algorithmic modeling for Rhino
This must be simple but I am banging my head against a wall.
I have a periodic, degree 3 curve with 4 control points. There are sliders driving the placement of the control points on the XZ plane. I want to be sure that the curve itself never has points that meet or exceed a certain value of X. For example, no point on the curve should ever have an X value of -10 or above.
Anyone able to get that through my thick skull?
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Hi Matthew,
there's no straightforward way to limit your points in such a way so as to prevent the curve from stepping over the x=-10 boundary. It's easy to determine whether the condition is broken (just use a boundingbox) but it's difficult to fix this problem. Here's a couple of algorithms that spring to mind immediately, none of them very good:
1) You could choose to pick the control-point with the highest x-value and move it in the the negative x direction until the curve rightmost extreme is once again below x = -10. This could severely deform the curve, especially if it's way beyond x = -10.
2) Measure the total offending distance and move all control points in the negative x direction. The benefit of this algorithm is that it is only requires a single step (i.e. no iteration or recursion).
3) Assign weights to all control-points (the farther along the x-axis the higher the weight for example) and move them all in negative x depending on this weight. This again requires iteration but will distort the overall shape less so than algorithm [1].
the main problem is that it is not easy to predict exactly how a curve extreme will change when a control-point is changed. There's no straightforward relationship between the two, other than actually making the curve and re-evaluating it. In your example, you could choose to move all control points and they would all affect the rightmost curve extreme. But they do not do so in a linear fashion.
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia
Thanks David. At least I wasn't overlooking something stupidly obvious as I usually do. Your proposed solutions are helpful. Will see what works out.
Matt
David,
Quick thought/ Question. Would a box morph essentially achieve some version of the solutions you described above?
Matt
Don't know. How would you set up the morph?
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia
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