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    Taking pictures with cameras

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    • TIGT Offline
      TIG Moderator
      last edited by

      But he doesn't even need to bother with setting the aspect_ratio at all - and changing it the way he does without thought of the screen's ratiowill give him gray areas... No need to over complicate it ?

      TIG

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      • Dan RathbunD Offline
        Dan Rathbun
        last edited by

        Hey! Look y'all! ...

        Ben's been SketchUcatized !!!

        ... welcome to the community Ben.

        I'm not here much anymore.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • B Offline
          ben.doherty
          last edited by

          Thanks for that!
          I did actually need the aspect ratio to be right as I'm using (trying to at least) Image Magick to interrogate the images.

          See what you think.

          require 'sketchup.rb'
          require"quick_magick.rb"
          
          def start
            puts "************************"
            ##changeable stuff###########################################################################
            #you need to swap all \ backslashes for / forward slashes
            #you also need to put a / on the end of the path
            imagePath   = 'C;/Users/Ben/Desktop/BVN/skTestImages/'
            #the field of view is in degrees and must be between 1 and 120)
            cameraFOV   = 120 
            #this trims the image ever so slightly so that it doesn't 
            #include the lines around the face
            insetFactor =   0.05
            startTime   =  13  #hours in 24hr format
            endTime     =  15  #hours in 24hr format
            hourDivs    =   2  #how many chunks to chop the hour into i.e. 4 = 15 minutes
            outputWidth = 500
            #############################################################################################
            model = Sketchup.active_model
            #entities = model.active_entities
            #ent = model.entities
            currentSelection = model.selection
            model.shadow_info["DisplayShadows"] = true
            m = 60/hourDivs
            
            result = UI.messagebox shadowInfoString + "\n\nAre these details correct?", MB_YESNO
            if result == 6 # Yes
              #this writes a message to the status bar (SB_PROMPT means the left bit)
              Sketchup.set_status_text "great, lets get going", SB_PROMPT
              itWorked = windowLooker(imagePath, 
                                      cameraFOV, 
                                      insetFactor, 
                                      startTime, 
                                      endTime, 
                                      hourDivs, 
                                      currentSelection, 
                                      m, 
                                      model,
                                      outputWidth)
              if itWorked 
                puts "that all seemed to work out"
              end
            else
              Sketchup.set_status_text "OHNOES!! Set the location settings and try again", SB_PROMPT
            end
          end
          
          def windowLooker( imagePath, 
                            cameraFOV, 
                            insetFactor, 
                            startTime, 
                            endTime, 
                            hourDivs, 
                            currentSelection, 
                            m,
                            model,
                            outputWidth)
            for hour in (startTime..endTime)
              for minutes in (0...hourDivs) # three dots ignores last value i.e. 0...3 ==> 0,1,2
                for i in (0...currentSelection.length)
                  if (currentSelection[i].is_a?(Sketchup;;Face))
                    # make the face local for the rest of this loop
                    face = currentSelection[i] 
                    if isFaceHorizontal(face, i) && isThisFourSided(face)
                      #set the time
                      #         Time.utc( year [, month, day, hour, min, sec, usec] )
                      timeNow = Time.utc( 2010,   "Jun", 21,  hour, m*minutes,  0)
                      model.shadow_info["ShadowTime"] = timeNow 
                      
                      #get information about the face
                      normal = face.normal
                      centroidPoint = face.bounds.center
                      height = (face.bounds.corner(4).distance face.bounds.corner(0)).to_mm
                      width  = (face.bounds.corner(0).distance face.bounds.corner(3)).to_mm  
          
                      #setup for the camera
                      camera = Sketchup;;Camera.new
                      camera.description  = "camera looking at window " + i.to_s()
                      aspectRatio = width/height
                      camera.aspect_ratio = aspectRatio
                      camera.fov = cameraFOV 
                      #this shrinks the view to account for prudence and window frames
                      width = width * (1-insetFactor) 
                      eyeDistance = calculateEyeDistance(camera, width)
          
                      normalPoint = []
                      normalPoint[0] = centroidPoint[0] + (normal[0]*eyeDistance)
                      normalPoint[1] = centroidPoint[1] + (normal[1]*eyeDistance)
                      normalPoint[2] = centroidPoint[2] + (normal[2]*eyeDistance)
                      
                      eye          = normalPoint
                      target       = centroidPoint
                      up           = [0,0,1]
                      camera.set eye, target, up  
          
                      #get the material and hold it, the face 
                      #must be white to avoid problems of translucency
                      holdMaterial = face.material
                      face.material = "white"
          
                      #change the view
                      view = model.active_view
                      status = view.camera = camera
                      #save the image
                      Dir.chdir( imagePath )
                      fileName = 'window' + ("%03d" %  i) + 
                                    "_" + hour.to_s + "_" + 
                                    (m*minutes).to_s + '.png'
                      view.write_image fileName, outputWidth, outputWidth*(1/aspectRatio), false
                      inspectImage(imagePath, fileName, aspectRatio)
          
                      #change the material back to what it was to begin with
                      face.material = holdMaterial
                      view.refresh
                      puts "face " + i.to_s() + " successful at " + hour.to_s + ";" + (m*minutes).to_s
                    end
                  end
                end
              end
            end
          end
          
          def isThisFourSided(aFace)
            if aFace.vertices.length == 4
              return true
            else
              puts "face " + i.to_s + " probably isn't a window"
              return false
            end
          end
          
          def isFaceHorizontal(aFace, identifierOfFace)
            if aFace.normal == [0,0,1] || aFace.normal == [0,0,-1]
              puts "face " + identifierOfFace.to_s + " is horizontal " + aFace.normal.to_s
              return false
            else
              return true
            end
          end
          
          def calculateEyeDistance(theCamera, faceWidth)
            eyeDistance = ((faceWidth/2)/Math.tan(theCamera.fov.degrees/2))
            eyeDistance = eyeDistance/25.4 #to fix the crazy inch bug
            if eyeDistance == 0 
              eyeDistance = 1
              puts "eye zero failure"
              puts "width was " + faceWidth.to_s
              puts "Math.tan(camera.fov) was " + Math.tan(radToDeg(theCamera.fov)/2).to_s 
            end
            return eyeDistance
          end
          
          def shadowInfoString
            #extract shadow information to show to the user
            shadowInfo  = Sketchup.active_model.shadow_info
            message = ""#declare an empty string outside the scope of the 'each'
            shadowInfo.each_pair {|key, value| message += "#{key} is #{value}\n" }
            return message
          end
          
          def cropImage(path, fileName, iar)
            i = QuickMagick;;Image.read(path+fileName).first
            cropW      = i.width.to_i
            cropH      = ((1/iar)*cropW).to_i
            offsetTop  = ((i.height/2)-(cropH/2)).to_i
            offsetleft = 0 
            puts "iar " + iar.to_s
            puts "cropW " + cropW.to_s
            puts "cropH " + cropH.to_s
            puts "offsetTop " + offsetTop.to_s
            puts "offsetleft " + offsetleft.to_s
            #geometry spec is in the format "widthxHeight!+leftOffset+topOffset"
            # the ! ignores the aspect ratio
            #more here http://www.imagemagick.org/script/command-line-processing.php#geometry
            geometrySpec = cropW.to_s + 
                    "x" + 
                    cropH.to_s + 
                    "!+" + 
                    offsetleft.to_s + 
                    "+" + 
                    offsetTop.to_s
            puts "geometrySpec " + geometrySpec
            i.crop geometrySpec
            i.save(path+fileName)
            i = QuickMagick;;Image.read(path+fileName).first
            numColours = i.colors
            #i.convert "QuickMagick;;Image.read(path+fileName).first -colorspace rgb -colors 10 -format \"%c\"  histogram;info;"
            i.draw_text(100, 100, "cropped " + geometrySpec + " colours " + numColours.to_s)
            i.save(path+fileName)
            sleep 0.5
          end
          
          def inspectImage(path, fileName, iar)
            i = QuickMagick;;Image.read(path+fileName).first
            numColours = i.colors
            #i.convert "QuickMagick;;Image.read(path+fileName).first -colorspace rgb -colors 10 -format \"%c\"  histogram;info;"
            i.draw_text(100, 100, " colours " + numColours.to_s)
            i.save(path+fileName)
            #sleep 0.5
          end
          
          start
          
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          • Dan RathbunD Offline
            Dan Rathbun
            last edited by

            A few notes:

            method windowLooker
            array normalPoint = [] can be defined in 1 statement:

            normalPoint = [ centroidPoint[0] + (normal[0]*eyeDistance),
                            centroidPoint[1] + (normal[1]*eyeDistance),
                            centroidPoint[2] + (normal[2]*eyeDistance)]
            
            

            method isFaceHorizontal, if the normal is vertical, you need to return true (not false) and v.v.

            boolean methodnames in Ruby should always end with '?'
            isThisFourSided?
            isFaceHorizontal?
            etc...
            (*leaves open the option to have attribute getter and setter methods: isFaceHorizontal and isFaceHorizontal= )

            puts/$stderr.write/$stdout.write etc:
            String concatination is slow because Ruby creates a new String object for each + operation. Instead have Ruby only create 1 String object (when it reads the 1st literal,) and then use the String append method << as in:
            puts 'Welcome, Mr. '<<name.first<<' '<<name.last<<"\n"

            • This also goes for String a+=b, which Ruby expands into a = a + b, just use a<<b (refering to the shadowInfoString method's each loop.)

            • Just be careful when making assignments. My lateset booboo here looked like:
              url = baseref<<subfolder
              which gave url OK, but also messed up baseref

            • Also try to use single quote strings for speed, as Ruby does not have to parse them for regular expressions or #{var} replacements; especially in loops, or methods that will be called from loops.

            Otherwise, you might be a newbie at Ruby, but I can tell you've programmed before. Java? Python?

            I'm not here much anymore.

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            • TIGT Offline
              TIG Moderator
              last edited by

              The aspect_ratio of the image will be the screen's UNLESS you try and set it !
              Then you have to set it appropriately reading the displays values - it's easier to set your eye+target points so that you see the whole face, it's then 'zoomed' so it all shows in the view - as I coded - taking the width as the height, if the height is bigger etc etc... There is no need to mess on with the aspect_ratio as presumably all of the views should be the same proportion ?

              I think you are making this a lot more complicated than it needs to be ? 😕

              As I see it you just make a list of the faces and for each face, get its center [the 'target'] and its normal - which is the vector to offset this target-point as the 'eye'. Then you get the face's bounds and get the larger of the bb's width & height and take that as the view's 'width' [+ some tolerance so it's wholly in the view]. Now as you know the 'fov' angle you can then do some trigonometry Math to work out the distance the eye needs to be from the target so that you'll see all of the face. Use that distance to offset the target-point to become the eye-point. Now you have the data necessary to reset the camera [note you need to set up=Z_AXIS or up=Y_AXIS if face.normal.z.abs==1 ### i.e. horizontal] 🤓

              TIG

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              • DavidBoulderD Offline
                DavidBoulder
                last edited by

                Ben, so I haven't hear you ultimate objective for this script. I know you want to see if windows are in shadow, but what will that information be used for. I fell like I've been peddling OpenStudio on a few posts for this purpose recently, but just thought I'd make you familiar with it. With this plugin, which is an interface to run the free EnergyPlus energy simulation software, you can get reports back showing what percentage of windows are in shadow at a given time of day or year. There are standard reports for equinox and solstices, but you can create more detailed reporting as needed.

                I can't find the link I was looking for, but can provide more detail if you are interested. Here is a link to general post on OpenStudio.
                http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=323&t=27908

                --

                David Goldwasser
                OpenStudio Developer
                National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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                • Dan RathbunD Offline
                  Dan Rathbun
                  last edited by

                  @unknownuser said:

                  (aka notionp ) at Google Sketchup Devlopers Group in 'taking pictures with cameras'":1wsabykr]Hi,
                  This is a bit of a dirty hack, but it will save switching from modelling to analysis tools all the time.

                  The ultimate aim is to take a picture of the shadow that falls on a face, then use image majick (or similar) to find out how much of it is in shadow.

                  Looks like more than windows.

                  And two tools are always better than one.

                  Besides, he's a'learnin' Ruby... he had to pick some learning project that interested him.

                  I'm not here much anymore.

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                  • B Offline
                    ben.doherty
                    last edited by

                    I've got this to the point with this that I'm happy to call it 'working'. Thanks for all the advice. I've tried to take as much of it as I can on board.
                    I still can't get my head around ImageMagick, but that's a whole different kettle of fish.

                    I think that looking seriously into OpenStudio is a good idea. I'd looked at energy plus already and given up because of overwhelming complexity, but if there is a friend;y front end now that'd probably be a much better solution.

                    I've learnt a hell of a lot through doing this though!

                    If anyone has any more comments then I'd love to hear them.

                    
                    module BVNtools
                      module Voyeur
                        
                        #require 'quick_magick.rb'
                        
                        if( not file_loaded?('makeTheFaces.rb') )
                          # This will add a separator to the menu, but only once
                          add_separator_to_menu('Voyeur')
                          
                          plugins_menu = UI.menu('Plugins')
                          voyeur_menu = plugins_menu.add_submenu('Voyeur')
                          voyeur_menu.add_item('make analysis faces') { makeAnalysisFaces }
                          voyeur_menu.add_item('Window Looker') { start }
                          
                          toolbar = UI;;Toolbar.new 'Voyeur'
                          
                          cmdFM = UI;;Command.new('Face Maker'){ makeAnalysisFaces }
                          cmdFM.small_icon = 'FM24.png'
                          cmdFM.large_icon = 'FM16.png'
                          cmdFM.tooltip = 'Makes offset faces for analysis'
                          
                          cmdWL = UI;;Command.new('Window Looker'){ start }
                          cmdWL.small_icon = 'WL24.png'
                          cmdWL.large_icon = 'WL16.png'
                          cmdWL.tooltip = 'photographs windows for their shadows'
                          
                          toolbar = toolbar.add_item cmdFM
                          toolbar = toolbar.add_item cmdWL
                          toolbar.show
                          
                          file_loaded('makeTheFaces.rb')
                        end
                    
                        class << self
                          
                          def isThisFourSided?(aFace)
                            if aFace.vertices.length == 4
                              return true
                            else
                              return false
                            end
                          end
                          
                          def getAnalysisDetails
                            #this asks the user for some input to the process
                            #OUTPUT it returns an array of strings that explain the various inputs
                            #it'd be better/clearer if it returned a hash of formatted values
                            #          [0                                        1           2                 3             4           5                 6                         7                   ]
                            prompts  = ['image path',                                'cameraFOV','inset factor %', 'start hour', 'end hour', 'tests per hour', 'image width in pixels', 'Analysis Layer Name']
                            defaults = ['C;\Users\bdoherty\Desktop\BVN\skTestImages','120',      '3',              '13',         '15',       '2',              '500',                   'Analysis'           ]
                            lists    = ['',                                          '',         '',               '',           '',         '1|2|3|4|5',      '',                      ''                   ]
                            input    = UI.inputbox prompts , defaults, lists, 'fill in some information'
                            result = {;imagePath   => input[0].to_s.strip, 
                                      ;cameraFOV   => input[1].to_f,
                                      ;insetFactor => input[2].to_f * 0.01,
                                      ;startTime   => input[3].to_i,
                                      ;endTime     => input[4].to_i,
                                      ;hourDivs    => input[5].to_i,
                                      ;outputWidth => input[6].to_i,
                                      ;analysisLayerName => input[7].to_s
                                     } 
                            return result
                          end
                          
                          def isFaceHorizontal?(aFace)
                            #This function checks to see if a face is horizontal, 
                            #i.e. if its normal faces directly up or directly down
                            #INPUT it takes in a face, and an identifier that is  
                            #used to provide an error if it is horizontal.
                            #OUTPUT returns true if it is horizontal, false if it isn't
                            internalNormal = aFace.normal
                            if internalNormal == [0,0,1] || internalNormal == [0,0,-1]          
                              return false
                            else
                              return true
                            end
                          end
                        
                          def calculateEyeDistance(theCamera, faceWidth)
                            #calculates the distance that a camera needs to be away from 
                            #a face in order to see it with a given field of view
                            eyeDistance = ((faceWidth/2)/Math.tan(theCamera.fov.degrees/2))
                            eyeDistance = eyeDistance/25.4 #to fix the crazy inch thing
                            if eyeDistance == 0 
                              eyeDistance = 10000          
                            end
                            return eyeDistance
                          end
                        
                          def shadowInfoString
                            #extract shadow information from the model to show to the user
                            shadowInfo  = Sketchup.active_model.shadow_info
                            message = ""#declare an empty string outside the scope of the 'each'
                            shadowInfo.each_pair {|key, value| message += "#{key} is #{value}\n" }
                            return message
                          end
                          
                          def inspectImage(path, fileName, iar)
                            myImage = QuickMagick;;Image.read(path + fileName).first
                            numColours = myImage.colors
                            #i.convert "QuickMagick;;Image.read(path+fileName).first -colorspace rgb -colors 10 -format \"%c\"  histogram;info;"
                            #hold is there because it seems that if you assign to a variable, then the program waits 
                            #for a return value, otherwise it just keeps going without anything to process.
                            hold = myImage.draw_text(100, 100, 'colours ' << numColours.to_s)
                            hold = myImage.save(path + fileName)
                          end
                          
                          def findAMaterial(listOfAllMaterials, name)
                          #INPUT   A string name of a material
                          #RETURNS the material object that corresponds to the string name given
                            for i in (0...listOfAllMaterials.length)
                              if listOfAllMaterials[i].name == name
                                return listOfAllMaterials[i]
                              end
                            end
                          end
                          
                          def bound( valtoCheck, lowerBound, upperBound )
                          #INPUT a number
                          #RETURNS that number if it is between the boundaries, otherwise the boundary that it hits
                          #i.e. bound(10,5,15) ==> 10
                          #     bound(20,5,15) ==> 15
                          #     bound( 0,5,15) ==>  5
                            if valtoCheck > upperBound
                              return upperBound
                            elsif valtoCheck < lowerBound
                              return lowerBound
                            else
                              return valtoCheck
                            end
                          end
                        
                        	def formatPath (pathString)
                          #this adds a trailing / to the path if it doesn't have one
                          #it also swaps the slashes from \ to /        
                            pathString.gsub!("\\", '/')
                            if pathString[pathString.length-1] == '/'
                              puts '/ not added'
                              return pathString
                            else
                              return pathString + '/'
                            end
                          end
                      
                          def getAnalysisDetailsFM
                          #this asks the user for some input to the process
                          #OUTPUT it returns an array of strings that explain the various inputs
                          #            [ 0                       1            2              ]
                            prompts  = ['Offset Distance (mm)', 'LayerName' , 'Material Name']
                            defaults = ['10',                   'Analysis'  , 'Analysis'     ]
                            lists    = ['',                     '',           ''             ]
                            input    = UI.inputbox prompts , defaults, lists, "fill in some information"
                            result = {
                                      ;offset   => input[0].to_f,
                                      ;layer    => input[1].to_s.strip,
                                      ;material => input[2].to_s.strip
                                     } 
                            return result
                          end
                          
                          def findALayer(listOflayers, layerNameToMatch)
                          #INPUT   A string name of a layer
                          #RETURNS the layer object that corresponds to the string name given
                            layerToMatch = nil
                            listOflayers.each{|l|
                              if l.name == layerNameToMatch 
                                layerToMatch = l
                              end
                            }
                            return layerToMatch
                          end
                          
                          def layerFilter(setToFilter, layerNameToMatch)
                            #INPUT   a set of entities to filter through & a string layername to search for
                            #RETURNS an array of all the entities in the input set that are also on the input layer
                            filteredSet = [] 
                            #get the layer as an object so that the comparison 
                            #isn't on the string name of the layer 
                            layerToMatch = findALayer(Sketchup.active_model.layers, layerNameToMatch)
                            #start filtering
                            setToFilter.each{|e|
                              if e.layer == layerToMatch
                                filteredSet << e
                              end
                            }
                            return filteredSet
                          end
                      
                          def propertyFilter(setToFilter)
                            newSet = []
                            setToFilter.each{|e|
                              if e.is_a? Sketchup;;Face
                                if isFaceHorizontal?(e) and isThisFourSided?(e)
                                  newSet << e
                                end
                              end
                            }
                          end
                    
                          def start
                            puts "\n\n\n"
                            
                            result = UI.messagebox shadowInfoString << "\n\nAre these details correct?", MB_YESNO
                            if result == 6 # Yes
                              #this writes a message to the status bar (SB_PROMPT means the left bit)
                              Sketchup.set_status_text "great, lets get going", SB_PROMPT
                              
                              userInput   = getAnalysisDetails                          #there needs to be / on the end of the path, formatPath does that
                              imagePath   = formatPath(userInput[;imagePath])           #the field of view is in degrees and must be between 1 and 120)
                              cameraFOV   = bound(userInput[;cameraFOV],  0, 120 )      #this trims the image ever so slightly so that it doesn't include the lines around the face
                              insetFactor = bound(userInput[;insetFactor],0,50)         #this is percentages between 0 and 1, i.e. 50% is 0.5 and 5% is 0.05
                              startTime   = bound(userInput[;startTime]  ,0,23)         #hours in 24hr format
                              endTime     = bound(userInput[;endTime]    ,startTime,24) #hours in 24hr format
                              hourDivs    =       userInput[;hourDivs]                  #how many chunks to chop the hour into i.e. 4 = 15 minutes
                              outputWidth = bound(userInput[;outputWidth],50,2000)      #width in pixels of the images, height is set by the aspect ratio
                              analysisLayerName = userInput[;analysisLayerName]         #the name of the layer that all the analysis faces are on
                              #############################################################################################
                              
                              model = Sketchup.active_model
                              #entities = model.active_entities
                              #ent = model.entities
                              filteredSelection = layerFilter(model.active_entities, analysisLayerName)
                              filteredSelection = propertyFilter(filteredSelection)
                              model.shadow_info["DisplayShadows"] = true
                              m = 60/hourDivs
                              
                              itWorked = windowLooker(imagePath,         cameraFOV,   insetFactor,
                                                      startTime,         endTime,     hourDivs, 
                                                      filteredSelection, m,           model,
                                                      outputWidth)
                              if itWorked 
                                puts "that all seemed to work out"
                                Sketchup.set_status_text "that all seemed to work out", SB_PROMPT
                              end
                            else
                              Sketchup.set_status_text "OHNOES!! Set the location settings and try again", SB_PROMPT
                            end
                          end #def start
                        
                          def windowLooker( imagePath,        cameraFOV,   insetFactor,
                                            startTime,        endTime,     hourDivs, 
                                            currentSelection, m,           model,
                                            outputWidth)
                                            
                            Dir.chdir imagePath
                            for i in (0...currentSelection.length)
                              #builds a folder name from the current face's attributes
                              folderName = imagePath + 'apptNum_'   + currentSelection[i].get_attribute("analysisInfo","apptNumber") +
                                                       '_apptType_' + currentSelection[i].get_attribute("analysisInfo","apptType")
                              #if the folder already exists, don't try and make it again!!
                              if not File.directory? folderName
                                Dir.mkdir(folderName)
                                #puts 'made  ' + folderName
                              end
                              Dir.chdir folderName
                    
                              for hour in (startTime..endTime)
                                for minutes in (0...hourDivs) # three dots ignores last value i.e. 0...3 ==> 0,1,2
                                  Sketchup.set_status_text "#{hour.to_s};#{(m*minutes).to_s}", SB_PROMPT
                                  # make the face local for the rest of this loop
                                  face = currentSelection[i] 
                                  
                                  #set the time  Time.utc( year [, month, day, hour, min, sec, usec] )
                                  timeNow =      Time.utc( 2010,   "Jun", 21,  hour, m*minutes,  0)
                                  model.shadow_info["ShadowTime"] = timeNow 
                                  
                                  #get information about the face
                                  normal = face.normal
                                  centroidPoint = face.bounds.center
                                  #0 = left front bottom              #1 = right front bottom
                                  #2 = left back bottom               #3 = right back bottom
                                  #4 = left front top                 #5 = right front top
                                  #6 = left back top                  #7 = right back top
                                  height = (face.bounds.corner(4).distance face.bounds.corner(0)).to_mm
                                  width  = (face.bounds.corner(0).distance face.bounds.corner(3)).to_mm
                                  
                                  #setup for the camera
                                  camera = Sketchup;;Camera.new              
                                  camera.description  = 'camera looking at window ' << i.to_s
                                  aspectRatio = width/height
                                  camera.aspect_ratio = aspectRatio
                                  camera.fov = cameraFOV 
                                  #this shrinks the view to account for prudence and window frames etc.
                                  width = width * (1-insetFactor) 
                                  eyeDistance = calculateEyeDistance(camera, width)
                                  
                                  eyeOffset = normal.transform( Geom;;Transformation.scaling(eyeDistance))
                                  
                                  eye          = centroidPoint.offset(eyeOffset)
                                  target       = centroidPoint
                                  camera.set eye, target, Z_AXIS  
                                  
                                  #get the material and hold it, the face 
                                  #must be white to avoid problems of translucency
                                  holdMaterial = face.material              
                                  face.material = "snow"
                                  
                                  #change the view
                                  view = model.active_view
                                  status = view.camera = camera
                                  
                                  #save the image
                                  timeString = "#{"%02d" % hour}_#{("%02d" % (m*minutes))}"
                                  apptNum = 'apptNum_' + currentSelection[i].get_attribute("analysisInfo","apptNumber")
                                  fileName = apptNum + '_at_' + timeString + ".png" #'window' + ("%03d" %  i)
                                  view.write_image fileName, outputWidth, outputWidth*(1/aspectRatio), false
                                  
                                  #TODO this is all the image magick stuff, 
                                  #inspectImage(folderName, fileName, aspectRatio)
                                  
                                  #change the material back to what it was to begin with
                                  face.material = holdMaterial              
                                  view.refresh
                                  statusText = apptNum + " successful at #{timeString}" 
                                  puts statusText
                                  Sketchup.set_status_text statusText, SB_PROMPT
                                end       #for minutes in (0...hourDivs)
                              end         #for hour in (startTime..endTime)
                            end           #for i in (0...currentSelection.length)
                            Sketchup.active_model.entities.erase_entities(currentSelection.to_a)
                          end             #windowLooker
                    
                          def makeAnalysisFaces
                            
                            mod = Sketchup.active_model
                            ent = mod.entities
                            #sel = mod.selection
                            
                            userInput = getAnalysisDetailsFM
                            analysisLayer = mod.layers.add userInput[;layer]
                            analysisMaterial = findAMaterial(mod.materials, userInput[;material])
                            faceCounter = 0
                    
                            ent.each{ |e|
                              if e.is_a? Sketchup;;ComponentInstance
                                e.definition.entities.each { |newE|
                                  if ((newE.is_a? Sketchup;;Face) and (newE.material == analysisMaterial)) 
                                    #make an empty group
                                    tempGroup = ent.add_group
                                    #make an offset face
                                    normal = Geom;;Vector3d.new(newE.normal).normalize
                                    offsetFactor = userInput[;offset].mm 
                                    offset = normal.transform( Geom;;Transformation.scaling(offsetFactor))
                                    newPoints = []
                                    newE.vertices.each{|vertex| newPoints << vertex.position.offset(normal)}
                                    #make a new face in that group
                                    face = tempGroup.entities.add_face newPoints
                                    face.layer = analysisLayer
                                    #apply a transformation to the group taken from the instance of the component
                                    tempGroup.transformation = e.transformation
                                    #set some attributes for that face. They will be used later to indicate where the face came from.
                                    face.set_attribute "analysisInfo", "apptType",   e.definition.name
                                    face.set_attribute "analysisInfo", "apptNumber", e.name
                                    #remove the group, the face stays where it is
                                    tempGroup.explode 
                                    
                                    faceCounter = faceCounter + 1
                                  end       #if newE.is_a? Sketchup;;Face
                                 }          #e.definition.entities.each
                              end           #if e.is_a
                            }               #ent.each
                            status = "Made  #{faceCounter.to_s} planes"
                            Sketchup.set_status_text status, SB_PROMPT
                            puts status
                          end               #makeAnalysisFaces
                        end                 #class
                      end                   #facemaker
                    end                     #voyeur
                    

                    Issues that I can see with it:

                    It gets really slow with big models, I'm not sure where the slowness comes from, but I presume it is the filtering for the right entity.

                    Most of the functions could be a lot more defensive

                    nearly all the methods should really be tagged onto existing classes so it is myFace.horizontal ==> true rather than isFaceHorizontal?(aFace)

                    but... it does the job for now, and maybe I can do that if I come back to it.

                    p.s. Dan - mostly c# scripting languages in the past.

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                    • thomthomT Offline
                      thomthom
                      last edited by

                      @ben.doherty said:

                      nearly all the methods should really be tagged onto existing classes so it is myFace.horizontal ==> true rather than isFaceHorizontal?(aFace)

                      I actually avoid that - I don't add my own methods to Ruby's and SketchUp's classes as then you move outside your own namespace and you have no assurance that some other script implement the same method.

                      So while it looks nicer, and produce cleaner code, it's prone to conflicts since there are so many plugins sharing the environment.

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

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                      • Dan RathbunD Offline
                        Dan Rathbun
                        last edited by

                        @ben.doherty said:

                        ...nearly all the methods should really be tagged onto existing classes so it is
                        myFace.horizontal ==> true rather than isFaceHorizontal?(aFace)

                        I've actually (2.5 weeks ago,) written that method up as part of an SKX extension for Face and Vector3d classes. But have not yet submitted it into the SKX forum. (They are really candidates for C implementation, as in pure Ruby, guys like TIG and ThomThom would not use them as they just add an extra method call into the mix. We'd want them added to the API in C so they are fast.)

                        My version has a ? on the end, and is a one-liner:

                        def horizontal?

                        return self.normal.parallel?([0,0,1)]end
                        I have a bunch more as well: downright?, downward!, downward?, facing_upright?, upward!, upward?, vertical? (the ! methods reverse the face, if the normal is not in the direction wanted.)
                        Same named methods, similar functions for Vector3d class.

                        @ben.doherty said:

                        p.s. Dan - mostly c# scripting languages in the past.

                        I knew it had to be something like that..

                        I'm not here much anymore.

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                        • thomthomT Offline
                          thomthom
                          last edited by

                          You can use the constants X_AXIS, Y_AXIS and Z_AXIS instead if creating the vector array [0,0,1] etc.

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

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                          • B Offline
                            ben.doherty
                            last edited by

                            Oh the arrogance. Nearly finished indeed!
                            I tested this on a real model rather than my toy model and it had a complete fit.

                            http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4120/4808393958_53df1efc85_d.jpg

                            it seems that even though you've set the eye point, SketchUp takes pictures from the edge of the universe.
                            This means that the images taken from the green positions are fine, but the ones taken from the red directions are actually taken from the outside of the building.

                            I reproduced this to prove that I'm not mad.

                            http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4117/4808393762_8dd31e280d_d.jpg

                            The spikes are the view cones of 120 degree camera and a 60 degree camera. the circle is a cylinder behind the camera.

                            http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4123/4808393916_b25c6cf78f_d.jpg

                            http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4079/4807773187_fb134f2865_d.jpg

                            If you take a picture from this position the cylinder is clearly visible in the image. Grrrr 😡

                            http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4139/4808393690_0195d98f69_d.jpg

                            If you use the walk around tools in the UI then you can go in front of the cylinder, but I couldn't find anything to do with this in the API.
                            The thing that seemed to be the most likely to help was the section plane, but this seems to affect the shadows which isn't a lot of help.

                            I think it might be time to start looking very seriously at OpenStudio, but it's a shame to have come this far to be thwarted at the end!
                            Any ideas?


                            V1.zip

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                            • B Offline
                              ben.doherty
                              last edited by

                              The other solution I suppose would be to select everything in the halfspace behind the camera and set it's material to a transparent png as suggested here http://groups.google.com/group/SketchUp3d/browse_thread/thread/2ce1ef1f54e7b6dc?pli=1 .

                              That really is going to slow things down if I have to do 2 material sets for each entity.

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                              • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                Dan Rathbun
                                last edited by

                                @ben.doherty said:

                                If anyone has any more comments then I'd love to hear them.

                                OK, this is a little one... but a very important one!

                                You do not want to iterate directly (and EVER change anything within,) the C++ collections while your in the process of iterating them. You need to make Ruby Array copies of them, and iterate the copies, so they are 'frozen'. Otherwise the C++ side changes the collection, and you either iterate entites more than once, or your loop misses entites.

                                The change is easy... insert .to_a in between the collection call, and the loop method, like:
                                was:
                                ents = model.entites.each {|e| ...
                                should be:
                                ents = model.entites.to_a.each {|e| ...

                                See if that helps speed things up. You may have been double testing the same entites.

                                Umm... how about:

                                
                                      def isThisFourSided?(aFace)
                                        if aFace.class==(Sketchup;;Face)
                                          return aFace.vertices.length == 4
                                        else
                                          raise(TypeError,"in `isThisFourSided?', Sketchup;;Face argument expected.")
                                        end
                                      end
                                
                                

                                Lastly.. File.join(arg1,ar2,ag3,...) concatenates pathstring segments using the Ruby's File::SEPARATOR character (usual /) and then File.expand_path(arg) will both expand it to an absolute path, and convert all '**'s to '/**'s.

                                I'm not here much anymore.

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                                • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                  Dan Rathbun
                                  last edited by

                                  @ben.doherty said:

                                  The other solution I suppose would be to select everything in the halfspace behind the camera and set it's material to a transparent png as suggested here ...

                                  If I had to mess with objects that are behind the camera, not supposed to show, but do anyway.. then my 1st course of action would not be to change things like their materials... but instead use the 'hidden' attribute.

                                  Just as in other OOP languages, subclasses in Ruby inherit methods from their superclasses. Objects like that cylinder (probably grouped,) will inherit .hidden= and .hidden methods. Everything that can be 'drawn' in a model, is a subclass of Sketchup::Drawingelement (where those two methods [and their boolean opposites: .visible? and .visible=,] are defined.)

                                  Obviously, controlling visibilty, in Sketchup, is easier and faster if you group objects. Then you can hide the whole group, without needing to hide the individual elements. Even faster, is to use layering. Put common groups on the same layer, and turn on/off the entire layer with it's .visible= method. (The API implies class Layer does not have the 'hidden' opposite methods.) It's best to always have basic elements (Edges, Faces, etc.) always on Layer0 and then group (or component them,) and set the group/component to another layer.

                                  I'm not here much anymore.

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                                  • DavidBoulderD Offline
                                    DavidBoulder
                                    last edited by

                                    Hiding or making materials transparent will have the same problem with shadows as using a section cut.

                                    It does seem odd that you are seeing objects behind the camera position. I could see issues like this coming up with parallel projection, but it sounds like you are using perspective cameras instead.

                                    --

                                    David Goldwasser
                                    OpenStudio Developer
                                    National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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                                    • DavidBoulderD Offline
                                      DavidBoulder
                                      last edited by

                                      Ben, I had some time to post a video demonstrating how to use OpenStudio, EnergyPlus and ResultsViewer to study window shading over the entire year. The video doesn't have any annotation yet, but I'll add that soon. Below are some screenshots. The first is from SketchUp/OpenStudio. The color of the windows relate to the fraction of the window in the sun. While typically viewing simulation data in SketchUp is ideal, here the sketchUp shadows work well on their own. We can look at a window and see that about half of it is in the sun. In this case ResultsViewer's flood maps are an excellent way to study the entire year at a glance. You can quickly see which times of day or year are the problem times. I have shown a Type A and Type B window for the south and east. The Type A and B windows are the same except the Type A has the shade directly above it, while the Type B windows have the same shade offset five feet vertically. This is a simple example, but you can imagine how you can quickly study a variety of window designs and look at the strengths and weakness of each one.

                                      YouTube link (may not work yet)
                                      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=60lmAnY81ds

                                      Sunlit fraction results viewed in SketchUp
                                      Type b south window
                                      Type a south window
                                      Type b east window
                                      Type a east window

                                      --

                                      David Goldwasser
                                      OpenStudio Developer
                                      National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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