all of them have lower spatial dimension than the space...
Right! I did not think that way... Hope to see 1D support soon.
On Friday, May 25, 2012 1:29:13 PM UTC+6, Robert Cimrman wrote:
Sure, it's a different thing. But those element share the "feature" that all of them have lower spatial dimension than the space.
r.
Based on my limited knowledge, I think 1D elements have no relation to plate/shells, only beam/column or what we say truss elements are to be considered 1D elements. Having options in plate/shells element is nice but its too advanced.
On Tuesday, May 22, 2012 5:16:28 PM UTC+6, Robert Cimrman wrote:
Thanks for the offer, but I am learning this topic myself. If I knew exactly how to do it, it would be a piece of cake.
If there is anybody with some coding experience related to plates/shells/beams etc., any remark/suggestion will be appreciated.
r.
On 05/22/2012 12:47 PM, Md. Golam Rashed wrote:
What sort of tasks one have to take to implement support for 1D
element?
I'm also looking forward to it. However, you can provide me with brief instructions, see what I can do.
On Monday, May 21, 2012 1:58:08 AM UTC-7, Robert Cimrman wrote:
Hi Nimish,
the 1D elements are not currently supported, that's true. Also the 2D elements are supported only for 2D problems for now - no 2D elements embedded
3D.
FYI: I am (slowly) adding the support for the elements of lower dimension, and even the 1D elements are planned, but I cannot tell the time frame, as
in the
rest of the code has to be updated to allow that.
Cheers, r.
On 05/21/2012 07:57 AM, Nimish wrote:
I am currrently looking for FEM packages to help me solve a system of beams and columns, basically a collection of 1D bernoulli/timoshenko line elements. I started reading SfePy docs and i am getting the idea that doing
On 05/24/2012 06:04 PM, Md. Golam Rashed wrote: the
above is not really possible here, am i right? Are only 2D area elements permitted in SfePy? Or is there any direct support for solving 1D line elements too..
Cheers Nimish