Tried to parametrize gen_twisted_boundary

This commit is contained in:
Chris Hodapp 2019-10-10 01:37:49 +02:00
parent ea64900fef
commit 6b6d500d27
3 changed files with 49 additions and 33 deletions

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@ -18,14 +18,6 @@ To-do items, wanted features, bugs:
- Parametrize gen_twisted_boundary over boundaries and
do my nested spiral
- Encode the notions of "generator which transforms an
existing list of boundaries", "generator which transforms
another generator"
- This has a lot of functions parametrized over a lot
of functions. Need to work with this somehow.
- Work directly with lists of boundaries. The only thing
I ever do with them is apply transforms to all of them, or
join adjacent ones with corresponding elements.
- Why do I get the weird zig-zag pattern on the triangles,
despite larger numbers of them? Is it something in how I
twist the frames?
@ -47,3 +39,16 @@ Other notes:
- Picking at random the diagonal on the quad to triangulate with
does seem to turn 'error' just to noise, and in its own way this
is preferable.
# Abstractions
- Encode the notions of "generator which transforms an
existing list of boundaries", "generator which transforms
another generator"
- This has a lot of functions parametrized over a lot
of functions. Need to work with this somehow. (e.g. should
it subdivide this boundary? should it merge opening/closing
boundaries?)
- Work directly with lists of boundaries. The only thing
I ever do with them is apply transforms to all of them, or
join adjacent ones with corresponding elements.

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@ -161,7 +161,17 @@ def twist_nonlinear(dx0 = 2, dz=0.2, count=3, scale=0.99, layers=100):
return mesh
def twist_from_gen():
gen = meshgen.gen_inc_y(meshgen.gen_twisted_boundary())
b = numpy.array([
[0, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 1],
[0, 0, 1],
], dtype=numpy.float64) - [0.5, 0, 0.5]
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
bs = [b]
gen = meshgen.gen_inc_y(meshgen.gen_twisted_boundary(bs))
mesh = meshgen.gen2mesh(gen, 100, True)
return mesh
@ -169,20 +179,21 @@ def twist_from_gen():
# turn = How many full turns to make in inner twist
# count = How many inner twists to have
def twisty_torus(frames = 200, turns = 4, count = 4, rad = 4):
b = numpy.array([
[0, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 1],
[0, 0, 1],
], dtype=numpy.float64) - [0.5, 0, 0.5]
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
bs = [b]
# In order to make this line up properly:
angle = numpy.pi * 2 * turns / frames
gen = meshgen.gen_torus_xy(meshgen.gen_twisted_boundary(count=count, ang=angle), rad=rad, frames=frames)
gen = meshgen.gen_torus_xy(meshgen.gen_twisted_boundary(bs=bs, count=count, ang=angle), rad=rad, frames=frames)
return meshgen.gen2mesh(gen, 0, flip_order=True, loop=True)
# frames = How many step to build this from:
# turn = How many full turns to make in inner twist
# count = How many inner twists to have
def twisty_torus_opt(frames = 200, turns = 4, count = 4, rad = 4):
# In order to make this line up properly:
angle = numpy.pi * 2 * turns / frames
gen = meshgen.gen_torus_xy(meshgen.gen_twisted_boundary(count=count, ang=angle), rad=rad, frames=frames)
return meshgen.gen2mesh(gen, 0, flip_order=True, loop=True, join_fn=meshutil.join_boundary_optim)
def main():
fns = {
ram_horn: "ramhorn.stl",

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@ -6,7 +6,8 @@ import trimesh
# Generate a frame with 'count' boundaries in the XZ plane.
# Each one rotates by 'ang' as it moves by 'dz'.
# dx0 is center-point distance from each to the origin.
def gen_twisted_boundary(count=4, dx0=2, dz=0.2, ang=0.1):
def gen_twisted_boundary(bs=None, count=4, dx0=2, dz=0.2, ang=0.1):
if bs is None:
b = numpy.array([
[0, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 0],
@ -16,22 +17,21 @@ def gen_twisted_boundary(count=4, dx0=2, dz=0.2, ang=0.1):
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
b = meshutil.subdivide_boundary(b)
bs = [b]
# Generate 'seed' transformations:
xfs = [meshutil.Transform().translate(dx0, 0, 0).rotate([0,1,0], numpy.pi * 2 * i / count)
for i in range(count)]
# (we'll increment the transforms in xfs as we go)
while True:
xfs_new = []
bs = []
for i, xf in enumerate(xfs):
# Generate a boundary from running transform:
b_i = xf.apply_to(b)
bs.append(b_i)
bs2 = [xf.apply_to(b) for b in bs]
# Increment transform i:
xf2 = xf.rotate([0,1,0], ang)
xfs_new.append(xf2)
xfs = xfs_new
yield bs
yield bs2
# This is to see how well it works to compose generators:
def gen_inc_y(gen, dy=0.1):