you post a screenshot of what the message coming from its readMe! output looks like?2) Close your Grasshopper and Rhino.3) Download "Revo Uninstaller Pro" from here. It is free for first 30 days, which is what we need.4) Right click on the RevoUninProSetup.exe and check if the file is blocked. If it is, unblock it.5) Run the RevoUninProSetup.exe file and install "Revo Uninstaller Pro".6) Uninstall "MapWinGIS" with "Revo Uninstaller Pro". It is important that "Revo Uninstaller Pro" deletes not only files from MapWinGIS installation folder, but also all other leftovers (as registry inputs). Here is a small tutorial on how to do that. Watch it from 6:10 till the end.7) Restart your PC8) When your Windows boots up, make sure that you are logged in as Administrator!9) In your Start menu's search box type: "UAC", which will find your User Account Control Settings. Click on it, and a new window will open. Set the bar on the left to "Never notify".10) Turn off your Windows Firewall.11) Then turn off your custom Firewall (in case you have another one, besides standard Windows Firewall).12) Completely turn off your Antivirus.13) Download again the MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe.exe file from here.14) Right click on the MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe file and see if it is blocked. If it is, unblock it.15) Right click on MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe file and choose: "Run as"... Administrator.16) One the installation preparation steps start, choose "Full installation". Wait for the MapWinGIS installation to finish.17) Right-click on "Rhino 5" icon and then choose: "Run as administrator".18) Open the the ironpython_admin.gh file again, and again post a screenshot of the message coming from its readMe! output.19) Drop the "Gismo Gismo" component to Grasshopper canvas. Post a screenshot of the message coming out from its readMe! output.
So we will need in total three screenshots of the readMe! output messages.
Thank you once again for being patient, and sorry for the large number of steps.…
Added by djordje to Gismo at 1:52am on April 9, 2017
ización de estructuras, panelización de superficies, gestión y conexión con tablas de datos, automatización de dibujo, programación visual … Adjuntamos el temario del cuso. El contenido del curso ha sido revisado y ampliado, gracias a la experiencia de nuestros anteriores. Está orientado a profesionales y estudiantes de arquitectura y diseño en general.
Será impartido por dos Authorized Rhino Trainers en Madrid, en la calle Bailén. Tiene un formato intensivo de 18 horas; el horario es: viernes, de 17 a 21; sábado, de 10 a 14 y de 16 a 20; y domingo, de 11 a 14 y de 16 a 19. El número de asistentes está limitado a un máximo de 8 personas.…
Added by Miguel Vidal at 11:11am on December 17, 2009
r-workshop programme will focus on the design and 1:1 fabrication of an interactive pavilion for the 2012 International Festival of Electronic Language (FILE). Located on Avenida Paulista, the pavilion will react to light sensors and human activity, so as to transform and create a range of different lighting and spatial effects, triggering further movement and producing an interactive feedback loop of behaviour and response. To accommodate this responsiveness, the design should be developed using recursive scripting, associative modelling and digital fabrication.
Each workshop will focus on a different phase of the pavilion’s design and construction. Instruction will be led by Rob Stuart-Smith of Kokuggia and Tristan Simmonds of Simmonds Studio, with Lawrence Friesen of Generative Geometry, Anne Save de Beaurecueil and Franklin Lee of SUBdV, together withand other AA tutors, as well as local structural engineers and set-designers. Each workshop will offer introductory instruction in computational design - Grasshopper, (GECO, Firefly) and Arduino, and digital fabrication, while advanced instruction will be offered to participants undertaking multiple workshops.
Workshop 1 will develop design variations in small models, as well as material and structural scale modeling, testing and initial 1:1 prototyping, following computational and digital fabrication instruction. Workshop 2 will produce 1:1 prototyping. Following computational and digital fabrication instruction, it will explore the mechanics and electronics of the light-sensors and motors that generate the transformations of the pavilion. Workshop 3 will fabricate the final elements, working directly with manufacturers, testing partial assemblies. Advanced development of all circuits and Arduino scripts will take place following computational and digital fabrication instruction. Workshop 4 will focus on the final assemblage of the pavilion on site.
www.aaschool.ac.uk/saopaulo.
OTHER WORKSHOPS
Workshop 2: 4–13 January 2012
Workshop 3: 3–12 April 2012
Workshop 4: 3–12 July 2012
…
nother nurbs surface that is built from control points extracted from the other two (3 three rows of control points shown in the picture are the ones I would like to use).
When I try to use the "Surface from Points" component, however, I cannot get the surface to generate properly. From my understanding of previous discussions on this forum, the U parameter should be U+1 which in my case would be 11. No parameter from 0-11 is producing the results I'm looking for, however.
My attempted solution is attached. I get the feeling the solution will be quite straightforward...
Thanks,
Austin
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hat position you would like in order:
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You still must show up on time and you still must stay and work on your project during the duration of class.
See you all next week, I hope I won't still have this cough!
-Joseph Iwaskiw…
imilar topic with a Windows 10 user, which successfully fixed this issue.If you are tiny little patient, I think we can try the same steps in your Windows 7 case.For start, try these three steps:1) Close Rhino. Restart your PC. 2) Once the PC boots up, double click on the "regMapWinGIS.cmd" file in "MapWinGIS" installation folder.3) When it closes the Command Prompt window it opened, try running Rhino, Grasshopper and drop the "Gismo Gismo" component on the canvas (Grasshopper working area).If this does not help (you get the same COM class factory CLSID error message coming out from the "Gismo Gismo" component), then try the following steps, one by one:
1) Close Grasshopper and Rhino2) Run the Revo Uninstaller Pro and uninstall your MapWinGIS application along with removing all the leftovers from the registry. You can download 30 days trial version of it from here. Here is a youtube example of a bit older Revo Uninstaller. But the important part is that is shows how registry leftovers are removed.3) Restart your PC, and once it boots again, make sure that you are logged in as an Adminstrator!4) In your Start menu's search box type: "UAC", which will find your User Account Control Settings. Click on it, and a new window will open. Set the bar on the left to "Never notify".5) Turn off your Antivirus, which ever it is.6) Download the 64 bit version of v4.9.4.2 MapWinGIS.7) Right click on downloaded MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe file, and choose "Properties". If there is "Unblock" button click on it, and then click on "OK". If there is no "Unblock" button, just click on "OK".8) Left double click on MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe file and install it to "C:\dev\MapWinGIS" folder. Choose "Full installation" during installation process!9) In your Start menu's search box type: "CMD". Once the "Command prompt" appears do not left click on it! Instead right click on it, and choose "Run as Administrator".10) A command prompt window will open. Type the following command:
"your_regsvr32_folder_path\regsvr32.exe" /u /s c:\dev\mapwingis\mapwingis.ocx
If command does not result in an error message, then type this one afterwards:
"your_regsvr32_folder_path\regsvr32.exe" /s c:\dev\mapwingis\mapwingis.ocx
11) If no error appeared again, then open your Rhino and Grasshopper and check what "Gismo Gismo" component prints from its "readMe!" output.If errors appeared, please post their screenshots. Thank you in advance.
Please accept my apologies for the large number of steps. Some of them are quite simple actually (click on this, download that...).…
Added by djordje to Gismo at 12:58pm on November 28, 2017
hem. Now I need to search through the original points that comprise the voronoi diagram and replace them with the new averaged points. I need to do this while still preserving the logic of the old data tree which is comprised of {i}j values. In other words each point is grouped into a vornoi cell so that the cells can be created with the polyline component
I believe I have a relatively simple solution, but need help create a python script that searches and replaces values within a data tree.See the psuedo code below:
Psuedo-Code:
For each item(i) in Data tree B (list of index values points to be replaced grouped into a data tree corresponding to the new point) find the corresponding integer in Data tree C (list of points grouped around {i;j} values)Then replace the integer in Data Tree C with the key value (the data tree path) that corresponds to the item from Data tree B that is replacing the item from Data tree CFor example:Data Tree B{14}(0)2(1)3(2)6(3)11(4)13(5)14Data Tree C{0;1}(0)2(1)3(2)6Output:Data Tree {0;1}(0){14}(1){14}(2){14}
List A - Single point (New Point) with Data Tree/Key value corresponding to group of points it will replace ( List B)
List B-list of index values of flattened voronoi point list with Data Tree/Key Value corresponding to List A - in other words these are all the points I need to replace with the point in List A
List C-list of index values of flattened voronoi point list with Data Tree/Key Value corresponding to {i}j values necessary to re-create voronoi cells with the polyline component
Once this is done I can use the Output and the new Points in List A to replace the set of old points in the original voronoi diagram with the new set up reduced points.
If there is another way to achieve the goal of eliminating small edges of a vorononi diagram, I'm open to suggestions.
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the loops haven't even started yet. This is a one time overhead - re-starting the loops after that doesn't have this long delay until you close and re-open the file.
Second, I got some encouraging results rather quickly but then spent WAY TOO MUCH TIME trying to replace the inner loop with a "Fast Loop". These are not well behaved in the sense that they don't respond to <ESC> like the "Classic" loops do so you can't stop them; and I never got the same results as the "Classic", no matter what I tried - but ultimately, I just got too frustrated with "Fast Loop" causing Rhino/GH and my whole laptop to freeze up - VERY BAD!!!!!!!!!!
I re-wired the loops slightly so that the hour used by your 'analysisPeriod' cluster is determined by the 'D0' value inside the inner loop.
I added a "Loop On / Loop Off" switch to stop/start the looping (which was useless with "Fast Loop" - grrr....).
I 'Simplified' the 'D1' output of the inner loop and enabled 'Record data' and 'Output after the last' on the outer loop.
And I got this - four buildings over three hours takes about 20 seconds:
Eleven buildings over three hours takes about one minute.
I'm not sure what will happen when I increase the hours and number of buildings but will try it when I have more time. It might be a good idea to avoid writing to Excel inside the loops and wait for the end results before writing them to an Excel file?
There are more possibilities for re-wiring based on simplifying various outputs but I'm tired of this for now and have other things to do. The exponential slowdown you observed might be due in part to Anemone adding an extra branch path every time it loops; adding 'Simplify' might help this?
P.S. 11 buildings over 13 hours (6am to 6pm) took 5 minutes 38 seconds.…
Added by Joseph Oster at 12:54pm on January 18, 2016