Grasshopper

algorithmic modeling for Rhino

Dear Users,

I've been working on data tree selection rules this weekend and when 0.9.0063 is released (hopefully tomorrow, 4th November) the [Path Compare], [Tree Split] and [Replace Path] components will work slightly different from before. Sorry about breaking this, but it proved impossible to improve the selection logic with the fairly ambiguous notation that was implemented already.

Not every change is breaking though and I hope that most simple matching rules will work as before. There will be a McNeel webinar on Wednesday the 6th of November where I discuss the new selection rules (as well as path mapping syntax and relative offsets within one or more data trees). This will be a pretty hard-core webinar aimed at expert users. The event will be recorded so you can always go and watch it later. I figured I'd briefly explain the new selection rules on Ning before I release the update though.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Imagine we have the following data tree, containing a bunch of textual characters:

{0;0} = [a,e,i,o,u,y]
{0;1} = [ä,ë,ê,ï,î,ö,ô,õ,ü,û,ÿ,ý]
{1;0} = [b,c,d,f,g,h,j,k,l,m,n,p,q,r,s,t,v,w,x,z]
{1;1} = [ç,ĉ,č,ĝ,ř,š,ş,ž]

There are a total of four branches {0;0}, {0;1}, {1;0} and {1;1}. The first branch contains all the vowels that are part of the standard English alphabet. The second branch contains all non-standard vowels and branches three and four contain the standard and non-standard consonants respectively.

So what if we want to select from this tree only the standard vowels? Basically include everything in the first branch and disregard everything else. We can use the [Tree Split] component with a selection rule to achieve this:

{0;0}

This selection rule hard-codes the number zero in both tree path locations. It doesn't define an item index rule, so all items in {0;0} will be selected.

If we want all the vowels (both standard and non-standard), then we have several options:

{0;?}         = select all branches that start with 0

{0;(0,1)}    = select all branches that start with 0 and end in either 0 or 1

{0;(0 to 1)} =    ......................................... and end in the range 0 to 1.

Conversely, selecting all standard vowels and consonants while disregarding all non-standard character can be achieved with rules as follows:

{?;0}

{(0,1);0}

{(0 to 1);0}

It is also possible to select items from each branch in addition to limiting the selection to specific branches. In this case another rule stated in square brackets needs to be appended:

{0;?}[0 to 2]

The above rule will select the first three vowels from the standard and the non-standard lists.

Basically, rules work in a very consistent way, but there are some syntax conventions you need to know. The first thing to realize is that every individual piece of data in a data-tree can be uniquely and unambiguously identified by a collection of integers. One integer describes its index within the branch and the others are used to identify the branch within the tree. As a result a rule for selection items always looks the same:

{A;B;C;...;Z}[i]              where A, B, C, Z and i represent rules.

It's very similar to the Path Mapper syntax except it uses square brackets instead of parenthesis for the index (the Path Mapper will follow suit soon, but that won't be a breaking change). You always have to define the path selector rule in between curly brackets. You can supply any number of rules as long as you separate them with semi-colons.

The index rule is optional, but -when provided- it has to be encased in square brackets after the path selection rule(s).

The following rule notations are allowed:

*  Any number of integers in a path

?  Any single integer

6  Any specific integer

!6  Anything except a specific integer

(2,6,7)  Any one of the specific integers in this group.

!(2,6,7)  Anything except one of the integers in this group.

(2 to 20)  Any integer in this range (including both 2 and 20).

!(2 to 20) Any integer outside this range.

(0,2,...)  Any integer part of this infinite sequence. Sequences have to be at least two integers long, and every subsequent integer has to be bigger than the previous one (sorry, that may be a temporary limitation, don't know yet).

(0,2,...,48)  Any integer part of this finite sequence. You can optionally provide a single sequence limit after the three dots.

!(3,5,...)  Any integer not part of this infinite sequence. The sequence doesn't extend to the left, only towards the right. So this rule would select the numbers 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 and all remaining even numbers.

!(7,10,21,...,425)  Any integer not part of this finite sequence.

Furthermore, it is possible to combine two or more rules using the boolean and/or operators. If you want to select the first five items in every list of a datatree and also the items 7, 12 and 42, then the selection rule would look as follows:

{*}[(0 to 4) or (6,11,41)]

The asterisk allows you to include all branches, no matter what their paths looks like.

It is at present not possible to use the parenthesis to define rule precedence, rules are always evaluated from left to right. It is at present also not possible to use negative integers to identify items from the end of a list.

If you want to know more, join the Webinar on Wednesday!

--

David Rutten

david@mcneel.com

Seattle, WA

Views: 73629

Replies to This Discussion

Frans, that is planned for GH2. Along with ways to 'bake' data (not just geometry) to the Rhino file and to files on disk and the possibility to create custom data types by combining existing types. None of these are promises though, but I'll try to make that work.

--

David Rutten

david@mcneel.com

Seattle, WA

Sweet!

//fr

Hi David, 

Where can we find the webinar now? 
Has it been uploaded already?

G

Hi Guido is here https://vimeo.com/78886857

Great, this is definitely needed. Is your sybtax based on an existing standard? Lexical?
Wirh the range syntax have you thought of adding another keyword such as "by"

1 to 10 by 2

1 3 5 7 9

would be (1,2...10) ? (1,3,...,10)

dont get you, i am saying sleect numbers in range 1 to 10, starting from 1 with a step of 2.

1 to 10 by 3 = 1 4 7 10

1 to 10 by 5 = 1 6 

1 to 10 by 1 = 1 to 10 = 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 

[1,4,...,10] = 1 to 10 by 3 = 1 4 7 10

[1,6,...,10] = 1 to 10 by 5 = 1 6 

[1,2,...,10] = 1 to 10 by 1 = 1 to 10 = 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Interesting, thanks, we really need a mask syntax help me/tutorial.........

Hi David,

you are saying

![3,5,...]  Any integer not part of this infinite sequence.

What is  the reason I can´t use {*}![0,2,...,6]  , but need to notate {*}[!(0,2,...,6)]  instead?

At the (great) webinar you explained the next step would be to include negative notations to also start a sequence from the end of a list or go backwards.

Does this mean (the never been used) negative branching will become illegal?

Hi Phillip,

oops, my bad. I used wrong brackets in my examples! *facepalm* I fixed it now.

The notation uses curly brackets to specify all path selection and square brackets to specify index selection. So basically it always looks like this:

{~~~~~~} [~~~~~~~~]

If you don't specify the square brackets, then [*] is assumed. At the moment the same is not true for curly brackets, but it probably should. I.e. if you omit the curly brackets then {*} should be assumed.

Nothing (except whitespace) is allowed to exist outside these two bracket groups, which is why you're not allowed to put a negation symbol in front of the square brackets.

Note that parenthesis are optional so you don't actually have to write "{*}[!(0,2,...,6)]", you can get away with "{*}[!0,2,...,6]"

--

David Rutten

david@mcneel.com

Tirol, Austria

RSS

About

Translate

Search

Photos

  • Add Photos
  • View All

Videos

  • Add Videos
  • View All

© 2024   Created by Scott Davidson.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service