(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…
know how to solve.
It appears in
11 - Honeybee Energy Modeling - The Laws of Geometry in E+ Part 3: Curved Geometry
where I need to retrieve .idf file,
and shows this message:
1. Solution exception:'hb_EPZoneSurface' object has no attribute 'punchedGeometry'
I've added .gh file at a state where I meet the problem.
Also, I've looked around the forum and found some mention OpeanStudio related problems, mainly one's lack of it. Could it be the source of the problem, because I only followed Installation Instructions and haven't installed OpenStudio.
…
is shorthand for [0 to 8].
> 10 Any number larger than X. This notation is shorthand for [11 to infinity].
>= 5 Any number larger than or equal to X. This notation is shorthand for [5 to infinity].
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Seattle, WA…
Added by David Rutten at 9:27pm on November 3, 2013
rve
10 curve
11 curve
12 curve
13 curve
...and I'd like to rearrange the order in which the curve are listed, to something like this:
{0,0,0}
0 curve
1 curve
8 curve
9 curve
10 curve
11 curve
2 curve
3 curve
4 curve
5 curve
12 curve
13 curve
6 curve
7 curve
I hope this makes sense.
Thank in advance for any advice,
John…
nput parameter and then set the named values on the second?
protected override void BeforeSolveInstance() { Param_Integer param0 = Params.Input[0] as Param_Integer; Param_Integer param1 = Params.Input[1] as Param_Integer; param1.ClearNamedValues();
GH_Structure<GH_Integer> data = param0.VolatileData as GH_Structure<GH_Integer>; if (data.IsEmpty) return; foreach (GH_Integer value in data.AllData(true)) { switch (value.Value) { case 1: param1.AddNamedValue("First option for 1", 11); param1.AddNamedValue("Second option for 1", 12); param1.AddNamedValue("Third option for 1", 13); break;
case 2: param1.AddNamedValue("First option for 2", 21); param1.AddNamedValue("Second option for 2", 22); param1.AddNamedValue("Third option for 2", 23); break;
case 3: param1.AddNamedValue("First option for 3", 31); param1.AddNamedValue("Second option for 3", 32); param1.AddNamedValue("Third option for 3", 33); break; } return; } }
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com…
Added by David Rutten at 1:56am on December 18, 2013