the parametric equations.
I managed to do other sorts of spirals, but here I cant get a grip on the integral.
( http://mathworld.wolfram.com/JacobiEllipticFunctions.html )
Calculus has been a while. Any practical hints how to proceed besides reading http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral ?
Thanks,
Phillip…
e able to loft them correctly. picked a point on the curve, decomposed points, selected x-output. but how to arrange the curves now from -n to +n?
cause my list looks like: -90,-80,-70,10,20,30,-60,-50,-40,40...
im so sorry but i have no idea, and unfortunately no time :(
thx in advance
michael…
nologically label them (there are currently 65 points and this is labelled as in the file i've attached). However, what i'm actually after is to reformat these points into an x and y style grid.(a1, a2, a3, a4, a5)(b1, b2, b3, b4, b5)(c1, c2, c3, c4, c5)(d1, d2, d3, d4, d5) etc.Any ideas/help how this can be made possible would be great.Thanks in advance…
%.
I us Revit, Maya, Microstation/GC SDK often and find rhinoCommon the most straight forward and easy to use.
reflector + Object Browser in VS is the best way to learn…
der to use the definition there have to be at least as many sliders as there are curves you selected. I have tested it with a grid structure where it preforms at about 80%.
Richard…
ybody has thought of or Seen in competition renderings. It Shows you in an understandable Way and in a Handy Format the tools you can use to fulfill your ideas. As i am nö Student anymore i don't find the Time to teach myself a Complex prog like Grasshopper-i really recommend it
W…
ing circles with three different radii.
Link to Video: http://vimeo.com/16060472
Work done at Proctor and Matthews Architect:
http://www.proctorandmatthews.com/welcome…
ndom positions which I don't know.
my aim is to spread squares like a grid in a big rectangle, by choosing the percentage between the total areas of all squares and the area of the big rectangle. for examples I want the squares to cover 80% of the rectangle.
the closest thing I could get is by arraying 1X1 small square to cover the whole rectangle, then i scale the small square by 0.8. but the final area was less than 80% so that didn't work well but it is the best I could do.
any idea of a better way to do that?
Cheers,
Ahmad…
Added by Ahmad Kotbi at 10:22am on November 8, 2015
GH) > then define (still in GH) some instance definition (or many: case variants) > then place it according some "policy" (3d point grid and the likes). Note: Only doable with code, mind (C# in my case).
Obviously you can skip the creation part and instruct GH to deal with instance definitions already listed in the Block Manager (say: find the block named "cell666_B3" blah, blah) ... but that means that you can only use them (meaning a rather "limited" parametric approach) and not make them from scratch (meaning a true parametric approach).
But I guess that you've tried the block way in the Rhino environment already. That said I use rather solely this approach in GH and yields quite manageable object collections - I would say "real-time" response (up to 20K instances) but I use dedicated Xeon E5 1630 V3 workstations (with NVida Quadros K4200 and up for the graphic response part of the equation) so the "performance" is rather a subjective thing.
Modifications:
easily doable with GH (on instance definitions at placing time: since you need only to scale them and not vary their topology).
Anyway post a portion of the R file.…
FORE MeshMachine (rather better) or after
BTW: For a mesh with 7M points ... well... you'll need some proper CPU to deal in a reasonable amount of time (what about a Xeon E5 1630 V3?).
Alternatively find a friend who knows very well Modo ... and see first hand what the US Movie Industry is all about.…