The 'g' is a global cell index yes. I said untested because I had not compiled the code in the email.
I consider Faults in the parser to be complete, and it is certainly used. Joakim 28. juli 2016 18:28 skrev "Paolo Orsini" <paolo.ors...@gmail.com> følgende: > and "g" is the cell global index, I can use to identify the cell... right? > Sorry I missed it. > Are you saying "untested", because nobody is currently working with faults? > However, the parser for the faults seems complete, correct? > > Thanks a lot > > Paolo > > On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 6:18 PM, Joakim Hove <joakim.h...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> The FaultFace has begin () and end () iterators which can be used to >> iterate over the indices. This (untested) should work: >> >> for (size_t g : faultface) >> // do something with g >> >> Hth - Joakim >> 28. juli 2016 18:01 skrev "Paolo Orsini" <paolo.ors...@gmail.com> >> følgende: >> >>> Hi Joakim, >>> >>> If I understood it right, each fault (as defined in eclipse) is a group >>> of FaultFaces >>> When looping on the FaultFaces, I don't see any method to get the I, J >>> and K of the cell the face belongs to? >>> Not even a getGlobalIndex function... >>> How do you work out the face the multiplier should be applied to? >>> >>> I clearly am missing something >>> >>> Thanks a lot for your help >>> >>> Paolo >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Opm mailing list >>> Opm@opm-project.org >>> http://opm-project.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/opm >>> >>> >
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