How are you defining lowest X/Y and highest X/Y? For example, if I have three 2D Points:
{-5, 10}
{-3, 0}
{4, -10}
Which of them qualifies for the highest and which the lowest?
Added by David Stasiuk at 11:36am on February 13, 2016
(10^(-62)≤n) and (n>10^(-14))
Shouldn't this become :
10^(-4)≤n
(10^(-9)≤n) and (n<10^(-4))
(10^(-14)≤n) and (n<10^(-9))
(10^(-62)≤n) and (n<10^(-14))
…
opper is all these values "recognizing" as similar/same.
I got list of results (n) with following values:
0. -3.2584e-9 1. -4.4992e-9 2. -6.7220e-9 3. -4.5154e-9 4. -4.3325e-9 5. -2.2496e-9 6. -2.2385e-9 7. -6.7525e-9 8. -4.5154e-9
Even though most of these values (maybe all of them) "go" into the second group:
(10^(-9)≤n) and (n>10^(-4))
Grasshopper recognizes all of them as members of the first group:
10^(-4)≥n
I am aware that this kind of very small values are unusual, and maybe Grasshopper is not made for it. But is there any way this can be done?
Take a look:
Thank you.…
Panels contain text, not numbers. "10" is less than "5" because it starts with a "1", which sorts less than "5".
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia
Added by David Rutten at 4:51pm on October 8, 2012
d to progress linearly between the two limits. It may well be that if you divide a surface with domain (0 to 10) into ten strips, you end up with strips that have physical dimensions like (5, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 5), rather than all being the same.…
Added by David Rutten at 6:45am on February 24, 2015