ere are ways to remap the data (PathMapper etc) and there's an excellent tutorial by David Rutten about path mapper on this forum somewhere.
And always look at whether you simply need to flatten your data to ba able to work with it.
For point lists I often use the PointNumber component to help visualise the data and the good old Panel component helps too!
When you see some of the elegant, compact definitions on here, there often seems to be some mystical foresight needed right from the first component but hopefully this jedi skill comes with practice!…
Added by martyn hogg at 12:24pm on January 13, 2014
ular heights and widths of units.
3. I then fill these grids with placement panels.
4. Create 2D adaptive components with materials applied along with parameters for specified offsets of materials. I'll name each ac as a unit type name ie WT-1, WT-2 etc.
5. I replace the placement panels with particular adaptive components (unit types).
6. I prepare a schedule for both unit and material takeoff in Revit.
So I guess I would like to achieve something similar to this where I can have multiple unit types already made/determined with materials and apply them to a grid or divided surfaces and they will adapt or fit into this divided grid. and from there i could extract data like sqft of a particular unit and material.
see attached images for clarification and thanks again for your time and help, this issue has had me stumped for a while now and I'd love to solve it.
Thanks again
…
les, also this image shows where i'm defining/assigning all of them:
BTW, the warehouse stuff appears ONLY in the exportToOpenStudio option.
Finally, i'm not conditioning the zones. Explicitly i asked to set the isConditioned_ input in the HB_createHBZones to False. The discussion you mentioned approaches this differently oversizing the heating/Cooling so you never need the AC. The IDF created don't have any definition of IdealSystems, so i don't believe this is the problem. If you want to see the IDF files you can see them above (attached in a previous message).
Weird ...
Thanks,
-A.
…
/stackoverflow.com/questions/7735036/naudio-frequency-band-in...
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17222492/how-to-change-frequency...;
I am no expert in this field; I would have to do research just like you. Maybe someone else on this forum has already done more work in this area, let's see. Or it might be you, the first one :)
This does not look like something completely at reach for someone with not much programming experience, but maybe with some guidance it could be doable.
--
>>Do you know other libraries that I can use with it?Sorry I would have to search for other libraries just like you.
EDIT: This link has a simple sine wave written from scratch. It might be a good start to mix with the code above and a playground to understand theory.
Giulio--Giulio Piacentinofor Robert McNeel & Associatesgiulio@mcneel.com…
ntage...
This is a standard mesh to nurbs conversion result: http://www.tsplines.com/j/subdtonurbs/MeshToNurbsBoatShell.png
You want to start with a proper mesh reparametrization:
http://www3.cs.stonybrook.edu/~gu/software/RiemannMapper/figures/ti...
Once you have your mesh reparametrized it's relatively easy to divide it into surfaces. That is the easiest approach but it doesn't take into account any features(creases etc)...
This illustrates a nice mesh parametrization with features.
https://www.graphics.rwth-aachen.de/media/paper_images/qgp_340.png
EDIT:
Got a brief look at the Geomagic thingy... seems like it's a subd modeler (like tsplines). Creating nurbs out of subd meshes is easy cause you can basically trace back the subdivision. With Giulios help I was able to make a rough version of that process here: http://www.grasshopper3d.com/forum/topics/skeletal-mesh?commentId=2985220%3AComment%3A558193 ;
(the point is that subd meshes to nurbs are not as much challenging as mesh to nurbs).…
can be found in "C:\Documents and Settings\<user name>\Application Data\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\Plug-ins\IronPython\settings\lib\rhinoscript" folder on WinXP. So could have used yours too.
RhinoCommon is a SDK and basically the power behind grasshopper and rhinoscriptsyntax functions. In fact each time you call a rhinoscriptsyntax, a RhinoCommon code gets executed.
And, yes:
import Rhino - imports RhinoCommon
import utility - enables importing utility.coercebrep() (or coerce3dpoint() coercecurve() ... so on)
Item access means an input is consisted of a single item.List access means an input is a list.Tree access means an input is consisted of a tree with data on different branches.rs.BooleanDifference requires both of it's arguments to be lists, so it would be logical to set the inputs b1 and b2 as lists. But there is one problem, that Mitch pointed out to me: it seems that python components (like grasshopper components) are "intelligent", and can distinguish whether you are inputting item, list, or tree. Setting your input as list, might disable this ability and leave you with only possible type of input (list).So honestly I do not know why in this case, setting the inputs to Lists worked - due to mentioned "intelligence" of python component, even an Item type would work.This might be a question for an experienced user, I am just a beginner.…
e some questions.
I want to loop with a foreach loop trough a list of points do i have to make a list before or is it possible to use them coming in from a noed i set the access to list?
Also i dont understand why no plane is created. How do i need to feed the points in?
And why is c# expecting open parens in line 88 and 86?
Hope its not to much at once, probably i should try a few less steps to get the problems solved one by one, just hoped it would be easier and sometimes just a parentesis is missing or some format stuff, so maybe it is not so much i really cant say.
If anybody has the time and feels he wants to help it would be nice on the other hand i understand cause of the amount of chaotic questions.
Regards!…