3:30am on November 24, 2011
elated with the Topology outputs:
So let's try to do (via components) the face reconstruction stage (the missing 4 as above):
Alias crenelatedEdgesTree as polylineTree.
Imagine a Lst that samples all the edges per Face ("changed" and "unchanged") as Curves.
1. Let's take face 3: this is surrounded by edges 10,11,12,13 and 37.
2. Has edge 10 "changed" (to polyline) ? No because in the polylineTree there's no branch {10} ... thus sample edge 10 from the EList (Note: apparently that's a boundary edge). Has edge 11 "changed" ? No ... blah, blah.
3. Has edge 12 "changed" ? Yes because in the polylineTree there's a branch {12} ... thus sample the item from that branch. Same for 13 ... etc etc.
4. Thus we have sampled all the surrounding edges as Curves and the next step is to join them > yielding a closed Curve.
5. Then we must "planarize" that Curve (by projecting it into the corresponding Brep Face plane) ... and the rest are history.
So ... try it and report any issue encountered.…
s than 40% on average.2. 8gb usage is steady at 28% 3. I've been now looking at 2 blank white screen, in both Rhino and Grasshopper for well over 20 min. finally I went for a walk at 10:25am, (its a beautiful day why waste it looking at nonexistent calculations, It would help if there was a timing function in the code that would let me know how long the calculations were going to take, came back 11:25am still no results. Had to Quit Rhino in the Start manager.
I have used all sorts of window programs for well over 25 years. Rhino and Grasshopper are the only 2 programs that I have ever seen that show totally white screens in their operating windows :(
…
right? When the dataTree is this simple its not really a problem, but when it grows and I want to be able to refer to a specific GH branch e.g. {11;320} and I need to read this specific branch in Python? How do I do this?
I know that there is the function tree.Path(x) this will give me the GH Path, but how do I figure out what x needs to be? I guess there must be a simple answer :).
Thanks Rasmus…
Added by Rasmus Holst at 1:24am on October 14, 2013
(18, 11, 0, 17), also put in the assembly component.
How can I know which value of the reaction forces correspond to which support?
In the manual is stated that when the reaction force component is used, than the values are displayed in ascending sequence of the corresponding nodes.So if I input the support nodes like thispoint with index 18point with index 11point with index 0point with index 17are the reaction forces displayed like this (per loadcase)?0 - reaction forces in point with index 01 - reaction forces in point with index 112 - reaction forces in point with index 183 - reaction forces in point with index 17
Thanks!
BestLara…
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he default for Rhino, degree=5 gives you smoother curves, but each control point matters less, degree=11 is the highest degree Rhino allows. Apart from 2, degrees tend to be odd rather than even, though Rhino supports both.
In addition to the degree and the control points, Nurbs curves have knots. A single knot is just a number, and the list of all knots is called the knot-vector of a curve. The number of knots depends on both the degree and the control-point count, and the spacing of the knots affects the shape of the curve a little bit. If there are <degree> knots with the same value, then the curve is somewhat discontinuous at that location which could manifest itself as a kink or as a clamped end-point. However it is not possible by just looking at the shape of a curve to say where stacked knots might be, but you can use the Rhino _List command to inspect all details of a Nurbs curve.…
ed according to list C.
I tried replace members, but it consists of geometry, so it doesn't worked.
In list C I filtered all the indices that need to be replaced.
All items in {0;0} from C need to be replaced by List B {0;0}
All items in {0;1} from C need to be replaced by List B {0;1}
And so on...
In the end everything needs to be fed into a orient component.
G is the geometry behind list B
A is the new list (but I don't know how to create)
B is the list A of all 60 panels
To wrap up the question:
I need to have entry 1 from list B in a new list on position: 0 1 2 3 5 6 7 10 11 12 15 16 21
I need to have entry 2 from list B in the same new list on position: 4 8 9 13 14 etc. etc. etc.
I wonder how I can do this :) Thanks in advance!
…
ay be other issues with your geometry, but this is usually the issue people run into.)
Rays will lose energy much more slowly when a room is very reflective, but such conditions only really exist with polished painted concrete. I don't know how many such rooms you've ever been in. I can count them on one hand - and I've been to acoustic reverberation chambers on 3 continents.
Pachyderm works with a ray decimation algorithm. This means that a ray will be traced out to the cutoff time, unless it has lost enough energy that its further contribution to the impulse response is negligible. At this time, the ray is discontinued. So, the more absorption in the room, the less time it will take to run the simulation. So, more realistic absorption coefficients will allow a model to run in a more reasonable amount of time.
Gypsum board/Plasterboard will typically be between 8 and 11 percent at mid and high frequencies, and higher at low frequencies, for example. Concrete, unless polished and painted, is still a little porous, so you can probably make it 3 to 5 percent.
Regarding sources and receivers, adding more receivers adds almost nothing to calculation time (until the every end, when it extrapolates a pressure response, anyway). This is because the receivers are entered into a spatial partition system, which allows it to be done in an optimized way. Adding multiple sources will effectively multiply the calculation time by the number of sources, because the simulation needs to be repeated for each source individually.
Hopefully this helps you figure out how to run simulations with reasonable run times.
Arthur…
) function if you've already got a boolean value.
This expression:
x < 12
results in exactly the same things as this expression:
If( x < 12, True, False )
If() is only really useful when you want to return non-boolean data, like so:
If( x < 12, x, 100-x )
In this case, the expression will return either x, or 100-x if x is larger than or equal to 12:
x result
1 1
2 2
10 10
11 11
12 88
13 87
14 86
18 82
70 30
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…
Added by David Rutten at 7:22am on August 10, 2011