![]() "Speaking for the Board Chair and Board, the District continues to condemn the recent disturbing social media trend involving hate speech, anti-Semitic references, and the abuse of school property. On Monday, a district spokesperson sent us the following statement regarding the incidents: "These must be taken seriously and also used as a way to have a teachable moment which is not happening at all," she mentioned. Now that the board has done so, she said they want the district to provide students and staff with educational, anti-hate programming to prevent this type of incident from happening again. She said that her organization and community members were initially upset that the school board didn’t immediately call these acts anti-Semitism. We're going to get it addressed," Menis mentioned. That would be easier but cost $$ last time I looked."We are not going to sit and watch hate happen at their schools. Sorry I got a bit off topic but I get excited when I seen Rhino There's also add ons that allow export of IFC from Rhino. I simply open Rhino/Grasshopper, load the script, pick the spreadsheet, click generate, behold there's a dwg in that folder now that I import into AS. It's been a few years since I used it for that purpose but I still use the Grasshopper/Rhino combo for creating templates for AS that read data from Excel spreadsheet that our sales dept uses for walk-in sales. I had mine create a plate layer then sublayers named as plate thickness. Plates are a different story but can be done the same way but extract the "top" surface of the plate, then silhouette that to what AS would recognize as a PLine. Like a layer named w8x18 has all the lines that represent 8x18's. Basically you could create the grasshopper script or sketch or whatever they call it to export a file with all your members as center lines but the line belongs to the pertaining layer which is named whatever the member is. ![]() There's another add on called Flux.IO that also integrates with AS and Rhino that sync the geometry between the two as you work. ![]() If you love Rhino like I do you will love it more when you get the feel for grasshopper. I've done this many times in the past but I had to create my own custom solution using Grasshopper.
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January 2023
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