byte-accuracy red, green, blue channels) = 27 bytes. More likely 28 bytes as colours are probably stored as 32-bit integers, allowing for an unused alpha channel.
28 * 800,000 equals roughly 22 megabytes, which is way down from 9 gigabytes. That's a 400 fold memory overhead, which is pretty hefty.
Grasshopper stores points as instances of classes, so on 64-bit systems it actually takes 64+64+3*8 = 152 bytes per point*, which adds up to 122MB, still way less than 9GB. It would be interesting to know where all the memory goes...
* Grasshopper points also store reference data, in case they come from the Rhino document. This data will not exist, but even so it will require 64-bits of storage.…
Added by David Rutten at 4:13pm on December 11, 2014
t item (see the image), is it possible to do this in another way (quickly) ?
Is it possible to divide that curve into 2 separate curves using a point that i've used for the division?
Thanks…
Added by luca.pavarin at 4:08pm on January 7, 2010