...crazy stool
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LOL, that's funny! Thank you for making the vids!
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@tinanne said:
Nothing is happening for me?
...let,s fly?
...is not stable,no save,but very nice..
select wings,run "buble"(pressure 1)and press ENTER...
paper+birds.skp -
wow. this is some cool stuff. and I know i'm just one step away from figuring it out! Dangit!
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@urgen said:
.... old (first)discussion about it: http://groups.google.com/group/Ruby-API/browse_thread/thread/982c56fae94d3537/fececa1a9d219f24?lnk=gst#fececa1a9d219f24
....Look it attentively... Be not lazy
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Got it!
Thanks for the hint!
w00t! -
So can someone also explain why it is happening?
(That should be the ultimate goal of such a topic so that everyone can understand it) -
If I understand right, it's because the +/- values are associated with the front/back face of the sketchup geometry. By having them arranged in a specific pattern, it creates an unsolvable problem for the SSB.
But I certainly don't understand all the details yet.
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Basically something like that,yes. The Bubble tool of SSB would want to "bulge" the shape towards the face normals and if you reverse some of the facets in the TIN, it gets "confused" and into an endless loop of bubbling to and fro. The beauty of it that since everything is happening "real time", it will continuously play the "animation".
In Urgen's model, you can find the "culprit", partially reversed surface hidden in the group.
It's mostly a useless "play" however but of course, you can even create "seemingly randomly waving" surfaces with it like for a pool or pond (if you stop the animation,it will"freeze" in its current phase).
Maybe this topic should go to the Tutorials? Let's see what Urgen says.
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It was tricky in the water example because the texture was applied to both sides...
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More exactly, to the (whole) group.
When you are suspicious of a face orientation issue, always start with checking the model in monochrome face style. That reveals a lot of (and often important) details. -
Consider this a Sketchup Forensics Lesson 101.
It was the first real time I'd tried to deconstruct someone else's model.
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You can always learn a lot from other models. It's really worth downloading and decomposing the ones posted in the Newbie or SketchUp Discussions as replies for others' questions.
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