wow, right on. extremely sensible. many thanks.

On Jan 4, 2:33 pm, Chris Wilkins <[email protected]> wrote:
> Visose,
> I like your solution. Definitely more useful. The smaller and simpler
> the definition, the better.
>
> Also, I didn't know you could use the panel to pass formulas into
> functions. That's a good trick. Thanks.
> -Chris
>
> On Jan 3, 5:58 pm, visose <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hi, here's an alternative 
> > solution:http://grasshopper3d.googlegroups.com/web/cullpointswithregion.jpg
> > This method allows for any shape to be used as a culling region. The
> > previous method, although it works for this specific case, suffers
> > from several shortcomings. For example, if one of the curves
> > intersects one of the ZY planes twice it breaks, there's no horizontal
> > culling.
> > The drawback is that you need a closed curve, so you'll have to add a
> > couple of lines connecting the ones you already have.
>
> > On Jan 3, 6:15 pm, dingle <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Spectacular. Simple and works perfectly. Thanks man!
>
> > > On Jan 3, 4:43 pm, Chris Wilkins <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Hi Dingle,
>
> > > > I've got a simple solution worked up. I've uploaded the definition
> > > > file and the Rhino file in a zipped folder:
>
> > > >http://groups.google.com/group/grasshopper3d/web/CullPointsOutsideBou...
>
> > > > And a couple screen shots:
>
> > > >http://groups.google.com/group/grasshopper3d/web/CullPointsOutsideBou......
>
> > > > This is just creating a YZ plane at each point and intersecting this
> > > > plane with the two boundary
> > > > curves, to get two more points for each of the original points. Then
> > > > it compares
> > > > the y-coordinates of the original points (which are randomly placed in
> > > > my example, but will
> > > > work the same for your grid of points). If the y-value is less than
> > > > the upper boundary and
> > > > greater than the lower boundary y-value, then it culls based on this.
>
> > > > Hope that works for you,
> > > > Chris
>
> > > > On Jan 2, 1:28 pm, dingle <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > hi all,
> > > > > new to grasshopper, no stranger to rhino. i manually created a non-
> > > > > rectangular point grid and i'm seeking to get rid of all of the points
> > > > > which lie outside (actually, above and below) two arbitrary curves.
> > > > > the curves are more or less parallel to the x-axis, so maybe we could
> > > > > do something like subtracting the deviations between them and a line
> > > > > along the x-axis?
> > > > > i think i could script my way around this but would love to keep it in
> > > > > grasshopper...
> > > > > try these images (hope i uploaded them correctly):
>
> > > > >http://groups.google.com/group/grasshopper3d/web/pointgridcrvbound_01......
>
> > > > > thanks all
> > > > > dingle- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

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