sketchucation logo sketchucation
    • Login
    ℹ️ Licensed Extensions | FredoBatch, ElevationProfile, FredoSketch, LayOps, MatSim and Pic2Shape will require license from Sept 1st More Info

    [Plugin] Export Cpoints to CSV v1.0 20110913

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Plugins
    28 Posts 6 Posters 17.1k Views 6 Watching
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • jemagnussenJ Offline
      jemagnussen
      last edited by

      Hi TIG,

      Need to bother you a bit more. I have now relocated the model to the 0,0,0 in Sketchup World and placed in the right height to be able to take out the Z value of the CPoints only in this location.
      Could you have a look to see what is wrong - as it just won't work...? I still get only the Z values rounded up to nearest whole number... even as you can see from the with a red circle marked point the values in querry shows -17.482, 197.420, -1.293 (lon/lat/Z)

      Best regards
      Jesper


      model

      HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
      Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
      32 GB Ram
      NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • TIGT Offline
        TIG Moderator
        last edited by

        I get no such problems.
        Since the units setting are in the SKP it's not that.
        Do you get the curtailed values in the Ruby Console as well as in the CSV ?
        I've attached the CSV file [zipped] that I got and here is an extract...test_cpoints.zipCapture1.PNG

        TIG

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • jemagnussenJ Offline
          jemagnussen
          last edited by

          Hi TIG,

          Strange... Yes the Ruby Console shows the same as in the csv file, it has removed the decimals and rounded up on all figures....

          7.0,129.0,0.0
          7.0,130.0,0.0
          6.0,137.0,0.0
          6.0,140.0,0.0
          4.0,140.0,1.0
          0.0,138.0,2.0
          0.0,140.0,2.0
          15.0,196.0,-1.0

          Best regards
          Jesper

          HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
          Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
          32 GB Ram
          NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • jemagnussenJ Offline
            jemagnussen
            last edited by

            • and the Excel sheet has all 3 figures in same column "A"... could it be some language issue as the Danish Excel version I use use "," as decimal seperator and "." as thousand seperator....?
              Normally not a problem as I anyway most of the time has to work with formatting csv files, most of the time I get the data as Lon/Lat and Z and not Lat/Lon and Z and with lots of spaces in between instead of ","'s but that's normally no problem.

            Brgds
            Jesper

            HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
            Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
            32 GB Ram
            NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • TIGT Offline
              TIG Moderator
              last edited by

              In the SKP do you have a decimal-separator as '.' or ',' ?
              I have '.' ??
              The code will [should] write the CSV as 1.234,45.678,9.012 etc
              If you open the .rb file with Notepad you can edit the two lines
              sep="," ### <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ext="csv" ### <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
              to read
              sep="\t" ### <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ext="tsv" ### <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
              Then the file will be a TabSeparatedVariable TSV file, rather than a CommaSeparatedVariable CSV file; both will open in Excel.
              1.234,45.678,9.012 >>> 1.234\t45.678\t9.012 [\t is a 'TAB']
              You could open the resultant TSV file in Notepad and do a find+replace for '.'>>>','
              Then open it in Excel as a Danish-friendly version ?
              1.234\t45.678\t9.012 >>> 1,234\t45,678\t9,012
              😲

              TIG

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • jemagnussenJ Offline
                jemagnussen
                last edited by

                Hi TIG,

                After changing the file it now says: exportcpoints2csv.new
                Error: #<NameError: undefined local variable or method `exportcpoints2csv' for main:Object>
                (eval):982

                Brgds
                Jesper

                HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
                Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
                32 GB Ram
                NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • TIGT Offline
                  TIG Moderator
                  last edited by

                  What have you done ??? 😒
                  Here's a new version that does it as a TSV file with ',' as the decimal separator!
                  Exportcpoints2tsv.rb

                  TIG

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • jemagnussenJ Offline
                    jemagnussen
                    last edited by

                    Hi TIG,

                    Yes, one could wonder what happened, I believe I just did as you instructed, changed the "," to "\t" in the first line and "csv" to "tsv" in second line, but something must have gone wrong. Maybe it has to do with the fact that I did a classic! I was too quick to use Notepad to edit the rb file and forgot to remove the "Use always this program" så now all the rb files is shown as "Notebook" files... 😮(

                    Here is the result of the new file you made:

                    7,0 129,0 0,0
                    6,0 140,0 0,0
                    0,0 138,0 2,0
                    0,0 140,0 2,0
                    15,0 196,0 -1,0
                    1,0 180,0 2,0
                    22,0 169,0 -1,0
                    -8,0 168,0 -1,0
                    21,0 189,0 0,0
                    -16,0 180,0 0,0

                    As you can see it still round up all figures, so it must have something to do with the exporting as Sketchup itself shows it with 3 decimals, the setting is with 3 decimal in Model Info and it can't have anything to do with Excel as the file now is exported to a text file... this is strange...

                    Brgds
                    Jesper

                    HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
                    Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
                    32 GB Ram
                    NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • jemagnussenJ Offline
                      jemagnussen
                      last edited by

                      Hi again,

                      Just a question, is it somehow possible to force the numbers of decimals to say fixed 3 decimals on all the 3 figures (LLZ)?

                      Best regards
                      Jesper

                      HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
                      Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
                      32 GB Ram
                      NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • TIGT Offline
                        TIG Moderator
                        last edited by

                        @jemagnussen said:

                        Hi again,

                        Just a question, is it somehow possible to force the numbers of decimals to say fixed 3 decimals on all the 3 figures (LLZ)?

                        Best regards
                        Jesper

                        To export to 3dp always including trailing .000 would be possible... BUT the XYZ code would need revisiting - I'll come back later today when I have a moment...

                        TIG

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • TIGT Offline
                          TIG Moderator
                          last edited by

                          Here's the updated version
                          (c) TIG 2011
                          Type
                          Exportcpoints2tsv.new
                          in the Ruby Console.
                          Exports all Cpoints is a Selection to a X,Y,Z 'TSV' file.
                          The sep="\t", the decsep=',' and ext='tsv'.
                          Change decsep='.' IF you want 1.234 rather than 1,234 OR run with arguments
                          as shown below...
                          Model Units are used and get exported to the TSV in say meters as 1,234 -
                          it always forces 3dp even when not needed - e.g. 0,100
                          Check that your locale Excel uses ','/'.' matching your output.
                          You can affect output by adding an argument to the command line, e.g.
                          It returns XYZ format by default BUT if you type
                          Exportcpoints2tsv.new 1
                          it will then use YXZ format.
                          To change from ',' to '.' as the decimal separator, type
                          Exportcpoints2tsv.new 2
                          To change from ',' to '.' as the decimal separator AND use YXZ, type
                          Exportcpoints2tsv.new 3

                          1.0 20110914 First issue.
                          1.1 20110915 Forces 3dp always, command-line argument to change format.Exportcpoints2tsv.rb

                          TIG

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • jemagnussenJ Offline
                            jemagnussen
                            last edited by

                            Hi TIG,

                            Voila... that did the trick, now I get the decimals, also from the model that is geolocated so this is really a big help. Can't thank you enough for your kind assistance.

                            Have a lovely day,
                            Best regards
                            Jesper

                            HP ZBook 15, Windows 10 64 bit
                            Intel Core i7-6820HQ @ 2.70GHz
                            32 GB Ram
                            NVIDIA Quadro M2000M

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • TIGT Offline
                              TIG Moderator
                              last edited by

                              I get there eventually 😉

                              TIG

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • W Offline
                                wsellers89
                                last edited by

                                Sorry to bother you, but I got referred to this post from the newbie section. I had asked the following:

                                I am laying out a porous plate and was wondering if there is an easy way or perhaps a script that will read the construction points (e.g. centerpoints) of each of the circles representing the holes. If it could write out the points to a file would be great, but if it would print to the console -- I could write them down. There are a couple of hundred holes that is why I would like to automate this.

                                Operating system: Mac OS X
                                SketchUp version: V8

                                This script sounds exactly like what I need. I placed the ruby script in the Main folder:
                                MacHD/Applications/Library/Application Support/Google SketchUp 8/SketchUp/plugins/

                                but when I relaunch SketchUp I don't see the script in the Plugins pull down menu. Am I missing something?

                                Sincerely,
                                Bill

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • GaieusG Offline
                                  Gaieus
                                  last edited by

                                  The instruction says

                                  @tig said:

                                  Type
                                  Exportcpoints2csv.new
                                  in the Ruby Console...

                                  Open the ruby console from the window menu and simply copy paste that line there (at the bottom) then press enter

                                  Gai...

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • TIGT Offline
                                    TIG Moderator
                                    last edited by

                                    As Gaieus said... it's a rarely used tool, so it is used without a menu item - as explained in the instructions on the download page...
                                    Type
                                    Exportcpoints2csv.new
                                    in the Ruby Console.

                                    You can export any selected cpoints to CSV using this 'Export CSV' tool...

                                    To mark all of the selected Arcs/Circles centers with cpoints, BEFORE you do that final CSV export, you can run this one liner: Copy/Paste the code into the Ruby Console + <enter>

                                    m=Sketchup.active_model;ae=m.active_entities;s=m.selection;as=[];s.each{|e|next unless e.kind_of?(Sketchup;;Edge)and e.curve and e.curve.kind_of?(Sketchup;;ArcCurve);as<<e.curve};as.uniq.each{|ar|ae.add_cpoint(ar.center)}
                                    

                                    A cpoint is added to every Arc/Circle's center for you, select them.
                                    The 'Export CSV' tool filters for only cpoints so you don't need to be too carefully making the selection as long as you include the cpoints you want...

                                    TIG

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • 1
                                    • 2
                                    • 1 / 2
                                    • First post
                                      Last post
                                    Buy SketchPlus
                                    Buy SUbD
                                    Buy WrapR
                                    Buy eBook
                                    Buy Modelur
                                    Buy Vertex Tools
                                    Buy SketchCuisine
                                    Buy FormFonts

                                    Advertisement