2008-10-27 10:52 AM
2008-12-08 04:28 AM
Braza wrote:Can we use mesh to roof to create some thickness to the mesh before object saving?
1. Model half of the shape using one mass mesh with the main curved shape;
2. Elevate one vertice;
3. Copy the same mesh and elevate by the thickness of the form;
4. Create a slab at level zero to cut the form;
5. Do the SEO;
6. Create a 3d side view of the half form;
7. Save it as an object;
8. Insert it in the project;
9. Mirror it.
2008-12-08 05:16 AM
2008-12-08 05:17 AM
2008-12-08 10:20 AM
Dwight wrote:Olivier wrote:
May be charm is not the correct word, I agree. Take it as an a euphemism.
Hahaha.
I am thick in the head these days.
Euphemism: From the pious saint "Euphemia" who always used a polite word when she meant the opposite.[i made that up]
2008-12-08 10:57 AM
2008-12-08 11:46 AM
Dwight wrote:i wish i could laugh out very loud without ppl in here wondering if i've gone mad!!! :D:D
Why i say "All words come from the Greek":
The complex profile makes me laugh with delight [I’m old – other forms of delight have faded in the harsh sunlight of reality] because we finally have a tool that approximates the way plastic materials like concrete can be formed into architectural elements, like tilt-nosed risers.
I use it a lot in my own work [especially with SEO to create pseudo-organic elements] and seem like an Oracle in the offices I consult to when I show them this relatively new trick – mainly because they have left out modeling stairs, or whatever, because of complexity. I feel like a one-trick pony on the forum whenever I mention the Complex Profile since it seems like an answer to so many problems that so few are aware of.
I make the parallel to the Father in the movie “My Big Fat Greek Wedding,” created by a charming woman from my hometown.
In this movie, the Father, a Greek, was always trying to show how Greece was the originator of Western culture and that “all words come from the Greek.” The best scene of this is when one of Toula’s school friends says “what about ‘kimono’?”
This question sends the father into an absurd explanation of how a Japanese word could ever have come from the Greek language.
All words come from the Greek, and all Archicad challenges can be solved by the Complex Profile. Just don’t ask me to model a kimono. Leave THAT to Angus Lee and the curtain wall tool.
2008-12-08 12:32 PM
angus wrote:As Mr. Obama says: "Yes we can!"
Can we use mesh to roof to create some thickness to the mesh before object saving?
2008-12-08 07:13 PM
Dwight wrote:
Why i say "All words come from the Greek":
The complex profile makes me laugh with delight [I’m old – other forms of delight have faded in the harsh sunlight of reality] because we finally have a tool that approximates the way plastic materials like concrete can be formed into architectural elements, like tilt-nosed risers.
I use it a lot in my own work [especially with SEO to create pseudo-organic elements] and seem like an Oracle in the offices I consult to when I show them this relatively new trick – mainly because they have left out modeling stairs, or whatever, because of complexity. I feel like a one-trick pony on the forum whenever I mention the Complex Profile since it seems like an answer to so many problems that so few are aware of.
I make the parallel to the Father in the movie “My Big Fat Greek Wedding,” created by a charming woman from my hometown.
In this movie, the Father, a Greek, was always trying to show how Greece was the originator of Western culture and that “all words come from the Greek.” The best scene of this is when one of Toula’s school friends says “what about ‘kimono’?”
This question sends the father into an absurd explanation of how a Japanese word could ever have come from the Greek language.
All words come from the Greek, and all Archicad challenges can be solved by the Complex Profile. Just don’t ask me to model a kimono. Leave THAT to Angus Lee and the curtain wall tool.
2008-12-08 07:15 PM
angus wrote:Braza wrote:Can we use mesh to roof to create some thickness to the mesh before object saving?
1. Model half of the shape using one mass mesh with the main curved shape;
2. Elevate one vertice;
3. Copy the same mesh and elevate by the thickness of the form;
4. Create a slab at level zero to cut the form;
5. Do the SEO;
6. Create a 3d side view of the half form;
7. Save it as an object;
8. Insert it in the project;
9. Mirror it.
What is the function in SEO? for hiding the slab? How about the elevation? I know sometimes SEO can't be shown in Plan/ Section/ Elevation.
2008-12-09 02:26 AM