rera de Arquitectura CEM | presenta la cordial invitación al Curso de Diseño Computacional a realizarse en nuestros laboratorios de Arquitectura y Diseño Industrial del Campus Estado de México.
Fecha: jueves 21, viernes 22 de 18: a 22:00 Hrs y sábado 23 de 8:00 a 15:00 Hrs febrero 2013. 15 Horas.
El taller está orientado a estudiantes y profesionales de la Arquitectura, Arte, el Diseño e Ingeniería.
COSTO:
Alumnos Tec o EXATEC con una cuota de $2000.00 pesos.* Estudiantes EXTERNOS y profesores TEC $3000.00*, Estudiantes de posgrado externos $3800.00* y Profesionales externos $4250.00 pesos.*
OBJETIVO GENERAL:
Alfabetización sobre lectura y escritura de herramientas computacionales para el desarrollo de la Arquitectura, Diseño e Ingeniería.
Objetivos específicos:
1. Comprenderá los conceptos metodológicos del Diseño Computacional y generativo.
2. Aplicará las metodologías en el diseño, análisis y despiece de una cubierta (celosía, muro, losa, fachada o mobiliario) con base en un espacio existente en el campus.
3. Desarrollará los conceptos de programación orientada a objetos (POO Intermedia)
4. Generará algoritmos y análisis en Grasshopper sobre el ejemplo de praxis.
5. Desarrollo de documentación y presentación de resultados.
6. Fabricación del objeto, escala por definir.
Requisitos: Conocimiento de alguna plataforma CAD/CAM/CAE.
Profesor:
Arq. David Hernández Melgarejo.
http://bioarchitecturestudio.wordpress.com
Mayor información:
Kathrin Schröter, Dipl.-Ing./Arch. (D)
Directora de la Carrera de Arquitectura e Ingeniería Civil
Escuela de Diseño, Ingeniería y Arquitectura
Campus Estado de México
TEC DE MONTERREY
Tel.: (52/55) 5864 5555 Ext. 5685 o 5750
Enlace intercampus:80.236.5685
Fax: (52/55) 5864 5319
kschroter@itesm.mx
www.itesm.mx
…
occur more than once in the same list, and different elements with identical values can occur more than once. Also, a list may contain lack of elements, referred to as "nulls".
Sets. Strictly speaking a Set is a mathematical construct which adheres to a strict collection of rules and limitations. Basically, a Set is the same as a List, with the exception that it cannot contain the same element more than once, or indeed two or more different elements with the same values. You see, in mathematics there is no difference between a value and an instance of that value, they are the same thing. In programming however it is possible to store the number 7 in more than one spot in the RAM. Grasshopper does not enforce this rule very strongly though, you can use a lot of Set components on lists that have multiple occurrences of the same value. The big difference between Lists and Sets in Grasshopper is that Sets are only defined for simple data types that have trivial equality comparisons. Basically: booleans, integers, numbers, complex numbers, strings, points, vectors, colours and intervals. Lists can contain all kinds of data.
Strings. Strings are text. There's nothing more to it. I don't know why early programmers chose to call them strings, but I suppose it's a better description of the memory representation of them. Strings are essentially sequences of individual characters.
Trees. Trees are the way all data is stored in Grasshopper. Even when you only have a single item, it will still be stored in a tree. A tree is a sorted collection of lists, where each list is identified by a path. A specific path can only occur once in a tree, when you merge two trees together, lists with identical paths are appended to each other. Trees are an attempt to losslessly represent not just the data itself, but also the history of that data. Imagine you have 4 curves {A,B,C,D} and you divide each into 3 points {X,Y,Z}. Then, for each of those points you create a new line segment {X',Y',Z'} and then divide each of those line segments again into 5 points each {K,L,M,N,O}. The way data is stored in trees, it should be possible to figure out whether a point M belongs to X' or to Z', and whether that X' or Z' came from A, B, C or D. This is why paths are often quite long after a while, because they encode a lot of history.
Paths. A Path is nothing more than a list of integers. It's denoted using curly brackets and semi-colons: {A;B;...;Z}. A Path should never be empty {} or have negative integers {0;-1}, but it is certainly possible to create a path like this and it probably won't even crash Grasshopper. Paths are 'grown' by components that (potentially) create more than one output value for a single input value. For example Divide Curve. It creates N points for every single input curve. In cases like this a new integer is appended to the end of the path.
In the next release the Path logic in Grasshopper is somewhat different. I fixed a number of obscure bugs (hopefully without introducing new fresh bugs) and special cased certain operations to somewhat reduce the speed at which paths grow. This may well break files that rely on a specific tree layout, but I hope the temporary sacrifice will be worth the long-term benefits.
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…
ole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 09.02.2019
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 16.02.2019
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/en/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-tickets-320822/…
hole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 06.04.2019
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 13.04.2019
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/en/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-tickets-331347/…
hole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 22.06.2019
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 29.06.2019
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/en/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-tickets-348801/…
hole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 17.08.2019
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 24.08.2019
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/en/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-tickets-369321…
hole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 16.11.2019
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 23.11.2019
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/en/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-tickets-385460/…
hole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 18.01.2020
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 25.01.2020
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-Tickets-397133…
hole new realm?
This Parametric Design Workshop will provide you with the necessary knowledge and ability to use Grasshopper, a free visual programming plugin in Rhinoceros. The workshop will also include a hands on parametric project.
If you already know Grasshopper and would like to uplift your parametric knowledge, then you can choose option 2.
Option 1: General Workshop for Beginners - 16 hours: Start 07.03.2020
Option 2: Intensive Workshop for Intermediates - 8 hours: Start 14.03.2020
Kindly reserve your Tickets here:
https://billetto.eu/e/parametric-design-workshop-rhino-grasshopper-lava-berlin-Tickets-409585
…
nda like a T-Rex).
BTW: The real thing:
(a) accepts different top-bottom nurbs controlled by a variety of ways including attractors etc etc.This is the reason that several components are not "minimized" (this def is a "bit" garrulous I confess, he he).
(b) has clash detection capabilities in order to avoid embarrassing moments when talking with these Germans.
(c) has images of nice looking girls (for inspiration purposes).
(d) has images of MERO cases.
(e) uses about 50% less components.
(f) exports (EXCEL) drilling axis for those Germans.
...
(z) can manage cladding support systems/corrugated sheets/etc without them... this def is 100% academic (see the unfortunate Roissy 2F and a myriad similar cases). Given the opportunity use Foamglas (1 "s") and avoid a myriad of issues.
BTW: this is a classic case about why we desperately need a decent block management at bake time: assume that you want to export something to your favorite AEC app (AECOSim, Revit, Allplan blah blah). By what means can you do it? (other than exporting a myriad of "individual/stand alone" balls/cones/tubes etc etc).
best, Peter
…