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    Custom Dynamic Component Functions = Ruby links

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    • J Offline
      Jim
      last edited by

      @unknownuser said:

      --use component options to determine dimensions
      --in outliner, click on 'CUTTERS'
      --select 'Outer Shell' via solid tools
      --select 'Subtract' via solid tools
      --click on the orange board (stringer_uncut)
      --explode
      --the stringer will be a single solid component named 'Stringer'

      Once the DC is configured, these steps could be automated into a single step (via a menu or tool button.) I am making the assumption of consistent Component names being used i.e Components named "Cutters" are always subtacted from Components named "Stringer_Uncut"

      Hi

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      • jeff hammondJ Offline
        jeff hammond
        last edited by

        @jim said:

        Once the DC is configured, these steps could be automated into a single step (via a menu or tool button.) I am making the assumption of consistent Component names being used i.e Components named "Cutters" are always subtacted from Components named "Stringer_Uncut"

        hey Jim.

        since the time of this thread, I have automated the finishing parts of the DC using AppleScript. I found a pretty decent way to create macros for sketchup.. the macros are osx 'services' which (can) reside in a specific app's menus (or they can be available system wide)

        which reminds me. maybe I should type up a thread showing how to accomplish this.

        dotdotdot

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        • Dan RathbunD Offline
          Dan Rathbun
          last edited by

          Jeff.. please DO.

          Then if we can find a PC complement (likely OLE,) these "services" could be wrapped as Ruby objects or classes. A platform conditional if block would define the Ruby interface, using AppleScript on the Mac, and OLE on PC. In this way we could have a cross-platform Ruby interface for plugins.

          I'm not here much anymore.

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          • jeff hammondJ Offline
            jeff hammond
            last edited by

            @dan rathbun said:

            Jeff.. please DO.

            Then if we can find a PC complement (likely OLE,) these "services" could be wrapped as Ruby objects or classes. A platform conditional if block would define the Ruby interface, using AppleScript on the Mac, and OLE on PC. In this way we could have a cross-platform Ruby interface for plugins.

            hmm. I'm not too sure it would work with what you're suggesting. (at least the way I've been going about it)

            I'm doing GUI scripting so it's basically just keystrokes and menu items.. you can accomplish quite a bit this way (I actually have one script that uses a little but of ruby in there via the console 😄 )

            the thing that's good about it is it's not very complicated so a lot of people should be able to make their own macros this way (and a bonus is that you don't have to install any additional software)..

            dotdotdot

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            • J Offline
              Jim
              last edited by

              @unknownuser said:

              I'm doing GUI scripting so it's basically just keystrokes and menu items..

              The Windows equivalent can be accomplished via Windows Scripting.

              Here's a VBScript example:

              Sub Wait
              	Wscript.Sleep(1500)
              End Sub
              
              set WshShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
              'WshShell.AppActivate "- SketchUp"
              Command = """C;\Program Files (x86)\Google\Google SketchUp 8\SketchUp.exe"""
              'MsgBox Command
              WshShell.Run(Command)
              Wait
              WshShell.SendKeys "%u" ' My SU Shortcut to open Ruby Console
              Wait
              WshShell.AppActivate "Ruby Console"
              Wait
              WshShell.SendKeys "require_all 'c;/plugins'{ENTER}"
              
              
              
              

              Hi

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              • jeff hammondJ Offline
                jeff hammond
                last edited by

                @jim said:

                @unknownuser said:

                I'm doing GUI scripting so it's basically just keystrokes and menu items..

                The Windows equivalent can be accomplished via Windows Scripting.

                Here's a VBScript example:

                set WshShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
                > 'WshShell.AppActivate "- SketchUp"
                > Command = "C;\Program Files (x86)\Google\Google SketchUp 8\SketchUp.exe"
                > MsgBox Command
                > WshShell.Run Command
                > WScript.Sleep 1000
                > WshShell.SendKeys "%u" ' My SU Shortcut to open Ruby Console
                > WScript.Sleep 1000
                > WshShell.AppActivate "Ruby Console"
                > WScript.Sleep 1000
                > WshShell.SendKeys "require_all 'c;/plugins'"
                > WScript.Sleep 1000
                > WshShell.SendKeys "{ENTER}"
                > 
                

                is something like that easy to run from within sketchup? (that's sort of the beauty of osx services.. they become a menu item so activating the script is the same for anything else in sketchup.)

                regardless, you guys could probably write a macro recorder in ruby that in turn produces these services :enlighten:

                nothing to do with recording cursor movement etc.. AppleScript can't handle it.. (eg- edit component, select all, explode, generate faces, exit component)

                those steps are what ruby watches, then places the commands in a .scpt format and moves them to the services folder.

                [edit-- sorry for not cleaning up the quotes in my replies.. im on a phone and deleting big chunks of text is no fun 😄 ]

                dotdotdot

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                • Dan RathbunD Offline
                  Dan Rathbun
                  last edited by

                  Yep.. what Jim said.. however, his example can also be written in Ruby (on PC using the Win32ole.so extension, which many users have already installed to their "Plugins" directory, or they have it in their full Ruby library directory, if they have installed the full Ruby edition, and pushed it's lib path into the $LOAD_PATH array.)

                  So to use the "SendKeys" example (which seems to be a common function name in many of the programming languages available, from low-level C, to the higher level languages such as VB, C# etc.)

                  Goal: To provide a cross-platform Ruby method, named SendKeys() that sends keystrokes to the Sketchup application.

                  1) Choose a community namespace. As an example, lets say (for argument's sake,) this will go within the SKX project namespace, and beneath that we'll wrap it within a GUI submodule.

                  module SKX; end # make sure outer namespace is defined
                  
                  module SKX;;GUI
                  
                    if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /(darwin)/i # on Mac
                  
                      def self.SendKeys(keystring)
                        # the Mac code using AppleScript
                      end
                  
                    else # on Windows
                  
                      def self.SendKeys(keystring)
                        # the WIN code using Windows Scripting Host
                      end
                  
                    end
                  
                  end # module SKX;;GUI
                  

                  This is the one file approach, which may not be the best, because it makes everyone update their file(s) even when a revision is made for a certain platform. I show it to make an important point about Ruby, in that it is a dynamic language that can be defined during runtime. (In this example, we would define the same method, two different ways, depending upon which platform it will run on.)

                  The separate file approach may be better. Where a user chooses an install package for the proper platform, so that their "Plugins/SKX/GUI" directory, only contains the Ruby object definitions for their platform.

                  To use this proposed feature, scripters would simply require the proper module definition file:

                  require("SKX/GUI/keyboard.rb") SKX::GUI::SendKeys("require_all 'c:/plugins'"+SKX::GUI::KBD::ENTER)

                  P.S.: Locally within a custom module or class, a scripter can create 'nickname' shortcut references that point at long nested qualified objects, like:
                  gui = SKX::GUI @kbd = SKX::GUI::KBD
                  or even:
                  ENTER = SKX::GUI::KBD::ENTER
                  So don't be afraid of well organized, multi-nested module namespaces.
                  Also.. if say, the KBD submodule was just a mixin module of constants, scripters could, if they wished, mix it into their module(s) or class(es) by inclusion:

                  module Author;;FancyPlugin
                    require("SKX/GUI/keyboard.rb")
                    include(SKX;;GUI;;KBD)
                    # now all constants in KBD module, are mixed in.
                  end
                  

                  💭

                  I'm not here much anymore.

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                  • jeff hammondJ Offline
                    jeff hammond
                    last edited by

                    the wording in AppleScript is keystroke.

                    keystroke "v" (for the v key)
                    keystroke "V" (is for shift + v)
                    keystroke "V" using command down (for shift-cmmd-v or paste in place)

                    likewise, you can also do menu items:

                    click menu item "Outer Shell" of menu "Tools"

                    dotdotdot

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                    • Dan RathbunD Offline
                      Dan Rathbun
                      last edited by

                      @unknownuser said:

                      the wording in AppleScript is keystroke.

                      Yea.. and what is the point your making ??

                      I'm not here much anymore.

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                      • jeff hammondJ Offline
                        jeff hammond
                        last edited by

                        @dan rathbun said:

                        @unknownuser said:

                        the wording in AppleScript is keystroke.

                        Yea.. and what is the point your making ??

                        just saying that ruby could write the macro script. (but I'm pretty sure I'm not thinking about doing this the right way 😉 )

                        like if a user turns on the macro recorder (.rb plugin) then does a series of commands they want to automate then click 'stop ecording'(or whatever).. ruby will then write the commands used in a scpt file in the format of my previous post.. then puts it in the services folder so the user now has a sketchup macro without leaving sketchup or manually typing up an AppleScript.

                        edit. oh, I was also just saying it's 'keystroke' in applescript as opposed to 'sendkeys'

                        dotdotdot

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                        • bmikeB Offline
                          bmike
                          last edited by

                          Jeff,

                          Very much hope you do a thread on how to use services in Mac. I've moved back to Mac after a too long trip through various PCs and am very curious about Services, AppleScript, and Automator. Anything you put together for Services in SketchUp would be appreciated.

                          mike beganyi design + consulting llc

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                          • jeff hammondJ Offline
                            jeff hammond
                            last edited by

                            @bmike said:

                            Jeff,

                            Very much hope you do a thread on how to use services in Mac. I've moved back to Mac after a too long trip through various PCs and am very curious about Services, AppleScript, and Automator. Anything you put together for Services in SketchUp would be appreciated.

                            I'm going to do a thread today on it.
                            I think I'll keep it super basic at first then the thread can evolve from there into the other possibilities.

                            dotdotdot

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                            • bmikeB Offline
                              bmike
                              last edited by

                              @unknownuser said:

                              @bmike said:

                              Jeff,

                              Very much hope you do a thread on how to use services in Mac. I've moved back to Mac after a too long trip through various PCs and am very curious about Services, AppleScript, and Automator. Anything you put together for Services in SketchUp would be appreciated.

                              I'm going to do a thread today on it.
                              I think I'll keep it super basic at first then the thread can evolve from there into the other possibilities.

                              Great!
                              I'll keep an eye out for it!

                              mike beganyi design + consulting llc

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                              • jeff hammondJ Offline
                                jeff hammond
                                last edited by

                                ok. I made a little macro example in this thread:

                                http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=44503

                                .

                                dotdotdot

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                                • halroachH Offline
                                  halroach
                                  last edited by

                                  @tig said:

                                  Please read this http://cfcl.com/twiki/bin/view/Projects/SketchUp/DA_Adding_Functions
                                  which covers how to add your own 'custom functions' to a DC. ...

                                  The link seems not to work anymore (It actually looks like an endless loop of DNS forwarding!?)
                                  Anywhere else where the info may be found?

                                  FlexTools - Super Quick Windows, Doors, Slats...

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                                  • halroachH Offline
                                    halroach
                                    last edited by

                                    Seems like the site is back up and running! The link about "Adding Functions" seems to have changed to this:
                                    http://cfcl.com/twiki/bin/view/Projects/SketchUp/Cookbook/DA_Adding_Functions

                                    FlexTools - Super Quick Windows, Doors, Slats...

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