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From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
Very cool ideas! Many Thanks to all!
The Moujiik one is terrific!Bravo!
Use The UnwrapCurve for the length of the curve !
http://moi3d.com/forum/index.php?webtag=MOI&msg=5136.1
Or
http://kyticka.webzdarma.cz/3d/moi/#CurveLength
From: Michael Gibson
You can use curve-to-curve flow to do this, and it is not necessary to find the length of the curve.
You just draw a line with an angled line directly above it:
Select the angled line for the object to deform:
Then run Transform > Deform > Flow. Select the line that is shadowed under it as the base curve, and the curvy line as the target curve, and enable the "Stretch" option:
With the "stretch" option enabled the base line does not need to be the exact length of the curvy one, in that mode it maps the entire length of the base curve to the entire length of the target curve so that handles working with the entire length.
You can also do a customized "rise and fall" by drawing in some curved profile instead of just a diagonal rising line, like this:
- Michael
Image Attachments:
pilou_flow_curve1.jpg
pilou_flow_curve2.jpg
pilou_flow_curve3.jpg
pilou_flow_curve4.jpg
pilou_flow_curve5.jpg
From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
Very cool so even more easy...but I must verify : something is little different ...
Maybe I make a little mistake somewhere in my first try of the Moujiik or Michael method!...
Curve is out of the surface at the end...
From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
After verification...maybe i miss something again but...
http://moiscript.weebly.com/uploads/3/9/3/8/3938813/michael_moujiik.3dm
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Pilou, can you describe what steps you are doing?
Here is how it looks like over here on your shapes:
- Michael
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Pilou, I think your error comes from selecting this curve as the object to be deformed:
That's incorrect, you're not following the steps that I wrote above: "Select the angled line for the object to deform:"
What you need is to select this one as the object to be deformed:
Then run the Flow command and pick this for the base curve:
And this one for the target curve:
- Michael
Image Attachments:
pilou_curve_flow9.jpg
pilou_flow_curve6.jpg
pilou_flow_curve7.jpg
pilou_flow_curve8.jpg
From: Frenchy Pilou (PILOU)
Yep! That what that! Thanks for the very detailed workflow! :)
Sorry for the disturb but here it's very difficult to be concentrated! (so my mistake)
All the days we must be carreful to not catch the covid ... Pressure is terrible!
It's like the Walking Dead but in reality! Confined ... in Paris!
Do you imagine this such crazzy thing ? All is stopped!
Totally surrealist! The worst-case scenario of an horror movie.
Take care for you too...pandemy is progressing!
It's a miracle that the Internet works!
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Pilou, yes it's a very strange time. A good time to stay at home and work with MoI though!
- Michael
From: Mik (MIKULAS)
... another possibility
Image Attachments:
Projected curve.jpg
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Mik, that will be similar but not quite exactly the same. The nice thing about the flow method is that it will make a uniform rising curve on stuff like this too:
- Michael
Image Attachments:
mik_rise_and_fall1.jpg
mik_rise_and_fall2.jpg
From: Mik (MIKULAS)
Hi Michael,
yes, of course, for curves with overlap turnings the flow command is the only right way.
Mik
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