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    [Plugin] Slicer v4.3 20110619

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    • TIGT Offline
      TIG Moderator
      last edited by

      Here's an updated version
      http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?p=16689#p16689

      An Image export option has been added.
      Usage:
      Run the main Slicer tool and make your flatten slices set.
      Then preselect the 'Flat-Slice-nnnnnnnn' group and type into Ruby Console: Slicer::images
      It then makes .png image files of 0.9 quality, with no anti-aliasing, each named after the slice; all within a folder with the model, named 'ModelName-Slice-Images-nnnnnnnn'. All images are made the same size [based on the screen] with the relative size of each slice maintained in the 'pixel sizes', so subsequent auto-cropping of the white-space leaves images that are all 'relatively sized'...
      Tip: use a Style with a white '[back]ground', no profiles, no extensions, no endpoints etc so the images are as sharp as possible.
      πŸ€“

      TIG

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      • G Offline
        Gschwartz9
        last edited by

        Despite studying and testing essentially everything in this thread, I'm unable to accomplish what I need.

        I'm laying out laminated flooring in my home. Each laminate plank measures ~ 4"x30"x3/8". I've made a group of the plank.

        I need to "saw" the planks to varying lengths, and save the pieces sawed off, minus 1/8" saw kerf. The saved pieces will be used where short pieces are needed on the opposite end of the room.

        I'm prepared to give myself a dope slap if I've failed to recognize the solution in this thread.

        SU8 Pro, Win7

        Gary

        There's always a better way.

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        • TIGT Offline
          TIG Moderator
          last edited by

          Gschwartz9

          I think that Slicer really isn't the tool you want...
          You are using groups rather than components which will make editing just one easier...
          You simply lay out the first line of planks as you would in real life.
          Using Move+Ctrl then Nx to make enough copies off to the right.
          The last one will need to be 'cut'.
          Copy the last group to the side of itself [Move+Ctrl with snap-points as appropriate].
          Now edit that copy and pushpull the end of the copied plank that's inside the room until it is level with the wall/skirting face [or door=threshold etc as appropriate to its location], now you could pushpull it another 1/8" to account for the saw cut [but this level of accuracy is probably unnecessary - I suspect you won't have modeled the rooms skirting trims and left a 1/2" movement gap around the perimeter etc...].
          You can also repeat on the last piece in the first line, editing it so the cut of end is no longer there...
          Take the 'off-cut' and place it at the left-hand start again, next to the initial piece.
          Now place a whole plank to the right of that and repeat the Move+Ctrl then Nx to make enough copies off to the right.
          Again the last one will need to be 'cut'.
          Repeat the copying it and pushpull the end of the copied plank that's inside the room etc as before.
          Keep repeating this until all of the floor is covered.

          Note that if you want to have regularly spaced butt-joints, rather than whatever the off-cut gives you [e.g. the planks are 'tile-like' rather than 'wooden-planks'] then you need to mark the tiling repeat as a line in the initial group and slide the off-cut at the restart until it aligns with the mark - if it can't then it's has to be discarded and you use a new plank - if you are trying to stagger the plank ends in alternate rows slide the next start plank to align with a mark - leave the part you'd actually need to cut off sticking into the wall for now... make the run of planks until the last one that needs cutting to fit - if it'd be smaller than the off-cut you would have from the first plank in the lien then you can make the copy of the plank and edit/pushpull that plank and its copy in opposite directions so you have the two pieces... then take the piece current stuck in the wall [I recommend you do this using a 2d copy of the floor plane without the walls to get in your way, or use layers to hide most stuff]... and use that at the right-hand end, again cutting it as needed to fit [this time the final off-cut will be useless because it'll not have a start or end slot to connect to another plank!]...

          It's easier to do it than write it...Capture.PNG

          TIG

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          • G Offline
            Gschwartz9
            last edited by

            Thanks TIG for the clever workaround. This will get me thru my current project.

            Your procedure is easy to follow and gets the job done. I have a couple of issues with the routine that may be unreasonable expectations. One: I've applied textures to the sides and ends to discern between tongue & groove ends & sides. When I shorten via PP, the texture remains, telling me it's a tongue or a groove when it's actually neither. Second: Compared to AutoCad's Slice command, it's more time consuming. With the ACAD Slice command, a plane is defined by two intersecting lines. Any object intersected by this plane can be sliced, with the option of retaining either or both resulting pieces. This capability is what I'm looking for.

            This has value in construction, carpentry & plumbing where materials are purchased in finite lengths that need to be cut to fit, and the remainder retained for use.

            You indicated that I may be looking in the wrong place. Can you point me in the right direction?

            Gary

            There's always a better way.

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            • K Offline
              kyyu
              last edited by

              Gschwartz9, you say you have SU8 Pro. Have you tried the "Solid Tools", specifically the "Split" feature?

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              • TIGT Offline
                TIG Moderator
                last edited by

                You are seriously over complicating the issue by adding a texture to the planks.
                Why not go the whole hog and add the fully modeled t&g edges all round [and then have the difficulty of snapping the pieces together] πŸ˜’
                Never forget that what you model is exactly that - 'a model' it does not need to represent really exactly - in the case of these planks the face size is what's important to you, nothing else. I used PushPull in my example simply because I though it was the simplest to do - as Scaling would distort etc...
                If you insist on using this 'textured way' then have you looked at say the 'Zorro2' tool which will cut up solids, or as already suggested the 'Solid' tool ?
                A simpler way might be that IF you have to know which edges are t&g etc then you can add a small 'marker' shaped like a T to the top-left corner of the original plank group and an equivalent G 'marker' to the bottom-right corner.
                The two edges next to a T are always 'Tongued' and the two next to the G are always 'Grooved'. When you split a plank [using Zorro/Solid tools etc, NOT PP] you can then tell which end is which type for reusing later. If a plank's off-cut has neither marker then it an unusable central bit and needs to be discarded.
                As you should always lay the floor from the top-left corner of the room, adding planks to the right until you reach a wall etc, and when that line is done you must start again at the left=most end of the laid floor, you should never need to 'rotate' or 'flip' anything [unlike real life!]... so the plank's 'up' long edge is always a 'tongue' and the plank's 'down' long edge is always a 'groove' anyway...

                TIG

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                • pep75P Offline
                  pep75
                  last edited by

                  Hey Tig! Now you van see what your hard work can do!!

                  http://www.qupix.nl/PROJECTS/STANDS/ROCKWOOL%20Utrecht%20Bouwb/PROJECTS_ROCKWOOL%20BOUWB.html

                  Greets!
                  Pep

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                  • G Offline
                    Gschwartz9
                    last edited by

                    I agree that I'm overcomplicating this issue. I'll simplify my need.

                    Assume that I have an 8' 2x4 that will be sawed into a 5' piece and a 16" piece. I want to use the remainder elsewhere in my project. Assume also that for good reasons, the PP solution won't work.

                    I've tried: Subtract, Split, Trim, Zorro & Zorro2. All either don't do the job, or require significant "repair" work on the cut pieces. For example: Subtract initially appears to do exactly what I need by removing a narrow section of the 2x4 at the desired location. But, the 8' 2x4 component (or group) continues to be a single entity that requires exploding, then making components or groups of all the pieces.

                    I must be doing something wrong, but I haven't identified it in the tutorials. Also, it's hard to believe that a program as sophisticated as SU lacks such a basic tool that has broad application.

                    What am I missing?

                    There's always a better way.

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                    • BoxB Offline
                      Box
                      last edited by

                      Draw a line using the line/pencil tool at the point you wish to cut, select the offcut and group it and move it to your offcut pile.

                      Or better still, create a vertical plane at your cutting point, use this to intersect with the planks and separate the pieces.

                      Perhaps I'm seeing it too simply, ignore me if so.

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                      • G Offline
                        Gschwartz9
                        last edited by

                        I tried both methods, but unable to make either work.

                        Someone please tell me if my expectations are unreasonable, or point me toward a solution.

                        There's always a better way.

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                        • TIGT Offline
                          TIG Moderator
                          last edited by

                          I still think Zorro[2] should do what you want...
                          I have 'chop.rb' [unreleased] that does something similar - simply splitting all of geometry inside the preselected things along the plane defined by 3 picked points...
                          I'll see if I can get it decent for the public... If I recall it only chops to one level of nesting - probably more than enough for you... but not great as a general tool... πŸ˜•

                          TIG

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                          • K Offline
                            kyyu
                            last edited by

                            @gschwartz9 said:

                            ...
                            I've tried: Subtract, Split, Trim, Zorro & Zorro2. All either don't do the job, or require significant "repair" work on the cut pieces.

                            This snippet of code can take care of the repair work, after using the solid tools (Trim?). Right click the group and select "Divide Group after Trim". Just be sure no loose geometry is touching it(groups & components are ok), otherwise they may be incorporated into the new groups.
                            divide group after trim.rb

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                            • G Offline
                              Gschwartz9
                              last edited by

                              I'll give Zorro[2] another try. Also interested in your chop tool. You're right about only one level of nesting needed.

                              I think it would be great as a general tool. Examples: *Plumber working with sections of 2" copper pipe for a long run that has many changes in direction and varying lengths of pipe, *Landscaper laying tiles along a curved path, *Carpenter determining which length of lumber will be most efficient for a project that needs several pieces of varying lengths, *A craftsman determining how much of a very expensive wood he needs, *A retired Mechanical Engineer attempting to optimize usage of laminate flooring.

                              Of all the tools I've looked at, Section Plane seems to have the essence of what's needed. It lacks is the option for retaining both sides of the section cut. An enhancement would be user-selected distance between the sides. That distance would vary depending on the material being cut; e.g. copper pipe, construction wood, model-makers wood, concrete ...

                              Is the code for Section Plane available?

                              There's always a better way.

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                              • G Offline
                                Gschwartz9
                                last edited by

                                @kyyu said:

                                @gschwartz9 said:

                                ...
                                I've tried: Subtract, Split, Trim, Zorro & Zorro2. All either don't do the job, or require significant "repair" work on the cut pieces.

                                This snippet of code can take care of the repair work, after using the solid tools (Trim?). Right click the group and select "Divide Group after Trim". Just be sure no loose geometry is touching it(groups & components are ok), otherwise they may be incorporated into the new groups.
                                [attachment=0:1q6mm088]<!-- ia0 -->divide group after trim.rb<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:1q6mm088]

                                WOW!
                                This does the job. Thank you kyyu.

                                There's always a better way.

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                                • G Offline
                                  Gschwartz9
                                  last edited by

                                  One remaining question:

                                  When I apply short reference lines to the edge of planks to use when I stagger the rows by 1/3 plank-length, the group is recognized as a group, but not a solid.

                                  If I edit the group & erase the reference lines, it is recognized as a solid.

                                  Where did I go wrong?

                                  There's always a better way.

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                                  • TIGT Offline
                                    TIG Moderator
                                    last edited by

                                    A solid is a group/definition where all edges have two faces - no more no fewer!
                                    So faceless-edges, faces without a neighbor [a flap], internal partitions where an edge has three or more faces or otherwise 'solid' forms that meet on a common edge so that edge actually has four faces... will all report as non-solids...

                                    So to avoid 'unsolidness' ensure that all edges have two, and only two faces... and use other means of adding 'guides'...

                                    TIG

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                                    • K Offline
                                      kyyu
                                      last edited by

                                      You could use "guide point/lines" placed by the "Tape Measure Tool". Or there are plugins that make center points (aka construction points) and you can copy/paste them after they are replaced. Or plugins that may place the construction point directly. The picture below, illustrates the two methods.

                                      Guide Point.png
                                      Or making construction lines, outside of the group, may turn out to be a better solution. That's how I normally do alot of my alignment.

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                                      • C Offline
                                        Cubcrafter
                                        last edited by

                                        Is it possible to have variable spacing of the slices.
                                        Such as the first slice is at the face of the object, second slice at 3", next slice at 8" and so on.

                                        Thanks,

                                        Larry

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                                        • TIGT Offline
                                          TIG Moderator
                                          last edited by

                                          Not unless you rewrite the code!
                                          It would be possible if you rewrite the loop that steps through the slice spacing - instead of using the spacing to move the intersecting 'disk' in even steps, you'd compile an array of the spacings and then iterate those in turn...
                                          Why do you want to do this ??

                                          TIG

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                                          • C Offline
                                            Cubcrafter
                                            last edited by

                                            Tig,

                                            I want to use something like slicer to locate bulkheads at exact locations along the fuselages of some aircraft designs that I am working on. I like the way it can take the slices and lay them out flat so that I can export them to my laser cutter.
                                            Maybe there is a better way, I don't know.

                                            Larry

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