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    Text , X , Y , Z import

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    • K Offline
      khallgren
      last edited by

      Hi , I managed to fix it
      It was just missing the "#" on the 3 first lines

      The plugin works perfect 😄 Thank you so mutch for your help .

      Best regards'
      Kristoffer

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      • TIGT Offline
        TIG Moderator
        last edited by

        You need to 'select all' and copy/paste it - you must have missed something off ?
        The =begin...=end is the same as putting # at the start of each line - these are 'comments', not read by the Ruby interpreter. As there's only one line of 'comments' I could have omitted the =begin and =end lines completely and put a # at the start of the line of instructions - it'd been simpler! I just made the script from my own template that already has that format in it as multiple lines of comments/notes are often needed...
        Do not move sketchup.rb from the Tools folder. It loads automatically from there.
        It is good practice to add the line require 'sketchup.rb' at the start - most scripts need Sketchup's functions to run and will report an error if they load before it does; the ' require' waits for the specified file to load first... It's an instruction to the Ruby interpreter, not you !
        Glad it's working - did you notice that you can adjust the location of the text and leader length by playing with the vec=[1,1,1] numbers ?
        🤓

        TIG

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        • K Offline
          khallgren
          last edited by

          Hi , Thanks for the Text and Leader tip

          If I want to import Y, X ,Z rather than X,Y,Z

          Can I just switch around the
          x=data[1].to_f.mm
          y=data[2].to_f.mm
          z=data[3].to_f.mm
          pt=[x,y,z]

          To
          y=data[1].to_f.mm
          x=data[2].to_f.mm
          z=data[3].to_f.mm
          pt=[y,x,z]

          Best Regards
          Kristoffer

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          • TIGT Offline
            TIG Moderator
            last edited by

            Yes.
            The data[] order is the order typed in each line in the .dat file.
            The original code assumed the first was the 'text', then x, y and z values, as in the .dat file supplied.
            You can have the .dat file's entries in any order as long as the code's data[] values are adjusted accordingly - for example if the format were x,y,z,text then the values would all change around to suit with txt=data[3], and then x=data[0], y=data[1] and z=data[2]...
            The code I gave you was only a basis for .dat file reading - it's very flexible...

            PS: DON'T swap the point's values around use pt[x,y,z] always, no matter what the order they were read from the file ! 😒

            TIG

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            • K Offline
              khallgren
              last edited by

              Hi again
              When I try to import a file Negative Co-ordinates I cet an error
              Is this an easy fix ?

              See the example file

              Best Regards
              Kristoffer


              Example_negative.txt

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              • TIGT Offline
                TIG Moderator
                last edited by

                What's the error ? Please post examples...
                The code x.to_f.mm should take the text 'string' of 'x' and make it into a 'number' [+/-] and then tell SUp it's in 'mm', not the default 'inches'?

                TIG

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                • thomthomT Offline
                  thomthom
                  last edited by

                  @khallgren said:

                  When I try to import a file Negative Co-ordinates I cet an error

                  Exactly what does the error say?

                  Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                  List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                  • K Offline
                    khallgren
                    last edited by

                    Hi , I tried to make my own file for testing and the negative co-ordinates workes fine, so the problem is not the negative co-ordinates. But when I export a file from my calculation program and try it import it I get an error, but the files sceems identical to me?

                    Here is the error i get

                    and the file is attached below

                    Error: #<Errno::ENOENT: C:/Programfiler/Google/Google SketchUp 7/Plugins/cptstxt.rb:14:in `readlines': No such file or directory - C:\Documents and Settings\krh\Skrivebord\BeregnetHøyderfile8.txt>
                    C:/Programfiler/Google/Google SketchUp 7/Plugins/cptstxt.rb:14

                    Best Regards
                    KRistoffer


                    BeregnetHøyderfile8.txt

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                    • K Offline
                      khallgren
                      last edited by

                      I think I know what the problem is . Its the dicimales.... Its fine importing a file that says:

                      example: text,200.0,200.0,200.0

                      But when the file has a desimale value thats larger than 0 i get an error

                      example: text,200.5,200.5,200.5

                      Best regards
                      Kristoffer

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                      • thomthomT Offline
                        thomthom
                        last edited by

                        Ah!
                        I know why that is - because you are Norwegian! Sketchup's ruby doesn't read files that has characters which isn't ASCII (A-Z). So our beloved æøå makes SU's file functions go belly up.

                        I struggled for ages with this some time ago. Found no good solution for that. You can work around be renaming your file.

                        Hilsen fra Bartehovedstaden! 😉

                        Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                        • thomthomT Offline
                          thomthom
                          last edited by

                          @khallgren said:

                          I think I know what the problem is . Its the dicimales.... Its fine importing a file that says:

                          example: text,200.0,200.0,200.0

                          But when the file has a desimale value thats larger than 0 i get an error

                          example: text,200.5,200.5,200.5

                          Best regards
                          Kristoffer

                          ?? With the same file you tried earlier? Or did you create a new test file with just ASCII chars in the file name & path?

                          Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                          List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                          • TIGT Offline
                            TIG Moderator
                            last edited by

                            As Thomthom said -
                            It's an 'unrelated' error to the code itself... you have 'special characters' in the filepath - this always causes Ruby / Sketchup problems [it can be trapped form but it's a bit complex for this simple example code!].
                            So please do it without the 'ø' etc in filename 'BeregnetHøyderfile8.txt' >>> 'BeregnetHoyderfile8.txt' ? it should then work !
                            😒

                            TIG

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                            • Didier BurD Offline
                              Didier Bur
                              last edited by

                              Hi,
                              @Khallgren: I'm just about to modify my points cloud script to achieve what you want. Stay tuned....

                              DB

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                              • K Offline
                                khallgren
                                last edited by

                                Hi , Oppps I missed that issue 😄
                                Diddler Bur: It would be great if your point cloud importer had a "text" option
                                Thanks for all your help 😄

                                Berst regards "fra regn byen"
                                Kristoffer

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