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

    Best way to iterate all nested entities

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Developers' Forum
    29 Posts 9 Posters 5.9k Views 9 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.
    • Dan RathbunD Offline
      Dan Rathbun
      last edited by

      When "drilling down" into the entities of component or groups, it is so very much faster to go through the model's definitions collection, checking each definition if it's instances collection has size > 0, (and possibly if it is image? == false,) and if so...

      ... delete from the definitions entities collection, and all instances are changed.

      I'm not here much anymore.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • tt_suT Offline
        tt_su
        last edited by

        .grep is an iterator itself - so no need for .each:

        entities.grep(Sketchup::Edge) {|edge| edge.erase! if is_vertical?(edge) }

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • tt_suT Offline
          tt_su
          last edited by

          Saying that - bulk methods is much faster than individual actions. Use entities.erase_entities when you erase multiple entities - it also avoids the pitfall of erasing the collection you are erasing from.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Dan RathbunD Offline
            Dan Rathbun
            last edited by

            Yea so you can also do this:

            verts = entities.grep(Sketchup::Edge).find_all {|edge| is_vertical?(edge) } entities.erase_entities(verts) unless verts.empty?

            💭

            P.S. @TT Yea I knew grep() is an iterator, but I usually avoid using a block with it, as it returns an array of block results which is a bit weird. (Especially when you expect a smaller subset than the whole.)
            I tend to just use it as a filter, and then call another method on the filtered results. IMHO the code is more readable. (.. and I don't confuse myself as much.)

            I'm not here much anymore.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • S Offline
              shannonnovus
              last edited by

              @dan rathbun said:

              Use the standard Ruby to_a() or grep() method to take a "snapshot" Ruby array copy of API collections.
              Then iterate THAT Ruby copy, viz:
              entities.grep(Sketchup::Edge).each {|e| e.erase! if is_vertical?(e) }

              Thanks Dan! The grep method worked great!

              @dan rathbun said:

              def is_vertical?(edge)
              >   vec = edge.start.position.vector_to(edge.end.position).normalize
              >   vec == [0,0,1] || vec == [0,0,-1]
              > end
              

              Your example for how to test for a vertical edge did not work for me, which could be entirely my fault. TIG's code from the other forum I mentioned did.

              edge.line[1].z.abs==1
              
              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • tt_suT Offline
                tt_su
                last edited by

                To use the same tolerance as SketchUp does, use the methods built into the Ruby API:

                vector = edge.line[1] vector.samedirection?(Z_AXIS)

                http://www.sketchup.com/intl/en/developer/docs/ourdoc/vector3d.php#samedirection?

                The components of a vector are floating point values so they should never be compared without a tolerance. For more information about floating point precision: http://floating-point-gui.de/

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S Offline
                  slbaumgartner
                  last edited by

                  @tt_su said:

                  To use the same tolerance as SketchUp does, use the methods built into the Ruby API:

                  vector = edge.line[1] vector.samedirection?(Z_AXIS)

                  http://www.sketchup.com/intl/en/developer/docs/ourdoc/vector3d.php#samedirection?

                  The components of a vector are floating point values so they should never be compared without a tolerance. For more information about floating point precision: http://floating-point-gui.de/

                  Excellent advice! Do you know whether Point3d#on_line? and #on_plane? also include the tolerance? The API docs don't say.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • tt_suT Offline
                    tt_su
                    last edited by

                    Yes it does. Do does Geom::Point3d, Geom::Vector3d and Length - which is why it's recommended you use those types when doing calculations, instead of using arrays and floats.

                    Also note that Length + Length == Float (annoyingly). So you need to ensure you have a Length before outputting that to a string.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • dkendigD Offline
                      dkendig
                      last edited by

                      definition.instances.empty? won't give you an accurate indicator of the usefulness of a definition unfortunately. It can cut out some obvious ones to skip, but not all of the useless ones. If an instance is used in a definition, and that parent definition isn't instanced anywhere, the first definition will still say it has one instance. It's not wrong... but it's not helpful either. It would be nice to know if a definition is actually used in your model somewhere. Of course if you purge unused first, you should be fine. This can be especially frustrating when working with a model in which you are not allowed to purge unused definitions.

                      Example:

                      1. Make a cube
                      2. Make the cube a component
                      3. Make a copy of the component instance
                      4. Make a new component out of the two instances
                      5. Delete the resulting component instance
                      6. Type this in the ruby console: Sketchup.active_model.definitions.each{|df| puts "definition #{df.name} instance count: #{df.instances.size}"};nil

                      Devin Kendig
                      Developer

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • tt_suT Offline
                        tt_su
                        last edited by

                        Ah yes - very good point.

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

                          To check if a defn with instances actually has one or more if these inserted in the model, or also it is inside a 'container' that is itself inserted in the model, OR inside something else that is inserted in the model... etc...
                          Start count=0.
                          Look at each instance in turn and get its parent.
                          If its parent is the model then it is inserted (count+=1).
                          Elsif its parent is another component-defn you'll need to check if that definition has instances and iterate those and if their parent is the model (count+=1 and break) but if its parent is another component-defn repeat the nested testing of that definition having instances etc...

                          With an instance of Component#1 inside Component#2, and two instances of both in model.

                          ` instance_counter()

                          Component Name: Component#1
                          All Instances: 4
                          Inserted Instances: 2
                          Nested Instances: 2

                          Component Name: Component#2
                          All Instances: 1
                          Inserted Instances: 1
                          Nested Instances: 0

                          true`

                          With only 2 instances of Component#1

                          ` instance_counter()

                          Component Name: Component#1
                          All Instances: 2
                          Inserted Instances: 0
                          Nested Instances: 2

                          Component Name: Component#2
                          All Instances: 1
                          Inserted Instances: 1
                          Nested Instances: 0

                          true`

                          This is only to demonstrate the principal - clearly you'd want to hae a proper model/method that returned the counts for you...

                          require('sketchup.rb')
                          def instance_counter()
                          	def instances?(d)
                          		model=Sketchup.active_model
                          		cont=0
                          		d.instances.each{|i|
                          			parent=i.parent
                          			if parent==model
                          				cont+=1
                          			else
                          				cont+=instances?(parent)
                          			end
                          		}
                          		return cont
                          	end
                          	model=Sketchup.active_model
                          	puts
                          	model.definitions.each{|d|
                          		next if d.image? || d.group?
                          		puts "Component Name; \t#{d.name}"
                          		puts "All Instances;  \t#{d.instances.length}"
                          		count=0
                          		ncount=0
                          		d.instances.each{|i|
                          			parent=i.parent
                          			if parent==model
                          				count+=1
                          			else
                          				ncount+=instances?(parent)
                          			end
                          		}
                          		puts "Inserted Instances; \t#{count}"
                          		puts "Nested Instances;   \t#{ncount}"
                          		puts
                          	}
                          	return true
                          end
                          

                          Perhaps a method that takes the defn as its argument and returns the instances count in three arrayed integers [all, model, nested] ... [4, 2, 2] - like this:

                          def instance_count(d=nil) #d=defintion
                          	return nil if !d || !d.is_a?(Sketchup;;ComponentDefinition)
                          	return false if d.image? || d.group?
                          	def instances?(d)
                          		model=Sketchup.active_model
                          		cont=0
                          		d.instances.each{|i|
                          			parent=i.parent
                          			if parent==model
                          				cont+=1
                          			else
                          				cont+=instances?(parent)
                          			end
                          		}
                          		return cont
                          	end
                          	model=Sketchup.active_model
                          	count_array=[d.instances.length]
                          	count=0
                          	ncount=0
                          	d.instances.each{|i|
                          		parent=i.parent
                          		if parent==model
                          			count+=1
                          		else
                          			ncount+=instances?(parent)
                          		end
                          	}
                          	count_array << count
                          	count_array << ncount
                          	return count_array
                          end
                          

                          TIG

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • dkendigD Offline
                            dkendig
                            last edited by

                            yes, generally this tends to do the trick, but we found that it was a tad faster to have your own lookup table that keeps track of definition relevance. The only downside, is that you are at the mercy of the observer system in that case, but the observers these days seem fairly stable, so that isn't currently an issue.

                            Devin Kendig
                            Developer

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

                            Advertisement