1 think leaves one thing enters 2 things leave 2 things enter 4 things leave etc in a 1 2 4 8 16 32 fashion. However, often times, I only want to iterate on the one thing not every instance over and over. In the simple example i just want to loop the component 30 times and end up with 30 curves, each one built off the previous. However, as seen below setting it to 30 gives you 8 final curves with tons of copies from previous generations being copied. Is there a way around this?…
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.…
s and..set of 25 points?.."= when my 2 surfaces points(xyz coords) are written to XL i assumed the one with 30 points would take up more "cells"(longer columns) in XL than the set with 20. So yes, i am for example trying to interpolate between 2 sets of points one with 30+ points and one with 25+ points,."..just rotate it back 90 degrees using the "rotate" function.."= tried that 1st, but although it rotated the Patch it did not correct or affect Copy Trims errored rotation,.I'll prep and upload my def. if you like?,
Thanks for reply & suggestions,
Jeff…
cell. Form a fitness parameter from that. Region union all 20 cells and claculate length of border. Calculate fitness as deviation of border lenght from desired length. combine fitnesses.
Plug point coordinates as genes and combined deviation as fitness. Run galapagos.…
NURBS using Rhinoceros. Content includes: Basic terminology, user interface, workflow strategies, using reference material and creating drawings from modeled geometry.
Workshop 2: Introduction to Parametric Design
Instructor: Rajaa Issa
(12:30 PM-3:30 PM)
This workshop will introduce the general framework of parametric thinking with a series of hands-on tutorials using Grasshopper for Rhinoceros. It is meant for beginners who have little to no idea about parametric modeling. The workshop will introduce the general components of an algorithm, design workflow, Grasshopper interface and visualization techniques. The students are expected to have basic knowledge of the Rhino modeling environment. Workshop 1 should fulfill this requirement.
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