pen Brep"; I didn't know it worked on flat surfaces. And I think it's only fair to include in your benchmark the considerable time 'SUnion' takes in this example: 21.9 seconds for 121 rings and likely much more with 400 or 1,000+ rings.
Then I noticed the pattern doesn't match. Checked the circles and they are the same. The distance between them, however, is different: 7 instead of 6. When I change that value to 6, the Python fails badly. All the holes and gaps are gone, which destroys the pattern:
I can't do the "two phase" approach on an 11 X 11 grid, but I can do 6 X 6 and 2 X 2 to get a 12 X 12 grid (40 'SUnion' operations) in 28 seconds total. That beats your benchmark of ~37 seconds for an 11 X 11 grid, if you include the 'SUnion' in your code.
…
r like in Excel columns) - it includes some ridiculous error checking with Gh testing + stream filters which I'll likely replace with more efficient Python when I revisit. Let me know your thoughts.
Best,
Brian…
Added by Brian Ringley at 2:59pm on September 16, 2015
tName_FinalProject_PartD.pdf
Below is the desk crit list, please sign up for a spot in the comments below:
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See you Monday!…
erations, is not it?
This is what I finally want and how I plan to do it:
In the starting tree, points are listed accordingly to the (11) 4-side-panels they belong to. I need to do a tree where each of the 11 lists contains not the points composing the panels but the points code of the points composing the panels. the point code is the number in the flattened list that refers to the points (like, panel 1 is made of points n 0,1,4,18, and so on). To do this, I suppose that I will use my tree of 11 lists of 33 true-false values, and apply it to cull 11 times a series of numbers from 0 to 32. I ll post it if it works!…
ee 3)
{5}
0 15
{6}
0 16
And I want to place points at every possible combination of these coordinates, treating Tree 1 as X coordinates, Tree 2 as Y coordinates, and Tree 3 as Z coordinates. Also, I would like the list of points to be a tree with paths corresponding to the coordinates. Wouldn't it be nice if I could plug these trees into a Point XYZ, with a new "branch cross reference" method, and get the following result?
{0:3:5}
0 {10.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{0:3:6}
0 {10.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{0:4:5}
0 {10.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{0:4:6}
0 {10.0, 14.0, 16.0}
{1:3:5}
0 {11.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{1:3:6}
0 {11.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{1:4:5}
0 {11.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{1:4:6}
0 {11.0, 14.0, 16.0}
{2:3:5}
0 {12.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{2:3:6}
0 {12.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{2:4:5}
0 {12.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{2:4:6}
0 {12.0, 14.0, 16.0}
In this form of cross referencing, every combination of individual branches from the different lists is used as separate input, and the output for each combination is put onto a branch in the result whose path is the concatenation of the input branch paths used.…
Added by Andy Edwards at 7:03pm on November 3, 2009
une 7 at Madison Square Garden. Promoted by Miguel Cotto Promotions, Top Rank®, DiBella Entertainment and Sampson Boxing, in association with Maravilla Box, Tecate and Madison Square Garden.Fight Tickets and PPV InfoCotto vs Martinez tickets are now available for purchase online at Ticketnetwork. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Buy Tickets Center at (855) 859-4045. The fight will be produced and distributed live by HBO Pay-Per-View®, beginning at 9:00 p.m. ET/6:00 p.m. PT.Hall of Fame trainer Freddie Roach is devising a cunning and effective strategy to, badger, outfox, and hound WBC middleweight champion Sergio “Maravilla” Martinez (51-2-2, 28KOs) into a brush with defeat, on June 7th at Madison Square Garden. Roach is training former three division world champion Miguel Cotto (38-4, 31KOs) for the match.“We have seen Martinez fights. I observed him closely when I was in Julio Cesar Chavez Jr’s corner, and he’s very fast. But…like all opponents he can be outboxed. If Miguel focuses on his body, Martinez will loose his speed and that’s when we will knock him out,” Roach mused.Cotto (38-4, 31 KO) and Martinez (51-2-2, 28 KO) will meet for Martinez’s WBC middleweight title and The Ring Magazine championship at Madison Square Garden, promoted by Top Rank, DiBella Entertainment, and Miguel Cotto Promotions.“Face Off” will premiere on Saturday, May 24 at Midnight EDT (so technically, the first minutes of Sunday, May 25, technically), after the May 24 HBO Boxing After Dark card, featuring Bryant Jennings vs Mike Perez, Daniel Geale vs Matthew Macklin, and Edwin Rodriguez vs Marcus Johnson.Other air times:HBO air times include: May 24 (12:00 a.m.), 25 (10:00 a.m.), 27 (3:15 p.m. & 2:30 a.m.), 28 (12:30 a.m.), 29 (5:30 p.m.), 30 (10:30 a.m.), 31 (7:00 p.m.) and June 3 (12:30 p.m. & 3:30 a.m.), 5 (1:15 a.m.), 6 (6:45 p.m.) and 7 (10:45 a.m.).HBO2 air times include: May 25 (5:30 p.m.), 26 (10:45 a.m. & 3:30 a.m.) 30 (4:00 p.m.) and 31 (11:30 p.m.).…