- Offsetsrf Failure On Complex Polysurface Examples
- Offsetsrf Failure On Complex Polysurface Definition
- Offsetsrf Failure On Complex Polysurface Meaning
Complex vertices (ones with more than three edges) can be problematic, especially in shelling and sharp corner offsets and where some, but not all, of the surfaces at the vertex offset apart. OffsetSrf on polysurfaces with naked edges, where the naked edges make concave boundaries will not work correctly. 2 days ago Jul 26, 2009 r/rhino This community is for professional, student, and hobbyist users of McNeel's Rhinoceros 3d modeling software and the Grasshopper generative modeling plug-in. 'cap' will tell rhino to try to close an open polysurface but it often cannot fix complex holes. 0 tutorial shows how to create complex surface shapes using the. Sep 17, 2015 Complex vertices (ones with more than three edges) can be problematic, especially in shelling and sharp corner offsets and where some, but not all, of the surfaces at the vertex offset apart. OffsetSrfon polysurfaces with naked edges, where the naked edges make concave boundaries will not work correctly.
Where can I find this command?Toolbars
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Solid
Offset
Surface
Offset Surface
The OffsetSrf command copies a surface or polysurface so that locations on the copied surface are the same specified distance from the original surface.
Steps
1. | Select a surface or polysurface. |
2. | Type the offset distance, and press Enter. |
Options
Distance
Specifies a distance for the offset.
Corner
Round
Creates a fillet at sharp corners in the original surface.
Sharp
Maintains the sharp corner when the original surface has a sharp corner.
FlipAll
Flips the offset direction of all selected surfaces. Arrows indicate the positive offset direction.
Solid
Makes a closed solid from the input and offset surfaces by lofting a ruled surface between all of the matching edges.
Loose (Surfaces only)
The resulting surface point structure is identical to the original surface.
Tolerance
Sets the tolerance for the offset surface. Type 0 to use the default tolerance.
BothSides
Draws the offset on both sides of the original.
DeleteInput
Yes
Deletes the original geometry.
No
Retains the original geometry.
Note
● | Positive values offset in the direction the arrows. Negative values offset the other way. |
● | When a plane, torus, sphere, open cylinder, or open cone surface is offset, the resulting surface is exact. Free-form surfaces are offset to within the value of the Tolerance option. |
● | When offsetting surfaces are joined that are part of a polysurface, there is no guarantee that the offset surfaces will also join into another polysurface. For example, offsetting the six sides of a box will not result in a larger closed box. It will return six separate surfaces with gaps between the edges. |
● | The OffsetSrf command does not maintain the overall structure of the starting polysurface in the offsets. Each surface offsets as an individual object. |
Shell and OffsetSrf for polysurfaces are works in progress. There are several known problem areas:
● | Singular surfaces can cause problems, especially when the offset of the surface must be extended at the singularity. The extensions are done in OffsetSrf (Corner=Sharp) and shelling, which always uses sharp corners. These extensions happen when the offsets of adjacent surfaces come apart. Also, cone-like singularities cause problems in all cases. |
● | Complex vertices (ones with more than three edges) can be problematic, especially in shelling and sharp corner offsets and where some, but not all, of the surfaces at the vertex offset apart. |
● | OffsetSrf on polysurfaces with naked edges, where the naked edges make concave boundaries will not work correctly. |
● | If faces adjacent to the removed faces offset in such a way that the removed face must be extended to fill in the gap, it will fail. |
● | Any surface whose offset self-intersects will cause a problem. |
See also
Rhinoceros 5 © 2010-2015 Robert McNeel & Associates. 17-Sep-2015
Toolbar | Menu |
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Solid Surface Offset Surface |
The OffsetSrf command copies a surface or polysurface so that locations on the copied surface are the same specified distance from the original surface.
Steps
- Select a surface or polysurface.
- Type the offset distance, and press Enter.
Infinite Plane: Type IP for InfinitePlane options.
Command-line options | |
---|---|
Distance | Sets the offset distance. |
Corner | Specifies how offset corner continuity handled. These options only apply if the offset direction is to the 'outside' as shown in the image. SharpCurves offset to the outside of a corner will be extended to meet at sharp corners with position (G0) continuity. RoundCurves offset to the outside of a corner will be filled with arc segments with tangent (G1) continuity. |
FlipAll | Flips the offset direction of all selected surfaces. Arrows indicate the positive offset direction. Note: This option is not available when any of the selected objects is a polysurface. |
Tolerance | Sets the tolerance for the offset surface. Type 0 to use the default tolerance. |
BothSides | Draws the offset on both sides of the original. |
DeleteInput | YesDeletes the original geometry. NoRetains the original geometry. |
Note
- Positive values offset in the direction of the arrows. Negative values offset the other way.
- When a plane, torus, sphere, open cylinder, or open cone surface is offset, the resulting surface is exact. Free-form surfaces are offset to within the value of the Tolerance option.
- When offsetting a polysurface with free-form sub-surfaces, the results might have some surfaces missing.
- The output object adopts the rendering material from the input object.
Offsetsrf Failure On Complex Polysurface Examples
See Also
OffsetMesh
Copies a mesh by moving the vertices a specified distance with different direction modes.
Offsetsrf Failure On Complex Polysurface Definition
OffsetSubD
Makes a copy of a SubD by moving its vertices towards the normal direction with the specified distance.
Toolbar | Menu |
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Solid Tools |
The Shell command creates a hollowed out shell from a solid.
Shell only operates on simple, solid, manifold polysurfaces. These surfaces are removed and the remainder is offset inward, using the outer parts of the removed surfaces to join the inner and outer parts.
Offsetsrf Failure On Complex Polysurface Meaning
Steps
- Select faces to remove from closed polysurface.
Leave at least one face unselected. - Press Enter when done
This step specifies which surfaces will be removed to make the shelled object.
The top surface of the cylinder was selected for removal.
Command-line options | |
---|---|
Thickness | Specifies the thickness for the shell. |
Troubleshoot shelling
Shell and OffsetSrf for polysurfaces are works in progress. There are several known problem areas:
- Singular surfaces can cause problems, especially when the offset of the surface must be extended at the singularity. The extensions are done in OffsetSrf (Corner=Sharp) and shelling, which always uses sharp corners. These extensions happen when the offsets of adjacent surfaces come apart. Also, cone-like singularities cause problems in all cases.
- Complex vertices (ones with more than three edges) can be problematic, especially in shelling and sharp corner offsets and where some, but not all, of the surfaces at the vertex offset apart.
- OffsetSrf on polysurfaces with naked edges, where the naked edges make concave boundaries will not work correctly.
- If faces adjacent to the removed faces offset in such a way that the removed face must be extended to fill in the gap, it will fail.
- Any surface whose offset self-intersects will cause a problem.
See also
Rhinoceros 7 © 2010-2020 Robert McNeel & Associates. 11-Dec-2020
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