Where to start?
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I'm sure everyone here will have a different answer to your question. But here goes mine.
Right here in this forum is by far the best place to ask questions and typically get answers. Often answers come within minutes, or a few hours. None of this wait around a month for someone to get back to you. Its an active community.
Also in this forum, there is a thread called SketchUp-Ruby resources. Look through that. Lots of important links and info. Make sure to scroll all the way though, Dan Rathbun posted a comprehensive list of links to important resources:
http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=10142#1 most important link for SketchUp programming though has to be the SketchUp API:
https://developers.google.com/sketchup/Imprtant Ruby programming resource, is the Pickaxe, available online:
http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/As for getting started, and just being able to fiddle around with ruby inside of Sketchup, to get a feel for how it works, I 100% hands down prefer Jim Foltz's Ruby Web console:
http://sketchuptips.blogspot.com/2007/08/plugin-webconsolerb.htmlUse that to enter multi line snippets of code to test. very helpful for trying to figure out specific methods of the SketchUp API.
And one thing I've put together, for better or for worse, is a series of YouTube videos where I show how to begin writing code to do specific things. Typically its simple, but important things like add entities to the selection via ruby, or clear the selection set. How to pushpull things. There are just a few videos, most about 5 minutes each. Here's some links
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTQWl4vLAOU&feature=plcp - Getting Started
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4mjZeEOgJE&feature=plcp - Using the Selection Set
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPGIqpWsSSQ&feature=plcp - Remove edges from the Selection Set
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3P5xPwQdD7w&feature=plcp - Erase Faces
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aq1YEaI2XlA&feature=plcp - Multiple Pushpull Tutorial -
Thanks for links. I'm impatient coz the language looks very close to my programming knowledges.
I will read the links tommorow, right now few things had surprised me:
For example:
def file_loaded?(filename) $loaded_files.include? filename.downcase end
No return value? Does the "?" on end mean that it returns bolean?
What does mean "e" and "|e|" in
entities.each do |e| faces.push e if e.is_a? Sketchup;;Face end
Just impatience
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ruby always returns something, even if its "nil". methods always return whatever is on the last line of the method. So whatever
$loaded_files.include? filename.downcase
returns is what that method will return. If your uncomfortable with that, you can always put a return in front of it for fun -return $loaded_files.include? filename.downcase
No, the question mark does not mean boolean. It is just another character you can use in a method name. So it just helps make it read a little bit more like english.
In the e and |e| question, "e" is variable that represents the object that is being processed. So entities.each is going to process each object in the entities collection. Each time, the object that is being processed will be called e. So essentially the line of code is saying push (as in push/pull) the sketchup object (e) if that object (e) is a face. If its not a face, it moves on to the next object in the entities collection.
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If you're new to Ruby I recommend "Ruby in Twenty Minutes": http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/documentation/quickstart/
As for SketchUp API, have a look at the sticky forum posts in this Developers section.
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Yup. So it is similar to foreach (PHP and other languages that use that syntax like foreach ($arr as $key => $val ) {} ). Ruby is very similar to JQuery and Javascript.
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for key, value in array puts "#{key} - #{value}" end
array.each { |key,value| http://www.thomthom.net/software/vertex_tools/manual }
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puts "Hello #{name.capitalize}!"
You can "add" any method to string inside string? That is awesome.
Class syntax:
class Greeter def initialize(name = "World") @name = name end end
Does the class can have something like:
class Greeter @name = "" @myname = end
Or you cannot define variables outside method?
It looks like I have use initialize method to define instances before all
Is this @ used only in classed? I have seen using
@@time_start = Time.now
what does mean the @@?
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@rumcajs said:
puts "Hello #{name.capitalize}!"
You can "add" any method to string inside string? That is awesome.
That's string interpolation / it's the most efficient way to concatenate strings.
@rumcajs said:
what does mean the @@?
Class variable - single @ is instance variables. Have a look at the Ruby in Twenty minutes link. It goes through all the basics like this.
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@thomthom said:
Have a look at the Ruby in Twenty minutes link. It goes through all the basics like this.
Yeah, I've just finished.
Is it only way of detecting if variable is array or do you have more ways? (inside class)
if @names.respond_to?("each") end
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I'm having a fun with this:
http://tryruby.org/levels/1/challenges/0#levels/1/challengesThis interactive guide for ruby is really cool. Somebody could make one for ruby beginners in SU, don't you think? It looks simple to do something like that.
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@rumcajs said:
@thomthom said:
Have a look at the Ruby in Twenty minutes link. It goes through all the basics like this.
Yeah, I've just finished.
Is it only way of detecting if variable is array or do you have more ways? (inside class)
> if @names.respond_to?("each") > end
@names.is_a?( Enumerable )
Btw, - strings are slow, avoid them if you can. For
respond_to?("each")
useSymbol
s instead - like so:respond_to?(:each)
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@thomthom said:
Btw, - strings are slow, avoid them if you can. For
respond_to?("each")
useSymbol
s instead - like so:respond_to?(:each)
Yes, I read it just now in the interactive guide I create my first hash. But don't know what is it hash, looks like an object... Why they call it hash?
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I take it you come from Javascript background?
Object have methods - Hashes has data.
A hash is an associative array - you specify the key and value. While with an array you just insert or remove values. (PHP and Javascript blends the difference between Hashes and Arrays. In Ruby they are distinct. ) Note that the order of the elements in arrays is based on the order they where added. When you iterate a Hash the values and keys is returned in a different order from how they where inserted. -
OK. So summary.
Objects can keep properties (@name...) and methods.
Arrays [] are only non-associative.
Hashes {} are associative arrays, not ordered.Can you print function or method just like in JS? I know more scripting languages not just JS. Last one is AHK.
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I tried this (interactive guide):
ratings = Hash.Ānew(0) => {} Success! > books.valuĀes.each { |rateĀ| ratinĀgs[rate] += 1 } => [;splendid, ;quite_good, ;mediocre, ;quite_not_good, ;abysmal] > ratings => {;splendid=>1, ;quite_good=>1, ;mediocre=>1, ;quite_not_good=>1, ;abysmal=>1} >
And it is not clear to me, hoq the value 1 is assigned to the values. I guess that first command created new hash ratings. Then I go through each value of the hash and set the ratings... But how is it possible, that ratings hash overwrite the book.values? As I know this is problem in PHP. If you know something like
foreach(books->valuĀes as $val){ ; this will not work; val="new value"; }
It will not overwrite the for values of "values" property. Maybe the relation between ratings and books.valuĀes was already defined somewhere in a class, which is not visible to me?
This command does not work to me as expected:
.. File.Open(Ā"/Home/comĀics.txt", "a") do |f| .... jjj .. ss
I can write in the file but how to close it and to keep data in it? There should be some other stuff in the file when I write File.Open(Ā"/Home/comĀics.txt", "a") . Once I succeeded there were some links and they say, that is should add some data in file...
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@rumcajs said:
I tried this (interactive guide):
ratings = Hash.Ānew(0) > => {} > Success! > > books.valuĀes.each { |rateĀ| ratinĀgs[rate] += 1 } > => [;splendid, ;quite_good, ;mediocre, ;quite_not_good, ;abysmal] > > ratings > => {;splendid=>1, ;quite_good=>1, ;mediocre=>1, ;quite_not_good=>1, ;abysmal=>1} > >
And it is not clear to me, how the value
1
is assigned to the values.Because the Ruby interpreter changes the shorthand
a += b
, toa = a + b
So your statement:
books.valuĀes.each { |rateĀ| ratinĀgs[rate] += 1 }
is actually executed as:
books.valuĀes.each { |rateĀ| ratinĀgs[rate]= ratinĀgs[rate] + 1 }
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Method names begin with a lower case character (by convention.)
So it is:
` File.open("path/to/file","w") do |f|
end`
The block form of
IO::open
with automatically close the file handle. -
Something else confused me. But i think I had overlooked something. The ratings are not saved in values, but in ratings...
Things are going bad, I cannot move on.
#<SyntaxError; Invalid char "\xC2" in expression. near line 1; "\xADread(\"/Hom\xC2\xADe/comics.t\xC2\xADxt\")"> > print File.ĀĀread("/coĀmics.tĀxt"Ā) => #<SyntaxError; Invalid char "\xC2" in expression. near line 1; "\xADread(\"/comics.t\xC2\xADxt\")"> > print File.Āread("comiĀcs.txt") => #<Errno;;ENOENT; No such file or directory - comics.txt> > Dir["/*"] => [] Open up a new BlogEntry class, pretty pretty please. >
How can I print what is in /home/comics.txt and /comics.txt and if they exists and why this error happens...
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Whatever i write it jumps into input mode:
comics.is_Āa .. end > comics.is_Āa? ..
Damn, that's not 15 minutes tutorial, but 15 hours (I'm in half but cannot move on).
> Popup.makeĀ do .... h1 "Header" .... list do ...... comics.eacĀh do |nameĀ, url| ........ link name,Ā url ........ end ...... end .... end ..
Should generate web page, but nothing popups. And I cannot check if the array exists, what is in array, what is in directory or if the file exist... Look like not realy ruby console (running in browser).
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defined?(comics)
tests for existancecomics.is_a?(Array)
or
comics.instance_of?(Array)
or
comics.class==(Array)
tests the class of thecomics
object
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