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    • Chris FullmerC Offline
      Chris Fullmer
      last edited by

      Here is a quick animation showing your code in action (no sound):

      [flash=1004,675:2gdcctgr]http://chrisfullmer.com/forums/martin_jumper.swf[/flash:2gdcctgr]

      Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
      All my Plugins I've written

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      • M Offline
        MartinRinehart
        last edited by

        @chris fullmer said:

        I did not use the .move! method, but instead a regular .transform!

        Hooray! It's alive. (It's doing exactly what TIG said: relative moves contrary to everything that I've seen. But that's another issue.)

        You wouldn't be able to slow that down to one or two moves per second, would you? At full throttle on my slow machine that's climbing about 63 inches/second.

        Edit: never mind. I got it.

        
                def nextFrame( view )
                    $gc.transform! $t
                    view.show_frame( 0.5 ) # Really simple!
                    return ( Time.now() - $start ) < 5
                end
        
        

        Author, Edges to Rubies - The Complete SketchUp Tutorial at http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial.

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        • Chris FullmerC Offline
          Chris Fullmer
          last edited by

          Yes, that is where the .show_frame method comes in to play. Change your next_frame method to this:

          def nextFrame( view ) $gc.transform! $t view.show_frame 0.5 return ( Time.now() - $start ) < 15 end

          That puts a 0.5 second delay on the animation. That is how you can control the framerate for SU animations. Of course SU can run even slower than what you specify IF you are animating a lot of geometry.

          delay should equal seconds divided by framerate:

          delay = 1 / fps

          So a target of 15 frames per second is 1 / 15 = 0.066667 for the delay value:

          view.show_frame 0.066667

          Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
          All my Plugins I've written

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          • M Offline
            MartinRinehart
            last edited by

            @chris fullmer said:

            Here is a quick animation showing your code ...

            Very cool. "Our code" I think is more exact. And thanks!

            Hey, how did you do that? I'm thinking that my HTML tutorial is destined for treeware, but that doesn't rule out links.

            Author, Edges to Rubies - The Complete SketchUp Tutorial at http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial.

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            • Chris FullmerC Offline
              Chris Fullmer
              last edited by

              Also, the way I put in the transformation makes it move 1" each time the .next_frame method fires. So you would have to do some re-working to make it so that it moves 1" per second, regardless of how many frames get made during that second. But that is do-able, and frankly more useful than making it move 1" per frame.

              I think the way to do it would be to figure in the frames per second into the transformation, so when the user changes the frames per second, it adjusts the transformation vector distance. Just a thought,

              Chris

              Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
              All my Plugins I've written

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              • thomthomT Offline
                thomthom
                last edited by

                View.average_refresh_time
                http://code.google.com/intl/nb/apis/sketchup/docs/ourdoc/view.html#average_refresh_time

                @unknownuser said:

                The average_refresh_time is used to set the average time used to refresh the current model in the view. This can be used to estimate the frame rate for an animation.

                This could be useful to verify you're getting the desired framerate?

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

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                • M Offline
                  MartinRinehart
                  last edited by

                  @thomthom said:

                  This could be useful to verify you're getting the desired framerate?

                  Frame rate seems correct, within SketchUp's limits. Moves small things nicely at 24 fps. Flying my 50kB biplane smoothly. Corrects the timer problem.

                  Will slow down, I assume (never assume!), if trying to move too much geometry.

                  Author, Edges to Rubies - The Complete SketchUp Tutorial at http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial.

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                  • renderizaR Offline
                    renderiza
                    last edited by

                    @chris fullmer said:

                    Here is a quick animation showing your code in action (no sound):

                    [flash=1004,675:rhvt88ob]http://chrisfullmer.com/forums/martin_jumper.swf[/flash:rhvt88ob]

                    Hi,

                    The code runs while using the “Ruby Web Console” but when I try to make a jumper.rb out of it to put it on the plugins folder the following error shows;

                    Load Errors
                    Undefined method ‘transform!’ for nil:NilClassError Loading File
                    jumper.rb
                    undefined method ‘transform!’ for nil: NilClass

                    If I try to put the following;

                    def transform
                    $gc = Sketchup.active_model.selection[0]
                    vec = Geom;;Vector3d.new(0,0,1)
                    $t = Geom;;Transformation.new(vec)
                    $start = Time.now()
                    
                    view = Sketchup.active_model().active_view()
                    
                    view.animation = Jumper.new
                    end
                    

                    The jumper.rb loads ok but when I press it no animations are triggered. Can someone please help me with this.

                    Thanks

                    [url=https://www.sketchupcode.com/:z3kqsidd]My Extensions ...[/url:z3kqsidd]

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                    • Dan RathbunD Offline
                      Dan Rathbun
                      last edited by

                      @unknownuser said:

                      The code runs while using the “Ruby Web Console” but when I try to make a jumper.rb out of it to put it on the plugins folder the following error shows;


                      Load Errors

                      Undefined method ‘transform!’ for nil:NilClassError Loading File
                      jumper.rb
                      undefined method ‘transform!’ for nil: NilClass


                      Because the examples in this topic show very poor programming practice!

                      (1) The code is not namespace protected

                      (2) The code uses global variables that can conflict with other global variables.

                      (3) There is no selection checking that prevents an exception if the selection is empty.

                      (4) There is no entity Type checking to ensure that the selected entity(ies) can have the transform! method called upon them.

                      I'll see if I can cobble up a better example, perhaps I'll post it in a new [ Code ] topic (so it can be indexed with the Code Snippet indexer.)

                      🤓

                      I'm not here much anymore.

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                      • Dan RathbunD Offline
                        Dan Rathbun
                        last edited by

                        @dan rathbun said:

                        I'll see if I can cobble up a better example, perhaps I'll post it in a new [ Code ] topic (so it can be indexed with the Code Snippet indexer.)

                        Done!

                        ➡ [Code] AnimateSelection Example v1.0.0

                        .

                        I'm not here much anymore.

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