MSH3 would then save 10 for a partitioned mesh, right? When was MSH3 approximately released as file version? To understand if the code may have been written with that in mind, even if it has never been a default option.
Il 04 mar 2018 08:29, "Christophe Geuzaine" <[email protected]> ha scritto: > > > On 3 Mar 2018, at 18:45, Alessio Nava <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Dear all, > > I would like to use gmsh meshes in Syrthes, which is a thermal solver > written by EDF. They have a tool called convert2syrthes4 which converts the > gmsh file to their own mesh file .syr. > > Inspecting the .syr file, I see that the elem references are shifted. I > have tracked down the problem to this line in lecture_msh.c for a 4 node > tetrahedron for example : > > sscanf(chaine, "%i %i %i %i %i %i %i %i %i %i", &entier1, &entier2, > &entier3, &couleur, &entier5, &entier6, > &(elem_tetraedre[tetraedreP1][0]), > &(elem_tetraedre[tetraedreP1][1]), > &(elem_tetraedre[tetraedreP1][2]), > &(elem_tetraedre[tetraedreP1][3])); > > Question: which is the gmsh file version which works with this sscanf? > They are execting 10 params, but I only have 9 in gmsh 3.0.6. > > > By default, none : MSH1 and MSH2 save 9 integers and (undocumented) MSH3 > saves 8 for a 4-node tetrahedron. (MSH4, which will become the default in > the upcoming Gmsh 4.0 release, will only save 5 - as it saves elements per > geometrical entity.) > > I was thinking about setting the right: Mesh.MshFileVersion = X.Y; > > Can anyone please help me? > -- > Distinti Saluti. > > *Alessio Nava* > _______________________________________________ > gmsh mailing list > [email protected] > http://onelab.info/mailman/listinfo/gmsh > > > — > Prof. Christophe Geuzaine > University of Liege, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science > http://www.montefiore.ulg.ac.be/~geuzaine > > Free software: http://gmsh.info | http://getdp.info | http://onelab.info > >
_______________________________________________ gmsh mailing list [email protected] http://onelab.info/mailman/listinfo/gmsh
