On Sat, Mar 14, 2009 at 6:51 AM, Jelle Feringa <jelleferi...@gmail.com> wrote: >> Anyway, to help others facilitate the consumption of the overly-hairy >> API, here's my collected bookmarks on OCC: >> http://heybryan.org/books/Manufacturing/pythonocc/opencascade.html > > Though, to be useful generally speaking, it would require to be more > structured ( topics like Boolean Operations, IGES, STEP, Topology, > Intersection etc. )
I agree. What I was doing was just going through the forum and rabidly bookmarking topics. Eventually I was going to write a script to download all of the pages, but then I realized that it's only been within the past 2 years (or past ~2000 messages) that anything on the forum has had a reply, so it doesn't matter. > Striving for a minimum of entries with a maximum of information would be > another requirement in my mind. Ah, well, I historically have difficulty with that. i.e., see-- http://heybryan.org/bookmarks/bookmarks-old2/ > Ultimately, definitely the best way is to provide examples in code. Well, yes, but I was wondering how exactly to figure out the OCC API- the OCC tutorials haven't (yet) successfully compiled on my machine, and the API documentation is just this doxygen-generated mess which doesn't really help things out. So how would one go about learning the API? Maybe it's in the PDFs? I haven't checked those yet. - Bryan http://heybryan.org/ 1 512 203 0507 _______________________________________________ Pythonocc-users mailing list Pythonocc-users@gna.org https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/pythonocc-users