That is correct. In reality there are 3 major versions of .NET 1, 2, and 4 (different versions of mscorlib.dll)
Rhino 4 uses .NET 2 which includes 3 and 3.5.
Rhino 5 uses .NET 4
simplified in the bake name attribute and on the bake object component. I was counting on maintaining that structure.
{0;4}
{0;4}
{1;2}
{1;2}
Easily fixed with an additional attribute. Just curious on the behavior. Thanks.
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Added by japhy to EleFront at 3:18pm on October 9, 2017
nts me this:
[[0], [0, 1], [0, 1, 2], [0, 1, 2, 3], [0, 1, 2, 3, 4], [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5], [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]]
this is what I wanted but how to convert this to tree in grasshopper?
In grasshopper I just get:
8x IronPython.Runtime.List…
branches in each A's list of B's, or remove its ends etcso that if I want to remove the last B in every A{0;1},{0;2},{0;3},{0;4},{0;5},{0;6}{1;1},{1;2},{1;3},{1;4}{2;1},{2;2},{2;3},{2;4},{2;5}would become{0;1},{0;2},{0;3},{0;4},{0;5}
{1;1},{1;2},{1;3}
{2;1},{2;2},{2;3},{2;4}I guess the question is do I need to figure out the cull pattern- each B may have different lengths...…
} (N=11) {0;1} (N=11) {0;2}(N = 11) {0;3}(N = 11) {0;4}(N = 11)
2. I run the Points that are coming out from the Divide Curve Components through the Path Mapper components with this definition:
{A;B} (i) > {A} (i)
3. I run data coming out from Path Mapper component through:
a) Parameter Viewer component and the result is:
{0} N=11 (data with 1 branches)
b) Point > Panel and the result is:
collection of 11 point (N=11) which is the exactly the same as the collection of point belonging to {0;4} (N = 11).
So, here is the question:
why the collection of points coming out from the Path Mapper {A;B} (i) > {A} (i) component is the same as the collection of points belonging to the curve {0;4}(N = 11) ?
Anyway ... It 's the first time I ask a question here... so I would like to thank you for what you do with your work! Thank you! You are really great!…
rated by "<" symbols. Examples: "2<10", "2<4<10", "Pow(2, 1)<5*Sin(3)<10".
The entered text contains 2 or 3 segments separated by two or more consecutive dots. Examples "2..10", "2..4..10", "Pow(2, 1)....5*Sin(3)..10".
If only two segments are provided, then the initial value will be the same as the minimum value. If a bounds number or a default value is written as a simple number, then the number of decimal places will be harvested. I.e. "2..4..10" is not the same as "2..4..10.00" as the former will result in an integer slider and the latter in a slider with two decimal places.
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…
Added by David Rutten at 10:08am on February 15, 2013