Hi Dana (and Ayla),
Thanks for the suggestions from both of you. Yes, in the past I
treated each "single-element-type" submesh individually, but I would
like to confirm whether SCIRun supports hybird meshes, as I am
dealing with quite general hybrid meshes now. I think I have got the
right confirmation from you and Ayla. Thanks very much!
Cheers,
Dafang
On 11/1/2013 4:03 PM, Dana Brooks
wrote:
52740928.6040501@ece.neu.edu" type="cite">
Dafang, Ayla, hi,
Dafang if this is like your hybrid meshes in the past, as I recall
it seemed like you had rather large (relatively speaking)
contiguous regions of a single element type with well defined
interfaces between them.
If that is the case you could perhaps treat each
single-element-type "sub-mesh" as a single mesh object in SCIRun
and then just visualize them jointly in the same viewer window?
would that work?
Otherwise, Ayla, I'm guesing that it would be too messy to create
a new derived hybrid mesh type where, say, each element had an
extra field with an index to determine which element type that
mesh was? I can imagine this might break a lot of stuff that tried
to use it :-)
best,
Dana
On 11/1/13 2:35 PM, Ayla Khan wrote:
6EB1F29A-3C18-4283-8962-BB93907C654D@sci.utah.edu"
type="cite">Hi Dafang,
The SCIRun field datatype only supports one mesh type at a
time. Either ASCII or Matlab formats should work. If you want
to use the Matlab file format, the documentation page for the InterfaceWithMatlab
module explains how your data should be formatted for
import into SCIRun.
Ayla
On Oct 31, 2013, at 10:04 PM, Dafang Wang wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to visualize a 3D finite element mesh that
contains a mixture of hex/prism/tetrahedral elements. I
am wondering whether SCIRun can visualize such data and
if so, what kind of file format is the most convenient.
My mesh is in both the ascii and matlab formats.
Thanks very much for any comments or advice.
Cheers,
Dafang
--
Dafang Wang, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow
Institute of Computational Medicine
Hackerman Hall, Room 218
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 21218
http://lagniappe.icm.jhu.edu/~dwang/
--
Dafang Wang, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow
Institute of Computational Medicine
Hackerman Hall, Room 218
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 21218
http://lagniappe.icm.jhu.edu/~dwang/
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