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    Retrievin object's absolute height ??

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    • jolranJ Offline
      jolran
      last edited by

      array.max
      For a collection of points you could do for ex:

      zmax = pts.map{|p| p.z }.max

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      • artmusicstudioA Offline
        artmusicstudio
        last edited by

        hi and thanx,
        so if understand right,
        this would sort the array of given points and find out the one with the highest z, right? (nice code, btw).

        so if if i had

        pt1=[0,0,5]
        pt2=[0,0,6]

        it would return zmax = 6 , right?

        my problem is, that when i retrieve points WITHIN a group, i get relative coordinates, not absolute. and since the group has no transformation, i again don't get ABSOLUTE coordinates ( with ABSOLUTE i hope to get the Z-zero of sketchup space, independent of, if the user changes the coordinate-origin (axes).

        maybe there is a way to get ABSOLUTE COORDINATES of any point outside or inside of grous/components?

        regards
        stan

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        • TIGT Offline
          TIG Moderator
          last edited by

          Points within a group are returned relative the the group's origin.
          So let's say you have a point 'pt' at [0,0,1] in the group you don't know where it is in the group's context unless you know where the group is within that let's say it is actually at [11,11,11].
          The group has a transformation: you can apply that to 'pt' and the values will change so:
          pt.transform!(group.transformation) becomes [11,11,12]
          and pt.z is now 12 rather than 1

          Of course your example should also work...
          zz=group.transformation.origin.z
          gives the height of the group so pt.z+zz also gives that height ?

          Of course if objects are nested you need to apply multiple transformations.

          TIG

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          • artmusicstudioA Offline
            artmusicstudio
            last edited by

            hi tig,
            i understood and made some tests.
            but if i have a group named

            @main_element (i persume it has a transformation, even it is not moved or anything else)
            and say

            tra = @main_element.transformation

            i get errors , since my syntax is wrong.

            could you give me the syntax for retrieving the transformation from a group?

            i tried a lot of ways, but always get errors.

            thank you!
            stan

            edit:
            when i define tra as

            tra = @main_element.transformation.to_a
            

            i get

            tra [1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0]

            how can i interpret the numbers?

            edit 2:
            when i move a group in Z+, tra becomes

            tra [1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1968.503937007874, 1.0]

            so 14th position seems to give the height.

            the problem is, that if i create a plane in a certain height (Z+), the transformation counts this as 0,0,0 .
            pos. 14 changes first, when i move the group from its origin place, where it was created.......this transformation is not related to absolute zero.... 😞

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            • jolranJ Offline
              jolran
              last edited by

              Does this work ?

              If I resue my code with TIG's recommendations..

              gpz = group.transformation.origin.z
              zmax = pts.map{|p| p.z + gpz }.max

              You could also have a look at Bounds.corner.points and get the highest Z value from those,
              unless you are interested in a particular vertice or so..

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              • artmusicstudioA Offline
                artmusicstudio
                last edited by

                hi jolran,

                1. i'll test your new idea later tonight, but i had the formula with origin
                tra = @main_element.transformation.origin
                

                already and it gave me the origin of the group at the point, where it was made, not to absolute [0,0,0]. but we shall see !!

                1. bounding box : i tried this, but i don't need the lowest point of a group, but one special corner within it, so lowest z of the bbox does not help here.
                  and when i retrieve the bbox of the nested element, itz again is relative, not absolute.

                seems to be tricky somehow....

                thanx
                stan

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                • sdmitchS Offline
                  sdmitch
                  last edited by

                  @artmusicstudio said:

                  hi tig,
                  i understood and made some tests.
                  but if i have a group named

                  @main_element (i persume it has a transformation, even it is not moved or anything else)
                  and say

                  Yes at the moment the group is created it is given an Identity Transformation.

                  tra = @main_element.transformation
                  i get errors , since my syntax is wrong.

                  The only reason this would give you syntax errors is if the variable @main_element has not been physically associated with the group.

                  could you give me the syntax for retrieving the transformation from a group?
                  i tried a lot of ways, but always get errors.

                  mod = Sketchup.active_model # Open model
                  > ent = mod.entities # All entities in model
                  > sel = mod.selection # Current selection
                  > @main_element = ent.grep(Sketchup;;Group).select{|g| g.name=="@main_element"}[0]
                  > tra = @main_element.transformation; #save the current transformation
                  > @main_element.transform! tra.inverse; # return the group to its created position
                  > zmax = @main_element.bounds.max.z; puts zmax; # get the max z
                  > @main_element.transform! tra; # return the group to its current position
                  

                  thank you!
                  stan

                  edit:
                  when i define tra as

                  tra = @main_element.transformation.to_a
                  

                  i get

                  tra [1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0]

                  how can i interpret the numbers?

                  edit 2:
                  when i move a group in Z+, tra becomes

                  tra [1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1968.503937007874, 1.0]

                  so 14th position seems to give the height.

                  the problem is, that if i create a plane in a certain height (Z+), the transformation counts this as 0,0,0 .
                  pos. 14 changes first, when i move the group from its origin place, where it was created.......this transformation is not related to absolute zero.... 😞

                  Nothing is worthless, it can always be used as a bad example.

                  http://sdmitch.blogspot.com/

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                  • S Offline
                    slbaumgartner
                    last edited by

                    @sdmitch said:

                    @artmusicstudio said:

                    hi tig,
                    i understood and made some tests.
                    but if i have a group named

                    mod = Sketchup.active_model # Open model
                    > > ent = mod.entities # All entities in model
                    > > sel = mod.selection # Current selection
                    > > @main_element = ent.grep(Sketchup;;Group).select{|g| g.name=="@main_element"}[0]
                    > > tra = @main_element.transformation; #save the current transformation
                    > > @main_element.transform! tra.inverse; # return the group to its created position
                    > > zmax = @main_element.bounds.max.z; puts zmax; # get the max z
                    > > @main_element.transform! tra; # return the group to its current position
                    

                    thank you!
                    stan

                    The code block above seems to have been edited out of your earlier post, but sdmitch grabbed it first. It seems to reveal confusion between the name attribute of a group and the symbolic name of a variable that refers to that group. These are separate, unrelated concepts. That is, if you write

                    @foo = ents.add_group #@foo is a variable that refers to a group with no name attribute
                    @foo.name = "@main_element" #@foo now refers to a group with name attribute "@main_element"

                    Following this code, there is no such variable as @main_element. Conversely, there is no group whose name attribute is @foo.

                    Your search above looks for a group whose name attribute is "@main_element". Did you assign that previously using Group#name=, or are you assuming that because you earlier created a group referenced by a variable named @main_element that the group has that as its name attribute (wrong). In any case, you need to test what value was assigned to @main_element by your search. I bet it is nil (because the search found nothing), and that is the cause of your syntax error.

                    Steve

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                    • jolranJ Offline
                      jolran
                      last edited by

                      I haven't follow along the other discussion so pardon me if butting in..

                      But If your only concern is the get the heighest elements point(?) won't this code work regardless of any transformation made ?

                      %(#FF0000)[bb = group.bounds # could be any element responding to Bounds.
                      cornersZmax = (0..7).collect{|i| bb.corner(i).z }.max]

                      I tested and it seams to be working. ?

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                      • TIGT Offline
                        TIG Moderator
                        last edited by

                        Since I haven't seen your code...
                        Here's a guess...

                        If your 'reference' is to a 'group' OR a 'component-instance', then it WILL have a 'transformation'.
                        BUT if that 'reference' is to a 'definition' it will NOT ! πŸ˜’

                        puts @main_element.class in your code will tell you what the reference is...

                        TIG

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                        • sdmitchS Offline
                          sdmitch
                          last edited by

                          What are we trying to determine? If it is the highest point regardless of location and/or orientation or the true height of the group?

                          Nothing is worthless, it can always be used as a bad example.

                          http://sdmitch.blogspot.com/

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                          • jolranJ Offline
                            jolran
                            last edited by

                            πŸ˜„

                            I interpreted this as highest point.

                            @unknownuser said:

                            i would like to calculate the height of a defined point (say toppoint of a bbox)
                            above absolute sketchup 0,0,0.

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                            • sdmitchS Offline
                              sdmitch
                              last edited by

                              In that case, ?group?.bounds.max.z should give you that in SU8.

                              Nothing is worthless, it can always be used as a bad example.

                              http://sdmitch.blogspot.com/

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                              • TIGT Offline
                                TIG Moderator
                                last edited by

                                It's possible to devise a group with a transformation where the group.bound.max.z will NOT be a vertex.
                                If the proposition is to find the highest vertex in a group that is not the same thing ?
                                However, if you are simply trying to find the max.z it will do...
                                See this simple illustration...


                                Capture.PNG

                                TIG

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                                • jolranJ Offline
                                  jolran
                                  last edited by

                                  @unknownuser said:

                                  element.bounds.max.z

                                  Yeah, that's way simpler...
                                  But as TIG pointed out bbox cp is not always safest way to find highest vertex, so normally one end up traversing the collection anyway.

                                  I'm starting to wonder if TO wants to measure the face height..

                                  to reuse the transformation origin maybe try this.. I guess theres more than 1 way to do this.

                                  targetZ = 0
                                  org = group.transformation.origin
                                  
                                  group.entities.to_a.grep(Sketchup;;Edge).each{|edg|
                                      sz = edg.start.position.z
                                      ez = edg.end.position.z
                                      tmax = (sz > ez ? sz ; ez) + org.z
                                      next unless tmax > targetZ 
                                       targetZ = tmax
                                  }
                                  puts targetZ.to_l
                                  
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                                  • sdmitchS Offline
                                    sdmitch
                                    last edited by

                                    @jolran said:

                                    @unknownuser said:

                                    element.bounds.max.z

                                    Yeah, that's way simpler...
                                    But as TIG pointed out bbox cp is not always safest way to find highest vertex, so normally one end up traversing the collection anyway.

                                    I'm starting to wonder if TO wants to measure the face height..

                                    to reuse the transformation origin maybe try this.. I guess theres more than 1 way to do this.

                                    targetZ = 0
                                    > org = group.transformation.origin
                                    > 
                                    > group.entities.to_a.grep(Sketchup;;Edge).each{|edg|
                                    >     sz = edg.start.position.z
                                    >     ez = edg.end.position.z
                                    >     tmax = (sz > ez ? sz ; ez) + org.z
                                    >     next unless tmax > targetZ 
                                    >      targetZ = tmax
                                    > }
                                    > puts targetZ.to_l
                                    

                                    Sorry but that only works if there is no rotation. Here is another way

                                    targetZ = 0
                                    tra = group.transformation
                                    group.entities.to_a.grep(Sketchup;;Edge).each{|edg|
                                        sz = edg.start.position.transform(tra).z
                                        ez = edg.end.position.transform(tra).z
                                    	targetZ = [targetZ,sz,ez].max
                                    }
                                    puts targetZ.to_l
                                    

                                    Nothing is worthless, it can always be used as a bad example.

                                    http://sdmitch.blogspot.com/

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                                    • jolranJ Offline
                                      jolran
                                      last edited by

                                      Dats true. But I don't understand why you opt to create a new Array for each edge instead of a ternary πŸ˜•

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