e
7. True
8. True <-- this one
9. True
10. False
11. True
12. False
13. True
14. True <-- this one
15. True
16. False
17. True
18. False
19. True
20. True <-- this one
21. True
22. False
23. True
24. False
25. True
26. True <-- this one
27. True
28. False
29. True
30. False
31. True
32. True <-- this one
33. True
Any idea how I can solve this?
Thanks!…
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, etc
In addition to the components in the attached file, I have also tried using Cull Index but that did not do much. I tried using a number slider set to whole numbers with the range equal to the values I have set up in the integer, but it just increases the size by 1 every time. Any help on steps in the right direction would be great thanks.…
pe Description = 41 byteType Name = 6 byteIs valid = 1 byteIs valid why not = 0 byte (let's assume everything works)Value = 8 byteTotal for GH_Number: 46 bytes, 8 of which are used for the number, 38 for saying it's a number). 2.400.000 x 46 byte = 105MB for one set of data. (a quick runtime check seems to confirm this is the right ballpark)
My conclusion for using big data in grasshopper needs some additional love at the moment. Currently the datatree structure becomes less useful when starting to go beyond the order 100,000, after this I usually consider writing some C# solution. Main reason usually is the runtime, not memory: executing the multiply command for example for 2.4 million times takes 20 seconds here (I'm not that patient).…
{0;1;0}N=6
{0;1;1}N=6
{0;1;2}N=5
{0;2;0}N=7
{0;2;1}N=8
{0;2;2}N=9
Can you shift and wrap any of the paths A B or C?
Say if I wanted to shift and wrap B by 1 to get the following...
{0;0;0}N=7
{0;0;1}N=8
{0;0;2}N=9
{0;1;0}N=3
{0;1;1}N=2
{0;1;2}N=5
{0;2;0}N=6
{0;2;1}N=6
{0;2;2}N=5…