another example could be:
index 3 value 6
index 4 value 6
index 5 value 6
flipped and branched:
branch 6 index 0 value 3
branch 6 index 1 value 4
branch 6 index 2 value 5
Added by Ante Ljubas at 12:50pm on October 22, 2010
a specific domain, for example:
0.) 0 to 1 -----> 11 random values from 0 to 1 (0.245,0.678,0.36,0.78,.28,0.18........)
1.) 1 to 2 -----> 11 random values from 1 to 2 (1.26,1.36,1.01,1.68,1.26,1.96.........)
3.) 2 to 3 -----> 11 random values from 2 to 3 (2.96,2.45,2.78,2.56,2.98,2.10..........)
4.) 3 to 4 and so on where I have a data set containing 11 paths with 11 values and the values fall within the specific domain.
Like my post above I have the correct path but I need to feed it the correct seed to get different values for each number. I tried grafting a series similar to the last post but it scrambles my data. Thanks so much for the help!
…
is shorthand for [0 to 8].
> 10 Any number larger than X. This notation is shorthand for [11 to infinity].
>= 5 Any number larger than or equal to X. This notation is shorthand for [5 to infinity].
--
David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Seattle, WA…
Added by David Rutten at 9:27pm on November 3, 2013
the one-but-last list [4]. After running out of the n- items avalaible it should continue with the second item of list 0 and so on for all items on all the lists.
Intput, six lists of 30 items each
[0] (n=30)
[1] (n=30)
[2] (n=30)
[3] (n=30)
[4] (n=30)
[5] (n=30)
Output, 18 lists of 10 items each
[0],i=0;[5],i=4; [4],i=7;...
[0],i=1;[5],i=5; [4],i=8;...
...
[5],i=1;[4],i=5; [3],i=0;...
I thought perhaps the weave component or the relative tree item component but didn't manage to figure out how to compose the mask. I couldn't find much on how to use these. I guess it should wrap the lists, but not the items.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.…
Added by Thorsten Lang at 2:27am on January 24, 2011