t1
: Geometry basics, elementary entities, physical groupst2
: Transformations, extruded geometries, volumest3
: Extruded meshes, ONELAB parameters, optionst4
: Built-in functions, holes in surfaces, annotations, entity colorst5
: Mesh sizes, macros, loops, holes in volumest6
: Transfinite meshes, deleting entitiest7
: Background meshest8
: Post-processing, image export and animationst9
: Pluginst10
: Mesh size fieldst11
: Unstructured quadrangular meshest12
: Cross-patch meshing with compoundst13
: Remeshing an STL file without an underlying CAD modelt14
: Homology and cohomology computationt15
: Embedded points, lines and surfacest16
: Constructive Solid Geometry, OpenCASCADE geometry kernelt17
: Anisotropic background mesht18
: Periodic meshest19
: Thrusections, fillets, pipes, mesh size from curvaturet20
: STEP import and manipulation, geometry partitioningt21
: Mesh partitioningx1
: Geometry and mesh datax2
: Mesh import, discrete entities, hybrid models, terrain meshingx3
: Post-processing data import: list-basedx4
: Post-processing data import: model-basedx5
: Additional geometrical data: parametrizations, normals, curvaturesx6
: Additional mesh data: integration points, Jacobians and basis functionsx7
: Additional mesh data: internal edges and facesgmsh
: top-level functionsgmsh/option
: option handling functionsgmsh/model
: model functionsgmsh/model/mesh
: mesh functionsgmsh/model/mesh/field
: mesh size field functionsgmsh/model/geo
: built-in CAD kernel functionsgmsh/model/geo/mesh
: built-in CAD kernel meshing constraintsgmsh/model/occ
: OpenCASCADE CAD kernel functionsgmsh/model/occ/mesh
: OpenCASCADE CAD kernel meshing constraintsgmsh/view
: post-processing view functionsgmsh/view/option
: view option handling functionsgmsh/plugin
: plugin functionsgmsh/graphics
: graphics functionsgmsh/fltk
: FLTK graphical user interface functionsgmsh/parser
: parser functionsgmsh/onelab
: ONELAB server functionsgmsh/logger
: information logging functionsNext: Obtaining Gmsh, Previous: (dir), Up: (dir) [Contents][Index]
Christophe Geuzaine and Jean-François Remacle
Gmsh is an automatic 3D finite element mesh generator with build-in pre- and post-processing facilities. This is the Gmsh Reference Manual for Gmsh 4.13.1 (May 24, 2024).
• Obtaining Gmsh | Where to get your copy of Gmsh | |
• Copying conditions | Terms and conditions of use | |
• Reporting a bug | Where to report issues | |
• Overview of Gmsh | High-level overview of Gmsh | |
• Gmsh tutorial | A step-by-step tutorial for both .geo files and the API | |
• Gmsh graphical user interface | Description of Gmsh’s GUI | |
• Gmsh command-line interface | Description of Gmsh’s command-line interface | |
• Gmsh scripting language | Description of Gmsh’s built-in scripting language (.geo files) | |
• Gmsh application programming interface | Description of Gmsh’s multi-language API | |
• Gmsh options | Description of all Gmsh options | |
• Gmsh mesh size fields | Description of all Gmsh mesh size fields | |
• Gmsh plugins | Description of all built-in Gmsh plugins | |
• Gmsh file formats | Description of Gmsh’s native file formats | |
• Compiling the source code | Information on how to compile Gmsh from source | |
• Information for developers | Information for Gmsh developers | |
• Frequently asked questions | The Gmsh FAQ | |
• Version history | Changelog | |
• Copyright and credits | Copyright information and list of contributors | |
• License | Complete copy of the license | |
• Concept index | Index of concepts | |
• Syntax index | Index of command-line, scripting and API syntax |
Next: Copying conditions, Previous: Top, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
The source code and pre-compiled binary versions of Gmsh (for Windows, macOS and Linux) can be downloaded from https://gmsh.info. Gmsh packages are also directly available in various Linux and BSD distributions (Debian, Fedora, Ubuntu, FreeBSD, ...).
If you use Gmsh, we would appreciate that you mention it in your work by citing the following paper: C. Geuzaine and J.-F. Remacle, Gmsh: a three-dimensional finite element mesh generator with built-in pre- and post-processing facilities. International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, Volume 79, Issue 11, pages 1309-1331, 2009. A preprint of that paper as well as other references and the latest news about Gmsh development are available on https://gmsh.info.
Next: Reporting a bug, Previous: Obtaining Gmsh, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
Gmsh is free software; this means that everyone is free to use it and to redistribute it on a free basis. Gmsh is not in the public domain; it is copyrighted and there are restrictions on its distribution, but these restrictions are designed to permit everything that a good cooperating citizen would want to do. What is not allowed is to try to prevent others from further sharing any version of Gmsh that they might get from you.
Specifically, we want to make sure that you have the right to give away copies of Gmsh, that you receive source code or else can get it if you want it, that you can change Gmsh or use pieces of Gmsh in new free programs, and that you know you can do these things.
To make sure that everyone has such rights, we have to forbid you to deprive anyone else of these rights. For example, if you distribute copies of Gmsh, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must tell them their rights.
Also, for our own protection, we must make certain that everyone finds out that there is no warranty for Gmsh. If Gmsh is modified by someone else and passed on, we want their recipients to know that what they have is not what we distributed, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on our reputation.
The precise conditions of the license for Gmsh are found in the General Public License that accompanies the source code (see License). Further information about this license is available from the GNU Project webpage https://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl-faq.html. Detailed copyright information can be found in Copyright and credits.
If you want to integrate parts of Gmsh into a closed-source software, or want to sell a modified closed-source version of Gmsh, you will need to obtain a different license. Please contact us directly for more information.
Next: Overview of Gmsh, Previous: Copying conditions, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
If, after reading this reference manual, you think you have found a bug in Gmsh, please file an issue on https://gitlab.onelab.info/gmsh/gmsh/issues. Provide as precise a description of the problem as you can, including sample input files that produce the bug. Don’t forget to mention both the version of Gmsh and your operation system.
See Frequently asked questions, and the bug tracking system to see which problems we already know about.
Next: Gmsh tutorial, Previous: Reporting a bug, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
Gmsh is a three-dimensional finite element mesh generator with a build-in CAD engine and post-processor. Its design goal is to provide a fast, light and user-friendly meshing tool with parametric input and flexible visualization capabilities.
Gmsh is built around four modules (geometry, mesh, solver and post-processing), which can be controlled with the graphical user interface (GUI; see Gmsh graphical user interface), from the command line (see Gmsh command-line interface), using text files written in Gmsh’s own scripting language (.geo files; see Gmsh scripting language), or through the C++, C, Python, Julia and Fortran application programming interface (API; see Gmsh application programming interface).
A brief description of the four modules is given hereafter, before an overview of what Gmsh does best (... and what it is not so good at), and some practical information on how to install and run Gmsh on your computer.
• Geometry module | ||
• Mesh module | ||
• Solver module | ||
• Post-processing module | ||
• What Gmsh is pretty good at | ||
• and what Gmsh is not so good at | ||
• Installing and running Gmsh on your computer |
Next: Mesh module, Previous: Overview of Gmsh, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
A model in Gmsh is defined using its Boundary Representation (BRep): a volume is bounded by a set of surfaces, a surface is bounded by a series of curves, and a curve is bounded by two end points. Model entities are topological entities, i.e., they only deal with adjacencies in the model, and are implemented as a set of abstract topological classes. This BRep is extended by the definition of embedded, or internal, model entities: internal points, curves and surfaces can be embedded in volumes; and internal points and curves can be embedded in surfaces.
The geometry of model entities can be provided by different CAD
kernels. The two default kernels interfaced by Gmsh are the
built-in kernel and the OpenCASCADE kernel. Gmsh does not
translate the geometrical representation from one kernel to another, or
from these kernels to some neutral representation. Instead, Gmsh
directly queries the native data for each CAD kernel, which avoids data
loss and is crucial for complex models where translations invariably
introduce issues linked to slightly different representations. Selecting
the CAD kernel in .geo scripts is done with the SetFactory
command (see Geometry scripting commands), while in the Gmsh API the
kernel appears explicitly in all the relevant functions from the
gmsh/model
namespace, with geo
or occ
prefixes for
the built-in and OpenCASCADE kernel, respectively (see Namespace gmsh/model).
Entities can either be built in a bottom-up manner (first points, then curves, surfaces and volumes) with the built-in and OpenCASCADE kernels, or in a top-down constructive solid geometry fashion (solids on which boolean operations are performed) with the OpenCASCADE kernel. Both methodologies can also be combined. Finally, groups of model entities (called “physical groups”) can be defined, based on the elementary geometric entities. (See Elementary entities vs physical groups, for more information about how physical groups affect the way meshes are saved.)
Both model entities (also referred to as “elementary entities”) and physical groups are uniquely defined by a pair of integers: their dimension (0 for points, 1 for curves, 2 for surfaces, 3 for volumes) and their tag, a strictly positive global identification number. Entity and group tags are unique per dimension:
Zero or negative tags are reserved by Gmsh for internal use.
Model entities can be manipulated and transformed in a variety of ways within the geometry module, but operations are always performed directly within their respective CAD kernels. As explained above, there is no common internal geometrical representation: rather, Gmsh directly performs the operations (translation, rotation, intersection, union, fragments, ...) on the native geometrical representation using each CAD kernel’s own API. In the same philosophy, models can be imported in the geometry module through each CAD kernel’s own import mechanisms. For example, by default Gmsh imports STEP and IGES files through OpenCASCADE, which will lead to the creation of model entities with an internal OpenCASCADE representation. Models represented with the built-in CAD kernel can be serialized to disk by exporting them as .geo_unrolled files, while models contructed with the OpenCASCADE kernel can be serialized as .brep or .xao files.
The Gmsh tutorial, starting with t1, is the best place to
learn how to use the geometry module: it contains examples of increasing
complexity based on both the built-in and the OpenCASCADE kernel. Note
that many features of the geometry module can be used interactively in
the GUI (see Gmsh graphical user interface), which is also a good
way to learn about both Gmsh’s scripting language and the API, as
actions in the geometry module automatically append the related command
in the input script file, and can optionally also generate input for the
languages supported by the API (see the
General.ScriptingLanguages
option; this is still work-in-progress
as of Gmsh 4.12.)
In addition to CAD-type geometrical entities, whose geometry is provided by a CAD kernel, Gmsh also supports discrete model entities, which are defined by a mesh (e.g. STL). Gmsh does not perform geometrical operations on such discrete entities, but they can be equipped with a geometry through a so-called “reparametrization” procedure1. The parametrization is then used for meshing, in exactly the same way as for CAD entities. See t13 for an example.
Next: Solver module, Previous: Geometry module, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
A finite element mesh of a model is a tessellation of its geometry by simple geometrical elements of various shapes (in Gmsh: lines, triangles, quadrangles, tetrahedra, prisms, hexahedra and pyramids), arranged in such a way that if two of them intersect, they do so along a face, an edge or a node, and never otherwise. This defines a so-called conformal mesh. The mesh module implements several algorithms to generate such meshes automatically. By default, meshes produced by Gmsh are considered as unstructured, even if they were generated in a structured way (e.g., by extrusion). This implies that the mesh elements are completely defined simply by an ordered list of their nodes, and that no predefined ordering relation is assumed between any two elements.
In order to guarantee the conformity of the mesh, mesh generation is performed in a bottom-up flow: curves are discretized first; the mesh of the curves is then used to mesh the surfaces; then the mesh of the surfaces is used to mesh the volumes. In this process, the mesh of an entity is only constrained by the mesh of its boundary, unless entities of lower dimensions are explicitly embedded in entities of higher dimension. For example, in three dimensions, the triangles discretizing a surface will be forced to be faces of tetrahedra in the final 3D mesh only if the surface is part of the boundary of a volume, or if that surface has been explicitly embedded in the volume. This automatically ensures the conformity of the mesh when, for example, two volumes share a common surface. Mesh elements are oriented according to the geometrical orientation of the underlying entity. Every meshing step is constrained by a mesh size field, which prescribes the desired size of the elements in the mesh. This size field can be uniform, specified by values associated with points in the geometry, or defined by general mesh size fields (for example related to the distance to some boundary, to a arbitrary scalar field defined on another mesh, etc.): see Gmsh mesh size fields. For each meshing step, all structured mesh directives are executed first, and serve as additional constraints for the unstructured parts. (The generation and handling of conformal meshes has important consequences on how meshes are stored internally in Gmsh, and how they are accessed through the API: see Gmsh application programming interface.)
Gmsh’s mesh module regroups several 1D, 2D and 3D meshing algorithms:
All meshes can be subdivided to generate fully quadrangular or fully
hexahedral meshes with the Mesh.SubdivisionAlgorithm
option
(see Mesh options).
• Choosing the right unstructured algorithm | ||
• Specifying mesh element sizes | ||
• Elementary entities vs physical groups |
Next: Specifying mesh element sizes, Previous: Mesh module, Up: Mesh module [Contents][Index]
Gmsh provides a choice between several 2D and 3D unstructured algorithms. Each algorithm has its own advantages and disadvantages.
For all 2D unstructured algorithms a Delaunay mesh that contains all the points of the 1D mesh is initially constructed using a divide-and-conquer algorithm2. Missing edges are recovered using edge swaps3. After this initial step several algorithms can be applied to generate the final mesh:
For very complex curved surfaces the “MeshAdapt” algorithm is the most robust. When high element quality is important, the “Frontal-Delaunay” algorithm should be tried. For very large meshes of plane surfaces the “Delaunay” algorithm is the fastest; it usually also handles complex mesh size fields better than the “Frontal-Delaunay”. When the “Delaunay” or “Frontal-Delaunay” algorithms fail, “MeshAdapt” is automatically triggered. The “Automatic” algorithm uses “Delaunay” for plane surfaces and “MeshAdapt” for all other surfaces.
Several 3D unstructured algorithms are also available:
The “Delaunay” algorithm is currently the most robust and is the only one that supports the automatic generation of hybrid meshes with pyramids. Embedded model entities and general mesh size fields (see Specifying mesh element sizes) are currently only supported by the “Delaunay” and “HXT” algorithms.
When Gmsh is configured with OpenMP support (see Compiling the source code), most of the meshing steps can be performed in parallel:
The number of threads can be controlled with the -nt
flag on the
command line (see Gmsh command-line interface), or with the
General.NumThreads
, Mesh.MaxNumThreads1D
,
Mesh.MaxNumThreads2D
and Mesh.MaxNumThreads3D
options (see
General options and Mesh options).
Next: Elementary entities vs physical groups, Previous: Choosing the right unstructured algorithm, Up: Mesh module [Contents][Index]
There are several ways to specify the size of the mesh elements for a given geometry:
Mesh.MeshSizeFromPoints
and
Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary
are set (they are by default; see
Mesh options), you can simply specify desired mesh element sizes
at the geometrical points of the model. The size of the mesh elements
will then be computed by interpolating these values inside the domain
during mesh generation. This might sometimes lead to over-refinement in
some areas, so that you may have to add “dummy” geometrical entities
in the model in order to get the desired element sizes or use more
advanced methods explained below.
Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature
is set to a positive value
(it is set to 0 by default), the mesh will be adapted with respect to
the curvature of the model entities, the value giving the target number
of elements per 2 Pi radians.
Box
field specifies the size of the elements inside and
outside of a parallelepipedic region.
Distance
field specifies the size of the mesh according to
the distance to some model entities.
MathEval
field specifies the size of the mesh using an
explicit mathematical function.
PostView
field specifies an explicit background mesh in the
form of a scalar post-processing view (see Post-processing module,
and Gmsh file formats) in which the nodal values are the target
element sizes. This method is very general but it requires a first
(usually rough) mesh and a way to compute the target sizes on this mesh
(usually through an error estimation procedure, e.g. in an iterative
process of mesh adaptation).
Min
field specifies the size as the minimum of the sizes
computed using other fields.
Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary
.
To determine the actual mesh size at any given point in the model, Gmsh
evaluates all the above mesh size constraints and selects the smallest
value. Using the Gmsh API, this value can then be further modified using
a C++, C, Python, Julia or Fortran mesh size callback function provided
via gmsh/model/mesh/setSizeCallback
(see Namespace gmsh/model/mesh).
The resulting value is further constrained in the interval [
Mesh.MeshSizeMin
, Mesh.MeshSizeMax
] (which can also be
provided on the command line with -clmin
and -clmax
). The
resulting value is then finally multiplied by Mesh.MeshSizeFactor
(-clscale
on the command line).
Note that when the element size is fully specified by a mesh size field, it is thus often desirable to set
Mesh.MeshSizeFromPoints = 0; Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature = 0; Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary = 0;
to prevent over-refinement inside an entity due to small mesh sizes on its boundary.
Previous: Specifying mesh element sizes, Up: Mesh module [Contents][Index]
It is usually convenient to combine elementary geometrical entities into more meaningful groups, e.g. to define some mathematical (“domain”, “boundary with Neumann condition”), functional (“left wing”, “fuselage”) or material (“steel”, “carbon”) properties. Such grouping is done in Gmsh’s geometry module (see Geometry module) through the definition of “physical groups”.
By default in the native Gmsh MSH mesh file format (see Gmsh file formats), as well as in most other mesh formats, if physical groups are
defined, the output mesh only contains those elements that belong to at
least one physical group. (Different mesh file formats treat physical
groups in slightly different ways, depending on their capability to
define groups.) To save all mesh elements whether or not physical groups
are defined, use the Mesh.SaveAll
option (see Mesh options)
or specify -save_all
on the command line. In some formats
(e.g. MSH2), setting Mesh.SaveAll
will however discard all
physical group definitions.
Next: Post-processing module, Previous: Mesh module, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
Gmsh implements a ONELAB (http://onelab.info) server to exchange data with external solvers or other codes (called “clients”). The ONELAB interface allows to call such clients and have them share parameters and modeling information.
The implementation is based on a client-server model, with a server-side database and local or remote clients communicating in-memory or through TCP/IP sockets. Contrary to most solver interfaces, the ONELAB server has no a priori knowledge about any specifics (input file format, syntax, ...) of the clients. This is made possible by having any simulation preceded by an analysis phase, during which the clients are asked to upload their parameter set to the server. The issues of completeness and consistency of the parameter sets are completely dealt with on the client side: the role of ONELAB is limited to data centralization, modification and re-dispatching.
Using the Gmsh API, you can directly embed Gmsh in your C++, C, Python, Julia or Fortran solver, use ONELAB for interactive parameter definition and modification, and to create post-processing data on the fly. See prepro.py, custom_gui.py and custom_gui.cpp for examples.
If you prefer to keep codes separate, you can also communicate with Gmsh
through a socket by providing the solver name (Solver.Name0
,
Solver.Name1
, etc.) and the path to the executable
(Solver.Executable0
, Solver.Executable1
, etc.). Parameters
can then be exchanged using the ONELAB protocol: see the
utils/solvers directory for
examples. A full-featured solver interfaced in this manner is GetDP
(https://getdp.info), a general finite element solver using mixed
finite elements.
Next: What Gmsh is pretty good at, Previous: Solver module, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
The post-processing module can handle multiple scalar, vector or tensor datasets along with the geometry and the mesh. The datasets can be given in several formats: in human-readable “parsed” format (these are just part of a standard input script, but are usually put in separate files with a .pos extension – see Post-processing scripting commands), in native MSH files (ASCII or binary files with .msh extensions: see Gmsh file formats), or in standard third-party formats such as CGNS or MED. Datasets can also be directly imported using the Gmsh API (see Namespace gmsh/view).
Once loaded into Gmsh, scalar fields can be displayed as iso-curves,
iso-surfaces or color maps, whereas vector fields can be represented
either by three-dimensional arrows or by displacement maps. Tensor
fields can be displayed as Von-Mises effective stresses, min/max
eigenvalues, eigenvectors, ellipses or ellipsoids. (To display other
combinations of components, you can use the
View.ForceNumComponents
option – see Post-processing options.)
Each dataset, along with the visualization options, is called a
“post-processing view”, or simply a “view”. Each view is given a
name, and can be manipulated either individually (each view has its own
button in the GUI and can be referred to by its index or its unique tag
in a script or in the API) or globally (see the
PostProcessing.Link
option in Post-processing options).
Possible operations on post-processing views include section
computation, offset, elevation, boundary and component extraction, color
map and range modification, animation, vector graphic output, etc.
These operations are either carried out nondestructively through the
modification of post-processing options, or can lead to the actual
modification of the view data or the creation of new views when done
using post-processing plugins (see Gmsh plugins). Both can be fully
automated in scripts or through the API (see e.g., t8, and
t9).
By default, Gmsh treats all post-processing views as three-dimensional plots, i.e., draws the scalar, vector and tensor primitives (points, curves, triangles, tetrahedra, etc.) in 3D space. But Gmsh can also represent each post-processing view containing scalar points as two-dimensional (“X-Y”) plots, either space- or time-oriented:
Next: and what Gmsh is not so good at, Previous: Post-processing module, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
Here is a tentative list of what Gmsh does best:
Next: Installing and running Gmsh on your computer, Previous: What Gmsh is pretty good at, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
Here are some known weaknesses of Gmsh:
If you have the skills and some free time, feel free to join the project: we gladly accept any code contributions (see Information for developers) to remedy the aforementioned (and all other) shortcomings!
Previous: and what Gmsh is not so good at, Up: Overview of Gmsh [Contents][Index]
Gmsh can be used either as a standalone application, or as a library.
As a standalone application, Gmsh can be controlled with the GUI (see Gmsh graphical user interface), through the command line (see Gmsh command-line interface) and through .geo script files (see Gmsh scripting language). In addition, the ONELAB interface (see Solver module) allows to interact with the Gmsh application through Unix or TCP/IP sockets. Binary versions of the Gmsh app for Windows, Linux and macOS can be downloaded from https://gmsh.info/#Download. Several Linux distributions also ship the Gmsh app. See Compiling the source code for instructions on how to compile the Gmsh app from source.
As a library, Gmsh can still be used in the same way as the standalone Gmsh app, but in addition it can also be embedded in external codes using the Gmsh API (see Gmsh application programming interface). The API is available in C++, C, Python, Julia and Fortran. A binary Software Development Kit (SDK) for Windows, Linux and macOS, that contains the dynamic Gmsh library and the associated header and module files, can be downloaded from https://gmsh.info/#Download. Python users can use
pip install --upgrade gmsh
which will download the binary SDK and install the files in the appropriate system directories. Several Linux distributions also ship the Gmsh SDK. See Compiling the source code for instructions on how to compile the dynamic Gmsh library from source.
Next: Gmsh graphical user interface, Previous: Overview of Gmsh, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
The following tutorials introduce new features gradually, starting with
the first tutorial t1
(see t1). The corresponding files are
available in the tutorials
directory of the Gmsh distribution.
The .geo files (e.g. t1.geo) are written in Gmsh’s built-in scripting language (see Gmsh scripting language). You can open them directly with the Gmsh app: in the GUI (see Gmsh graphical user interface), use the ‘File->Open’ menu and select e.g. t1.geo. Or on the command line, run
> gmsh t1.geo
which will launch the GUI, or run
> gmsh t1.geo -2
to perform 2D meshing in batch mode (see Gmsh command-line interface).
The c++, c, python, julia and fortran subdirectories of the tutorials directory contain the C++, C, Python, Julia and Fortran versions of the tutorials, written using the Gmsh API (see Gmsh application programming interface). You will need the Gmsh dynamic library and the associated header files (for C++ and C) or modules (for Python, Julia and Fortran) to run them (see Installing and running Gmsh on your computer). Each subdirectory contains additional information on how to run the tutorials for each supported language.
All the tutorials starting with the letter t are available both using the scripting language and the API. Extended tutorials, starting with the letter x, introduce features that are only available through the API.
Note that besides these tutorials, the Gmsh distribution contains many other examples written using both the built-in scripting language and the API: see examples and benchmarks.
• t1 | Geometry basics, elementary entities, physical groups | |
• t2 | Transformations, extruded geometries, volumes | |
• t3 | Extruded meshes, ONELAB parameters, options | |
• t4 | Built-in functions, holes in surfaces, annotations, entity colors | |
• t5 | Mesh sizes, macros, loops, holes in volumes | |
• t6 | Transfinite meshes, deleting entities | |
• t7 | Background meshes | |
• t8 | Post-processing, image export and animations | |
• t9 | Plugins | |
• t10 | Mesh size fields | |
• t11 | Unstructured quadrangular meshes | |
• t12 | Cross-patch meshing with compounds | |
• t13 | Remeshing an STL file without an underlying CAD model | |
• t14 | Homology and cohomology computation | |
• t15 | Embedded points, lines and surfaces | |
• t16 | Constructive Solid Geometry, OpenCASCADE geometry kernel | |
• t17 | Anisotropic background mesh | |
• t18 | Periodic meshes | |
• t19 | Thrusections, fillets, pipes, mesh size from curvature | |
• t20 | STEP import and manipulation, geometry partitioning | |
• t21 | Mesh partitioning | |
• x1 | Geometry and mesh data | |
• x2 | Mesh import, discrete entities, hybrid models, terrain meshing | |
• x3 | Post-processing data import: list-based | |
• x4 | Post-processing data import: model-based | |
• x5 | Additional geometrical data: parametrizations, normals, curvatures | |
• x6 | Additional mesh data: integration points, Jacobians and basis functions | |
• x7 | Additional mesh data: internal edges and faces |
Next: t2, Previous: Gmsh tutorial, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t1
: Geometry basics, elementary entities, physical groupsSee t1.geo. Also available in C++ (t1.cpp), C (t1.c), Python (t1.py), Julia (t1.jl) and Fortran (t1.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 1 // // Geometry basics, elementary entities, physical groups // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The simplest construction in Gmsh's scripting language is the // `affectation'. The following command defines a new variable `lc': lc = 1e-2; // This variable can then be used in the definition of Gmsh's simplest // `elementary entity', a `Point'. A Point is uniquely identified by a tag (a // strictly positive integer; here `1') and defined by a list of four numbers: // three coordinates (X, Y and Z) and the target mesh size (lc) close to the // point: Point(1) = {0, 0, 0, lc}; // The distribution of the mesh element sizes will then be obtained by // interpolation of these mesh sizes throughout the geometry. Another method to // specify mesh sizes is to use general mesh size Fields (see `t10.geo'). A // particular case is the use of a background mesh (see `t7.geo'). // If no target mesh size of provided, a default uniform coarse size will be // used for the model, based on the overall model size. // We can then define some additional points. All points should have different // tags: Point(2) = {.1, 0, 0, lc}; Point(3) = {.1, .3, 0, lc}; Point(4) = {0, .3, 0, lc}; // Curves are Gmsh's second type of elementary entities, and, amongst curves, // straight lines are the simplest. A straight line is identified by a tag and // is defined by a list of two point tags. In the commands below, for example, // the line 1 starts at point 1 and ends at point 2. // // Note that curve tags are separate from point tags - hence we can reuse tag // `1' for our first curve. And as a general rule, elementary entity tags in // Gmsh have to be unique per geometrical dimension. Line(1) = {1, 2}; Line(2) = {3, 2}; Line(3) = {3, 4}; Line(4) = {4, 1}; // The third elementary entity is the surface. In order to define a simple // rectangular surface from the four curves defined above, a curve loop has // first to be defined. A curve loop is also identified by a tag (unique amongst // curve loops) and defined by an ordered list of connected curves, a sign being // associated with each curve (depending on the orientation of the curve to form // a loop): Curve Loop(1) = {4, 1, -2, 3}; // We can then define the surface as a list of curve loops (only one here, // representing the external contour, since there are no holes--see `t4.geo' for // an example of a surface with a hole): Plane Surface(1) = {1}; // At this level, Gmsh knows everything to display the rectangular surface 1 and // to mesh it. An optional step is needed if we want to group elementary // geometrical entities into more meaningful groups, e.g. to define some // mathematical ("domain", "boundary"), functional ("left wing", "fuselage") or // material ("steel", "carbon") properties. // // Such groups are called "Physical Groups" in Gmsh. By default, if physical // groups are defined, Gmsh will export in output files only mesh elements that // belong to at least one physical group. (To force Gmsh to save all elements, // whether they belong to physical groups or not, set `Mesh.SaveAll=1;', or // specify `-save_all' on the command line.) Physical groups are also identified // by tags, i.e. strictly positive integers, that should be unique per dimension // (0D, 1D, 2D or 3D). Physical groups can also be given names. // // Here we define a physical curve that groups the left, bottom and right curves // in a single group (with prescribed tag 5); and a physical surface with name // "My surface" (with an automatic tag) containing the geometrical surface 1: Physical Curve(5) = {1, 2, 4}; Physical Surface("My surface") = {1}; // Now that the geometry is complete, you can // - either open this file with Gmsh and select `2D' in the `Mesh' module to // create a mesh; then select `Save' to save it to disk in the default format // (or use `File->Export' to export in other formats); // - or run `gmsh t1.geo -2` to mesh in batch mode on the command line. // You could also uncomment the following lines in this script: // // Mesh 2; // Save "t1.msh"; // // which would lead Gmsh to mesh and save the mesh every time the file is // parsed. (To simply parse the file from the command line, you can use `gmsh // t1.geo -') // By default, Gmsh saves meshes in the latest version of the Gmsh mesh file // format (the `MSH' format). You can save meshes in other mesh formats by // specifying a filename with a different extension in the GUI, on the command // line or in scripts. For example // // Save "t1.unv"; // // will save the mesh in the UNV format. You can also save the mesh in older // versions of the MSH format: // // - In the GUI: open `File->Export', enter your `filename.msh' and then pick // the version in the dropdown menu. // - On the command line: use the `-format' option (e.g. `gmsh file.geo -format // msh2 -2'). // - In a `.geo' script: add `Mesh.MshFileVersion = x.y;' for any version // number `x.y'. // - As an alternative method, you can also not specify the format explicitly, // and just choose a filename with the `.msh2' or `.msh4' extension. // Note that starting with Gmsh 3.0, models can be built using other geometry // kernels than the default built-in kernel. By specifying // // SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); // // any subsequent command in the `.geo' file would be handled by the OpenCASCADE // geometry kernel instead of the built-in kernel. Different geometry kernels // have different features. With OpenCASCADE, instead of defining the surface by // successively defining 4 points, 4 curves and 1 curve loop, one can define the // rectangular surface directly with // // Rectangle(2) = {.2, 0, 0, .1, .3}; // // The underlying curves and points could be accessed with the `Boundary' or // `CombinedBoundary' operators. // // See e.g. `t16.geo', `t18.geo', `t19.geo' or `t20.geo' for complete examples // based on OpenCASCADE, and `examples/boolean' for more.
Next: t3, Previous: t1, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t2
: Transformations, extruded geometries, volumesSee t2.geo. Also available in C++ (t2.cpp), C (t2.c), Python (t2.py), Julia (t2.jl) and Fortran (t2.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 2 // // Transformations, extruded geometries, volumes // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // We first include the previous tutorial file, in order to use it as a basis // for this one. Including a file is equivalent to copy-pasting its contents: Include "t1.geo"; // We can then add new points and curves in the same way as we did in `t1.geo': Point(5) = {0, .4, 0, lc}; Line(5) = {4, 5}; // Gmsh also provides tools to transform (translate, rotate, etc.) // elementary entities or copies of elementary entities. For example, point // 5 can be moved by 0.02 to the left with: Translate {-0.02, 0, 0} { Point{5}; } // And it can be further rotated by -Pi/4 around (0, 0.3, 0) (with the rotation // along the z axis) with: Rotate {{0,0,1}, {0,0.3,0}, -Pi/4} { Point{5}; } // Note that there are no units in Gmsh: coordinates are just numbers - it's up // to the user to associate a meaning to them. // Point 3 can be duplicated and translated by 0.05 along the y axis: Translate {0, 0.05, 0} { Duplicata{ Point{3}; } } // This command created a new point with an automatically assigned tag. This tag // can be obtained using the graphical user interface by hovering the mouse over // the point: in this case, the new point has tag `6'. Line(7) = {3, 6}; Line(8) = {6, 5}; Curve Loop(10) = {5,-8,-7,3}; Plane Surface(11) = {10}; // To automate the workflow, instead of using the graphical user interface to // obtain the tags of newly created entities, one can use the return value of // the transformation commands directly. For example, the `Translate' command // returns a list containing the tags of the translated entities. Let's // translate copies of the two surfaces 1 and 11 to the right with the following // command: my_new_surfs[] = Translate {0.12, 0, 0} { Duplicata{ Surface{1, 11}; } }; // my_new_surfs[] (note the square brackets, and the `;' at the end of the // command) denotes a list, which contains the tags of the two new surfaces // (check `Tools->Message console' to see the message): Printf("New surfaces '%g' and '%g'", my_new_surfs[0], my_new_surfs[1]); // In Gmsh lists use square brackets for their definition (mylist[] = {1, 2, // 3};) as well as to access their elements (myotherlist[] = {mylist[0], // mylist[2]}; mythirdlist[] = myotherlist[];), with list indexing starting at // 0. To get the size of a list, use the hash (pound): len = #mylist[]. // // Note that parentheses can also be used instead of square brackets, so that we // could also write `myfourthlist() = {mylist(0), mylist(1)};'. // Volumes are the fourth type of elementary entities in Gmsh. In the same way // one defines curve loops to build surfaces, one has to define surface loops // (i.e. `shells') to build volumes. The following volume does not have holes // and thus consists of a single surface loop: Point(100) = {0., 0.3, 0.12, lc}; Point(101) = {0.1, 0.3, 0.12, lc}; Point(102) = {0.1, 0.35, 0.12, lc}; xyz[] = Point{5}; // Get coordinates of point 5 Point(103) = {xyz[0], xyz[1], 0.12, lc}; Line(110) = {4, 100}; Line(111) = {3, 101}; Line(112) = {6, 102}; Line(113) = {5, 103}; Line(114) = {103, 100}; Line(115) = {100, 101}; Line(116) = {101, 102}; Line(117) = {102, 103}; Curve Loop(118) = {115, -111, 3, 110}; Plane Surface(119) = {118}; Curve Loop(120) = {111, 116, -112, -7}; Plane Surface(121) = {120}; Curve Loop(122) = {112, 117, -113, -8}; Plane Surface(123) = {122}; Curve Loop(124) = {114, -110, 5, 113}; Plane Surface(125) = {124}; Curve Loop(126) = {115, 116, 117, 114}; Plane Surface(127) = {126}; Surface Loop(128) = {127, 119, 121, 123, 125, 11}; Volume(129) = {128}; // When a volume can be extruded from a surface, it is usually easier to use the // `Extrude' command directly instead of creating all the points, curves and // surfaces by hand. For example, the following command extrudes the surface 11 // along the z axis and automatically creates a new volume (as well as all the // needed points, curves and surfaces): Extrude {0, 0, 0.12} { Surface{my_new_surfs[1]}; } // The following command permits to manually assign a mesh size to some of the // new points: MeshSize {103, 105, 109, 102, 28, 24, 6, 5} = lc * 3; // We finally group volumes 129 and 130 in a single physical group with tag `1' // and name "The volume": Physical Volume("The volume", 1) = {129,130}; // Note that, if the transformation tools are handy to create complex // geometries, it is also sometimes useful to generate the `flat' geometry, with // an explicit representation of all the elementary entities. // // With the built-in geometry kernel, this can be achieved with `File->Export' by // selecting the `Gmsh Unrolled GEO' format, or by adding // // Save "file.geo_unrolled"; // // in the script. It can also be achieved with `gmsh t2.geo -0' on the command // line. // // With the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel, unrolling the geometry can be achieved // with `File->Export' by selecting the `OpenCASCADE BRep' format, or by adding // // Save "file.brep"; // // in the script. (OpenCASCADE geometries can also be exported to STEP.) // It is important to note that Gmsh never translates geometry data into a // common representation: all the operations on a geometrical entity are // performed natively with the associated geometry kernel. Consequently, one // cannot export a geometry constructed with the built-in kernel as an // OpenCASCADE BRep file; or export an OpenCASCADE model as an Unrolled GEO // file.
Next: t4, Previous: t2, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t3
: Extruded meshes, ONELAB parameters, optionsSee t3.geo. Also available in C++ (t3.cpp), Python (t3.py), Julia (t3.jl) and Fortran (t3.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 3 // // Extruded meshes, ONELAB parameters, options // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Again, we start by including the first tutorial: Include "t1.geo"; // As in `t2.geo', we plan to perform an extrusion along the z axis. But here, // instead of only extruding the geometry, we also want to extrude the 2D // mesh. This is done with the same `Extrude' command, but by specifying element // 'Layers' (2 layers in this case, the first one with 8 subdivisions and the // second one with 2 subdivisions, both with a height of h/2): h = 0.1; Extrude {0,0,h} { Surface{1}; Layers{ {8,2}, {0.5,1} }; } // The extrusion can also be performed with a rotation instead of a translation, // and the resulting mesh can be recombined into prisms (we use only one layer // here, with 7 subdivisions). All rotations are specified by an axis direction // ({0,1,0}), an axis point ({-0.1,0,0.1}) and a rotation angle (-Pi/2): Extrude { {0,1,0} , {-0.1,0,0.1} , -Pi/2 } { Surface{28}; Layers{7}; Recombine; } // Using the built-in geometry kernel, only rotations with angles < Pi are // supported. To do a full turn, you will thus need to apply at least 3 // rotations. The OpenCASCADE geometry kernel does not have this limitation. // Note that a translation ({-2*h,0,0}) and a rotation ({1,0,0}, {0,0.15,0.25}, // Pi/2) can also be combined to form a "twist". Here the angle is specified as // a ONELAB parameter, using the `DefineConstant' syntax. ONELAB parameters can // be modified interactively in the GUI, and can be exchanged with other codes // connected to the same ONELAB database: DefineConstant[ angle = {90, Min 0, Max 120, Step 1, Name "Parameters/Twisting angle"} ]; // In more details, `DefineConstant' allows you to assign the value of the // ONELAB parameter "Parameters/Twisting angle" to the variable `angle'. If the // ONELAB parameter does not exist in the database, `DefineConstant' will create // it and assign the default value `90'. Moreover, if the variable `angle' was // defined before the call to `DefineConstant', the `DefineConstant' call would // simply be skipped. This allows to build generic parametric models, whose // parameters can be frozen from the outside - the parameters ceasing to be // "parameters". // // An interesting use of this feature is in conjunction with the `-setnumber // name value' command line switch, which defines a variable `name' with value // `value'. Calling `gmsh t3.geo -setnumber angle 30' would define `angle' // before the `DefineConstant', making `t3.geo' non-parametric // ("Parameters/Twisting angle" will not be created in the ONELAB database and // will not be available for modification in the graphical user interface). out[] = Extrude { {-2*h,0,0}, {1,0,0} , {0,0.15,0.25} , angle * Pi / 180 } { Surface{50}; Layers{10}; Recombine; }; // In this last extrusion command we retrieved the volume number // programmatically by using the return value (a list) of the `Extrude' // command. This list contains the "top" of the extruded surface (in `out[0]'), // the newly created volume (in `out[1]') and the tags of the lateral surfaces // (in `out[2]', `out[3]', ...). // We can then define a new physical volume (with tag 101) to group all the // elementary volumes: Physical Volume(101) = {1, 2, out[1]}; // Let us now change some options... Since all interactive options are // accessible in Gmsh's scripting language, we can for example make point tags // visible or redefine some colors directly in the input file: Geometry.PointNumbers = 1; Geometry.Color.Points = Orange; General.Color.Text = White; Mesh.Color.Points = {255, 0, 0}; // Note that all colors can be defined literally or numerically, i.e. // `Mesh.Color.Points = Red' is equivalent to `Mesh.Color.Points = {255,0,0}'; // and also note that, as with user-defined variables, the options can be used // either as right or left hand sides, so that the following command will set // the surface color to the same color as the points: Geometry.Color.Surfaces = Geometry.Color.Points; // You can use the `Help->Current Options and Workspace' menu to see the current // values of all options. To save all the options in a file, use // `File->Export->Gmsh Options'. To associate the current options with the // current file use `File->Save Model Options'. To save the current options for // all future Gmsh sessions use `File->Save Options As Default'.
Next: t5, Previous: t3, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t4
: Built-in functions, holes in surfaces, annotations, entity colorsSee t4.geo. Also available in C++ (t4.cpp), Python (t4.py), Julia (t4.jl) and Fortran (t4.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 4 // // Built-in functions, holes in surfaces, annotations, entity colors // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // As usual, we start by defining some variables: cm = 1e-02; e1 = 4.5 * cm; e2 = 6 * cm / 2; e3 = 5 * cm / 2; h1 = 5 * cm; h2 = 10 * cm; h3 = 5 * cm; h4 = 2 * cm; h5 = 4.5 * cm; R1 = 1 * cm; R2 = 1.5 * cm; r = 1 * cm; Lc1 = 0.01; Lc2 = 0.003; // We can use all the usual mathematical functions (note the capitalized first // letters), plus some useful functions like Hypot(a, b) := Sqrt(a^2 + b^2): ccos = (-h5*R1 + e2 * Hypot(h5, Hypot(e2, R1))) / (h5^2 + e2^2); ssin = Sqrt(1 - ccos^2); // Then we define some points and some lines using these variables: Point(1) = {-e1-e2, 0 , 0, Lc1}; Point(2) = {-e1-e2, h1 , 0, Lc1}; Point(3) = {-e3-r , h1 , 0, Lc2}; Point(4) = {-e3-r , h1+r , 0, Lc2}; Point(5) = {-e3 , h1+r , 0, Lc2}; Point(6) = {-e3 , h1+h2, 0, Lc1}; Point(7) = { e3 , h1+h2, 0, Lc1}; Point(8) = { e3 , h1+r , 0, Lc2}; Point(9) = { e3+r , h1+r , 0, Lc2}; Point(10)= { e3+r , h1 , 0, Lc2}; Point(11)= { e1+e2, h1 , 0, Lc1}; Point(12)= { e1+e2, 0 , 0, Lc1}; Point(13)= { e2 , 0 , 0, Lc1}; Point(14)= { R1 / ssin, h5+R1*ccos, 0, Lc2}; Point(15)= { 0 , h5 , 0, Lc2}; Point(16)= {-R1 / ssin, h5+R1*ccos, 0, Lc2}; Point(17)= {-e2 , 0.0 , 0, Lc1}; Point(18)= {-R2 , h1+h3 , 0, Lc2}; Point(19)= {-R2 , h1+h3+h4, 0, Lc2}; Point(20)= { 0 , h1+h3+h4, 0, Lc2}; Point(21)= { R2 , h1+h3+h4, 0, Lc2}; Point(22)= { R2 , h1+h3 , 0, Lc2}; Point(23)= { 0 , h1+h3 , 0, Lc2}; Point(24)= { 0, h1+h3+h4+R2, 0, Lc2}; Point(25)= { 0, h1+h3-R2, 0, Lc2}; Line(1) = {1 , 17}; Line(2) = {17, 16}; // Gmsh provides other curve primitives than straight lines: splines, B-splines, // circle arcs, ellipse arcs, etc. Here we define a new circle arc, starting at // point 14 and ending at point 16, with the circle's center being the point 15: Circle(3) = {14,15,16}; // Note that, in Gmsh, circle arcs should always be smaller than Pi. The // OpenCASCADE geometry kernel does not have this limitation. // We can then define additional lines and circles, as well as a new surface: Line(4) = {14, 13}; Line(5) = {13, 12}; Line(6) = {12, 11}; Line(7) = {11, 10}; Circle(8) = {8, 9, 10}; Line(9) = {8, 7}; Line(10) = {7, 6}; Line(11) = {6, 5}; Circle(12) = {3, 4, 5}; Line(13) = {3, 2}; Line(14) = {2, 1}; Line(15) = {18, 19}; Circle(16) = {21, 20, 24}; Circle(17) = {24, 20, 19}; Circle(18) = {18, 23, 25}; Circle(19) = {25, 23, 22}; Line(20) = {21,22}; Curve Loop(21) = {17, -15, 18, 19, -20, 16}; Plane Surface(22) = {21}; // But we still need to define the exterior surface. Since this surface has a // hole, its definition now requires two curves loops: Curve Loop(23) = {11, -12, 13, 14, 1, 2, -3, 4, 5, 6, 7, -8, 9, 10}; Plane Surface(24) = {23, 21}; // As a general rule, if a surface has N holes, it is defined by N+1 curve loops: // the first loop defines the exterior boundary; the other loops define the // boundaries of the holes. // Finally, we can add some comments by embedding a post-processing view // containing some strings: View "comments" { // Add a text string in window coordinates, 10 pixels from the left and 10 // pixels from the bottom, using the `StrCat' function to concatenate strings: T2(10, -10, 0){ StrCat("Created on ", Today, " with Gmsh") }; // Add a text string in model coordinates centered at (X,Y,Z) = (0, 0.11, 0): T3(0, 0.11, 0, TextAttributes("Align", "Center", "Font", "Helvetica")){ "Hole" }; // If a string starts with `file://', the rest is interpreted as an image // file. For 3D annotations, the size in model coordinates can be specified // after a `@' symbol in the form `widthxheight' (if one of `width' or // `height' is zero, natural scaling is used; if both are zero, original image // dimensions in pixels are used): T3(0, 0.09, 0, TextAttributes("Align", "Center")){ "file://t4_image.png@0.01x0" }; // The 3D orientation of the image can be specified by proving the direction // of the bottom and left edge of the image in model space: T3(-0.01, 0.09, 0, 0){ "file://t4_image.png@0.01x0,0,0,1,0,1,0" }; // The image can also be drawn in "billboard" mode, i.e. always parallel to // the camera, by using the `#' symbol: T3(0, 0.12, 0, TextAttributes("Align", "Center")){ "file://t4_image.png@0.01x0#" }; // The size of 2D annotations is given directly in pixels: T2(350, -7, 0){ "file://t4_image.png@20x0" }; }; // This post-processing view is in the "parsed" format, i.e. it is interpreted // using the same parser as the `.geo' file. For large post-processing datasets, // that contain actual field values defined on a mesh, you should use the MSH // file format instead, which allows to efficiently store continuous or // discontinuous scalar, vector and tensor fields, or arbitrary polynomial // order. // Views and geometrical entities can be made to respond to double-click events, // here to print some messages to the console: View[0].DoubleClickedCommand = "Printf('View[0] has been double-clicked!');"; Geometry.DoubleClickedCurveCommand = "Printf('Curve %g has been double-clicked!', Geometry.DoubleClickedEntityTag);"; // We can also change the color of some entities: Color Grey50{ Surface{ 22 }; } Color Purple{ Surface{ 24 }; } Color Red{ Curve{ 1:14 }; } Color Yellow{ Curve{ 15:20 }; }
Next: t6, Previous: t4, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t5
: Mesh sizes, macros, loops, holes in volumesSee t5.geo. Also available in C++ (t5.cpp), Python (t5.py), Julia (t5.jl) and Fortran (t5.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 5 // // Mesh sizes, macros, loops, holes in volumes // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // We start by defining some target mesh sizes: lcar1 = .1; lcar2 = .0005; lcar3 = .055; // If we wanted to change these mesh sizes globally (without changing the above // definitions), we could give a global scaling factor for all mesh sizes on the // command line with the `-clscale' option (or with `Mesh.MeshSizeFactor' in an // option file). For example, with: // // > gmsh t5.geo -clscale 1 // // this input file produces a mesh of approximately 3000 nodes and 14,000 // tetrahedra. With // // > gmsh t5.geo -clscale 0.2 // // the mesh counts approximately 231,000 nodes and 1,360,000 tetrahedra. You can // check mesh statistics in the graphical user interface with the // `Tools->Statistics' menu. // // See `t10.geo' for more information about mesh sizes. // We proceed by defining some elementary entities describing a truncated cube: Point(1) = {0.5,0.5,0.5,lcar2}; Point(2) = {0.5,0.5,0,lcar1}; Point(3) = {0,0.5,0.5,lcar1}; Point(4) = {0,0,0.5,lcar1}; Point(5) = {0.5,0,0.5,lcar1}; Point(6) = {0.5,0,0,lcar1}; Point(7) = {0,0.5,0,lcar1}; Point(8) = {0,1,0,lcar1}; Point(9) = {1,1,0,lcar1}; Point(10) = {0,0,1,lcar1}; Point(11) = {0,1,1,lcar1}; Point(12) = {1,1,1,lcar1}; Point(13) = {1,0,1,lcar1}; Point(14) = {1,0,0,lcar1}; Line(1) = {8,9}; Line(2) = {9,12}; Line(3) = {12,11}; Line(4) = {11,8}; Line(5) = {9,14}; Line(6) = {14,13}; Line(7) = {13,12}; Line(8) = {11,10}; Line(9) = {10,13}; Line(10) = {10,4}; Line(11) = {4,5}; Line(12) = {5,6}; Line(13) = {6,2}; Line(14) = {2,1}; Line(15) = {1,3}; Line(16) = {3,7}; Line(17) = {7,2}; Line(18) = {3,4}; Line(19) = {5,1}; Line(20) = {7,8}; Line(21) = {6,14}; Curve Loop(22) = {-11,-19,-15,-18}; Plane Surface(23) = {22}; Curve Loop(24) = {16,17,14,15}; Plane Surface(25) = {24}; Curve Loop(26) = {-17,20,1,5,-21,13}; Plane Surface(27) = {26}; Curve Loop(28) = {-4,-1,-2,-3}; Plane Surface(29) = {28}; Curve Loop(30) = {-7,2,-5,-6}; Plane Surface(31) = {30}; Curve Loop(32) = {6,-9,10,11,12,21}; Plane Surface(33) = {32}; Curve Loop(34) = {7,3,8,9}; Plane Surface(35) = {34}; Curve Loop(36) = {-10,18,-16,-20,4,-8}; Plane Surface(37) = {36}; Curve Loop(38) = {-14,-13,-12,19}; Plane Surface(39) = {38}; // Instead of using included files, we now use a user-defined macro in order // to carve some holes in the cube: Macro CheeseHole // In the following commands we use the reserved variable name `newp', which // automatically selects a new point tag. Analogously to `newp', the special // variables `newc', `newcl, `news', `newsl' and `newv' select new curve, // curve loop, surface, surface loop and volume tags. // // If `Geometry.OldNewReg' is set to 0, the new tags are chosen as the highest // current tag for each category (points, curves, curve loops, ...), plus // one. By default, for backward compatibility, `Geometry.OldNewReg' is set // to 1, and only two categories are used: one for points and one for the // rest. p1 = newp; Point(p1) = {x, y, z, lcar3}; p2 = newp; Point(p2) = {x+r,y, z, lcar3}; p3 = newp; Point(p3) = {x, y+r,z, lcar3}; p4 = newp; Point(p4) = {x, y, z+r,lcar3}; p5 = newp; Point(p5) = {x-r,y, z, lcar3}; p6 = newp; Point(p6) = {x, y-r,z, lcar3}; p7 = newp; Point(p7) = {x, y, z-r,lcar3}; c1 = newc; Circle(c1) = {p2,p1,p7}; c2 = newc; Circle(c2) = {p7,p1,p5}; c3 = newc; Circle(c3) = {p5,p1,p4}; c4 = newc; Circle(c4) = {p4,p1,p2}; c5 = newc; Circle(c5) = {p2,p1,p3}; c6 = newc; Circle(c6) = {p3,p1,p5}; c7 = newc; Circle(c7) = {p5,p1,p6}; c8 = newc; Circle(c8) = {p6,p1,p2}; c9 = newc; Circle(c9) = {p7,p1,p3}; c10 = newc; Circle(c10) = {p3,p1,p4}; c11 = newc; Circle(c11) = {p4,p1,p6}; c12 = newc; Circle(c12) = {p6,p1,p7}; // We need non-plane surfaces to define the spherical holes. Here we use // `Surface', which can be used for surfaces with 3 or 4 curves on their // boundary. With the built-in kernel, if all the curves are circle arcs with // the same center, a spherical patch is created; otherwise transfinite // interpolation is used. With the OpenCASCADE kernel, `Surface' can be used // with an arbitrary number of boundary curves, and will fit a BSpline patch // through them. l1 = newcl; Curve Loop(l1) = {c5,c10,c4}; l2 = newcl; Curve Loop(l2) = {c9,-c5,c1}; l3 = newcl; Curve Loop(l3) = {c12,-c8,-c1}; l4 = newcl; Curve Loop(l4) = {c8,-c4,c11}; l5 = newcl; Curve Loop(l5) = {-c10,c6,c3}; l6 = newcl; Curve Loop(l6) = {-c11,-c3,c7}; l7 = newcl; Curve Loop(l7) = {-c2,-c7,-c12}; l8 = newcl; Curve Loop(l8) = {-c6,-c9,c2}; s1 = news; Surface(s1) = {l1}; s2 = news; Surface(s2) = {l2}; s3 = news; Surface(s3) = {l3}; s4 = news; Surface(s4) = {l4}; s5 = news; Surface(s5) = {l5}; s6 = news; Surface(s6) = {l6}; s7 = news; Surface(s7) = {l7}; s8 = news; Surface(s8) = {l8}; // We then store the surface loops tags in a list for later reference (we will // need these to define the final volume): theloops[t] = newsl; Surface Loop(theloops[t]) = {s1, s2, s3, s4, s5, s6, s7, s8}; thehole = newv; Volume(thehole) = theloops[t]; Return // We can use a `For' loop to generate five holes in the cube: x = 0; y = 0.75; z = 0; r = 0.09; For t In {1:5} x += 0.166; z += 0.166; // We call the `CheeseHole' macro: Call CheeseHole; // We define a physical volume for each hole: Physical Volume (t) = thehole; // We also print some variables on the terminal (note that, since all // variables in `.geo' files are treated internally as floating point numbers, // the format string should only contain valid floating point format // specifiers like `%g', `%f', '%e', etc.): Printf("Hole %g (center = {%g,%g,%g}, radius = %g) has number %g!", t, x, y, z, r, thehole); EndFor // We can then define the surface loop for the exterior surface of the cube: theloops[0] = newreg; Surface Loop(theloops[0]) = {23:39:2}; // The volume of the cube, without the 5 holes, is now defined by 6 surface // loops: the first surface loop defines the exterior surface; the surface loops // other than the first one define holes. (Again, to reference an array of // variables, its identifier is followed by square brackets): Volume(186) = {theloops[]}; // Note that using solid modelling with the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel, the // same geometry could be built quite differently: see `t16.geo'. // We finally define a physical volume for the elements discretizing the cube, // without the holes (for which physical groups were already created in the // `For' loop): Physical Volume (10) = 186; // We could make only part of the model visible to only mesh this subset: // // Hide {:} // Recursive Show { Volume{129}; } // Mesh.MeshOnlyVisible=1; // Meshing algorithms can changed globally using options: Mesh.Algorithm = 6; // Frontal-Delaunay for 2D meshes // They can also be set for individual surfaces, e.g. MeshAlgorithm Surface {31, 35} = 1; // MeshAdapt on surfaces 31 and 35 // To generate a curvilinear mesh and optimize it to produce provably valid // curved elements (see A. Johnen, J.-F. Remacle and C. Geuzaine. Geometric // validity of curvilinear finite elements. Journal of Computational Physics // 233, pp. 359-372, 2013; and T. Toulorge, C. Geuzaine, J.-F. Remacle, // J. Lambrechts. Robust untangling of curvilinear meshes. Journal of // Computational Physics 254, pp. 8-26, 2013), you can uncomment the following // lines: // // Mesh.ElementOrder = 2; // Mesh.HighOrderOptimize = 2;
Next: t7, Previous: t5, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t6
: Transfinite meshes, deleting entitiesSee t6.geo. Also available in C++ (t6.cpp), C (t6.c), Python (t6.py), Julia (t6.jl) and Fortran (t6.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 6 // // Transfinite meshes, deleting entities // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Let's use the geometry from the first tutorial as a basis for this one: lc = 1e-2; Point(1) = {0, 0, 0, lc}; Point(2) = {.1, 0, 0, lc}; Point(3) = {.1, .3, 0, lc}; Point(4) = {0, .3, 0, lc}; Line(1) = {1, 2}; Line(2) = {3, 2}; Line(3) = {3, 4}; Line(4) = {4, 1}; Curve Loop(1) = {4, 1, -2, 3}; Plane Surface(1) = {1}; // Delete the surface and the left line, and replace the line with 3 new ones: Delete{ Surface{1}; Curve{4}; } p1 = newp; Point(p1) = {-0.05, 0.05, 0, lc}; p2 = newp; Point(p2) = {-0.05, 0.1, 0, lc}; l1 = newc; Line(l1) = {1, p1}; l2 = newc; Line(l2) = {p1, p2}; l3 = newc; Line(l3) = {p2, 4}; // Create a surface: Curve Loop(2) = {2, -1, l1, l2, l3, -3}; Plane Surface(1) = {-2}; // The `Transfinite Curve' meshing constraints explicitly specifies the location // of the nodes on the curve. For example, the following command forces 20 // uniformly placed nodes on curve 2 (including the nodes on the two end // points): Transfinite Curve{2} = 20; // Let's put 20 points total on combination of curves `l1', `l2' and `l3' // (beware that the points `p1' and `p2' are shared by the curves, so we do not // create 6 + 6 + 10 = 22 nodes, but 20!) Transfinite Curve{l1} = 6; Transfinite Curve{l2} = 6; Transfinite Curve{l3} = 10; // Finally, we put 30 nodes following a geometric progression on curve 1 // (reversed) and on curve 3: Transfinite Curve{-1, 3} = 30 Using Progression 1.2; // The `Transfinite Surface' meshing constraint uses a transfinite interpolation // algorithm in the parametric plane of the surface to connect the nodes on the // boundary using a structured grid. If the surface has more than 4 corner // points, the corners of the transfinite interpolation have to be specified by // hand: Transfinite Surface{1} = {1, 2, 3, 4}; // To create quadrangles instead of triangles, one can use the `Recombine' // command: Recombine Surface{1}; // When the surface has only 3 or 4 points on its boundary the list of corners // can be omitted in the `Transfinite Surface' constraint: Point(7) = {0.2, 0.2, 0, 1.0}; Point(8) = {0.2, 0.1, 0, 1.0}; Point(9) = {0.25, 0.2, 0, 1.0}; Point(10) = {0.3, 0.1, 0, 1.0}; Line(10) = {8, 10}; Line(11) = {10, 9}; Line(12) = {9, 7}; Line(13) = {7, 8}; Curve Loop(14) = {10, 11, 12, 13}; Plane Surface(15) = {14}; Transfinite Curve {10, 11, 12, 13} = 10; Transfinite Surface{15}; // The way triangles are generated can be controlled by appending "Left", // "Right" or "Alternate" after the `Transfinite Surface' command. Try e.g. // // Transfinite Surface{15} Alternate; // Finally we apply an elliptic smoother to the grid to have a more regular // mesh: Mesh.Smoothing = 100;
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t7
: Background meshesSee t7.geo. Also available in C++ (t7.cpp), Python (t7.py), Julia (t7.jl) and Fortran (t7.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 7 // // Background meshes // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Mesh sizes can be specified very accurately by providing a background mesh, // i.e., a post-processing view that contains the target mesh sizes. // Merge a list-based post-processing view containing the target mesh sizes: Merge "t7_bgmesh.pos"; // If the post-processing view was model-based instead of list-based (i.e. if it // was based on an actual mesh), we would need to create a new model to contain // the geometry so that meshing it does not destroy the background mesh. It's // not necessary here since the view is list-based, but it does no harm: NewModel; // Merge the first tutorial geometry: Merge "t1.geo"; // Apply the view as the current background mesh size field: Background Mesh View[0]; // In order to compute the mesh sizes from the background mesh only, and // disregard any other size constraints, one can set: Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary = 0; Mesh.MeshSizeFromPoints = 0; Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature = 0; // See `t10.geo' for additional information: background meshes are actually a // particular case of general "mesh size fields".
Next: t9, Previous: t7, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t8
: Post-processing, image export and animationsSee t8.geo. Also available in C++ (t8.cpp), Python (t8.py), Julia (t8.jl) and Fortran (t8.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 8 // // Post-processing, image export and animations // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // In addition to creating geometries and meshes, GEO scripts can also be used // to manipulate post-processing datasets (called "views" in Gmsh). // We first include `t1.geo' as well as some post-processing views: Include "t1.geo"; Include "view1.pos"; Include "view1.pos"; Include "view4.pos"; // Gmsh can read post-processing views in various formats. Here the `view1.pos' // and `view4.pos' files are in the Gmsh "parsed" format, which is interpreted // directly by the GEO script parser. The parsed format should only be used for // relatively small datasets of course: for larger datasets using e.g. MSH files // is much more efficient. // We then set some general options: General.Trackball = 0; General.RotationX = 0; General.RotationY = 0; General.RotationZ = 0; General.Color.Background = White; General.Color.Foreground = Black; General.Color.Text = Black; General.Orthographic = 0; General.Axes = 0; General.SmallAxes = 0; // We also set some options for each post-processing view: v0 = PostProcessing.NbViews-4; v1 = v0+1; v2 = v0+2; v3 = v0+3; View[v0].IntervalsType = 2; View[v0].OffsetZ = 0.05; View[v0].RaiseZ = 0; View[v0].Light = 1; View[v0].ShowScale = 0; View[v0].SmoothNormals = 1; View[v1].IntervalsType = 1; View[v1].ColorTable = { Green, Blue }; View[v1].NbIso = 10; View[v1].ShowScale = 0; View[v2].Name = "Test..."; View[v2].Axes = 1; View[v2].Color.Axes = Black; View[v2].IntervalsType = 2; View[v2].Type = 2; View[v2].AutoPosition = 0; View[v2].PositionX = 85; View[v2].PositionY = 50; View[v2].Width = 200; View[v2].Height = 130; View[v3].Visible = 0; // You can save an MPEG movie directly by selecting `File->Export' in the // GUI. Several predefined animations are setup, for looping on all the time // steps in views, or for looping between views. // But a script can be used to build much more complex animations, by changing // options at run-time and re-rendering the graphics. Each frame can then be // saved to disk as an image, and multiple frames can be encoded to form a // movie. Below is an example of such a custom animation. t = 0; // Initial step // Loop on num from 1 to 3 For num In {1:3} View[v0].TimeStep = t; // Set time step View[v1].TimeStep = t; View[v2].TimeStep = t; View[v3].TimeStep = t; t = (View[v0].TimeStep < View[v0].NbTimeStep-1) ? t+1 : 0; // Increment View[v0].RaiseZ += 0.01/View[v0].Max * t; // Raise view v0 If (num == 3) // Resize the graphics when num == 3, to create 640x480 frames General.GraphicsWidth = General.MenuWidth + 640; General.GraphicsHeight = 480; EndIf frames = 50; // Loop on num2 from 1 to frames For num2 In {1:frames} // Incrementally rotate the scene General.RotationX += 10; General.RotationY = General.RotationX / 3; General.RotationZ += 0.1; // Sleep for 0.01 second Sleep 0.01; // Draw the scene (one could use `DrawForceChanged' instead to force the // reconstruction of the vertex arrays, e.g. if changing element clipping) Draw; If (num == 3) // Uncomment the following lines to save each frame to an image file (the // `Print' command saves the graphical window; the `Sprintf' function // permits to create the file names on the fly): // Print Sprintf("t8-%g.gif", num2); // Print Sprintf("t8-%g.ppm", num2); // Print Sprintf("t8-%g.jpg", num2); EndIf EndFor If(num == 3) // Here we could make a system call to generate a movie. For example, with // ffmpeg: // System "ffmpeg -i t8-%d.jpg t8.mpg" EndIf EndFor
Next: t10, Previous: t8, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t9
: PluginsSee t9.geo. Also available in C++ (t9.cpp), Python (t9.py), Julia (t9.jl) and Fortran (t9.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 9 // // Plugins // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Plugins can be added to Gmsh in order to extend its capabilities. For // example, post-processing plugins can modify views, or create new views based // on previously loaded views. Several default plugins are statically linked // with Gmsh, e.g. Isosurface, CutPlane, CutSphere, Skin, Transform or Smooth. // // Plugins can be controlled in the same way as other options: either from the // graphical interface (right click on the view button, then `Plugins'), or from // the command file. // Let us for example include a three-dimensional scalar view: Include "view3.pos" ; // We then set some options for the `Isosurface' plugin (which extracts an // isosurface from a 3D scalar view), and run it: Plugin(Isosurface).Value = 0.67 ; // Iso-value level Plugin(Isosurface).View = 0 ; // Source view is View[0] Plugin(Isosurface).Run ; // Run the plugin! // We also set some options for the `CutPlane' plugin (which computes a section // of a 3D view using the plane A*x+B*y+C*z+D=0), and then run it: Plugin(CutPlane).A = 0 ; Plugin(CutPlane).B = 0.2 ; Plugin(CutPlane).C = 1 ; Plugin(CutPlane).D = 0 ; Plugin(CutPlane).View = 0 ; Plugin(CutPlane).Run ; // Add a title (By convention, for window coordinates a value greater than 99999 // represents the center. We could also use `General.GraphicsWidth / 2', but // that would only center the string for the current window size.): Plugin(Annotate).Text = "A nice title" ; Plugin(Annotate).X = 1.e5; Plugin(Annotate).Y = 50 ; Plugin(Annotate).Font = "Times-BoldItalic" ; Plugin(Annotate).FontSize = 28 ; Plugin(Annotate).Align = "Center" ; Plugin(Annotate).View = 0 ; Plugin(Annotate).Run ; Plugin(Annotate).Text = "(and a small subtitle)" ; Plugin(Annotate).Y = 70 ; Plugin(Annotate).Font = "Times-Roman" ; Plugin(Annotate).FontSize = 12 ; Plugin(Annotate).Run ; // We finish by setting some options: View[0].Light = 1; View[0].IntervalsType = 1; View[0].NbIso = 6; View[0].SmoothNormals = 1; View[1].IntervalsType = 2; View[2].IntervalsType = 2;
Next: t11, Previous: t9, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t10
: Mesh size fieldsSee t10.geo. Also available in C++ (t10.cpp), Python (t10.py), Julia (t10.jl) and Fortran (t10.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 10 // // Mesh size fields // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // In addition to specifying target mesh sizes at the points of the geometry // (see `t1.geo') or using a background mesh (see `t7.geo'), you can use general // mesh size "Fields". // Let's create a simple rectangular geometry lc = .15; Point(1) = {0.0,0.0,0,lc}; Point(2) = {1,0.0,0,lc}; Point(3) = {1,1,0,lc}; Point(4) = {0,1,0,lc}; Point(5) = {0.2,.5,0,lc}; Line(1) = {1,2}; Line(2) = {2,3}; Line(3) = {3,4}; Line(4) = {4,1}; Curve Loop(5) = {1,2,3,4}; Plane Surface(6) = {5}; // Say we would like to obtain mesh elements with size lc/30 near curve 2 and // point 5, and size lc elsewhere. To achieve this, we can use two fields: // "Distance", and "Threshold". We first define a Distance field (`Field[1]') on // points 5 and on curve 2. This field returns the distance to point 5 and to // (100 equidistant points on) curve 2. Field[1] = Distance; Field[1].PointsList = {5}; Field[1].CurvesList = {2}; Field[1].Sampling = 100; // We then define a `Threshold' field, which uses the return value of the // `Distance' field 1 in order to define a simple change in element size // depending on the computed distances // // SizeMax - /------------------ // / // / // / // SizeMin -o----------------/ // | | | // Point DistMin DistMax Field[2] = Threshold; Field[2].InField = 1; Field[2].SizeMin = lc / 30; Field[2].SizeMax = lc; Field[2].DistMin = 0.15; Field[2].DistMax = 0.5; // Say we want to modulate the mesh element sizes using a mathematical function // of the spatial coordinates. We can do this with the MathEval field: Field[3] = MathEval; Field[3].F = "cos(4*3.14*x) * sin(4*3.14*y) / 10 + 0.101"; // We could also combine MathEval with values coming from other fields. For // example, let's define a `Distance' field around point 1 Field[4] = Distance; Field[4].PointsList = {1}; // We can then create a `MathEval' field with a function that depends on the // return value of the `Distance' field 4, i.e., depending on the distance to // point 1 (here using a cubic law, with minimum element size = lc / 100) Field[5] = MathEval; Field[5].F = Sprintf("F4^3 + %g", lc / 100); // We could also use a `Box' field to impose a step change in element sizes // inside a box Field[6] = Box; Field[6].VIn = lc / 15; Field[6].VOut = lc; Field[6].XMin = 0.3; Field[6].XMax = 0.6; Field[6].YMin = 0.3; Field[6].YMax = 0.6; Field[6].Thickness = 0.3; // Many other types of fields are available: see the reference manual for a // complete list. You can also create fields directly in the graphical user // interface by selecting `Define->Size fields' in the `Mesh' module. // Let's use the minimum of all the fields as the background mesh size field Field[7] = Min; Field[7].FieldsList = {2, 3, 5, 6}; Background Field = 7; // To determine the size of mesh elements, Gmsh locally computes the minimum of // // 1) the size of the model bounding box; // 2) if `Mesh.MeshSizeFromPoints' is set, the mesh size specified at // geometrical points; // 3) if `Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature' is positive, the mesh size based on // curvature (the value specifying the number of elements per 2 * pi rad); // 4) the background mesh size field; // 5) any per-entity mesh size constraint. // // This value is then constrained in the interval [`Mesh.MeshSizeMin', // `Mesh.MeshSizeMax'] and multiplied by `Mesh.MeshSizeFactor'. In addition, // boundary mesh sizes are interpolated inside surfaces and/or volumes depending // on the value of `Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary' (which is set by default). // // When the element size is fully specified by a mesh size field (as it is in // this example), it is thus often desirable to set Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary = 0; Mesh.MeshSizeFromPoints = 0; Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature = 0; // This will prevent over-refinement due to small mesh sizes on the boundary. // Finally, while the default "Frontal-Delaunay" 2D meshing algorithm // (Mesh.Algorithm = 6) usually leads to the highest quality meshes, the // "Delaunay" algorithm (Mesh.Algorithm = 5) will handle complex mesh size // fields better - in particular size fields with large element size gradients: Mesh.Algorithm = 5;
Next: t12, Previous: t10, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t11
: Unstructured quadrangular meshesSee t11.geo. Also available in C++ (t11.cpp), Python (t11.py), Julia (t11.jl) and Fortran (t11.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 11 // // Unstructured quadrangular meshes // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // We have seen in tutorials `t3.geo' and `t6.geo' that extruded and transfinite // meshes can be "recombined" into quads, prisms or hexahedra by using the // "Recombine" keyword. Unstructured meshes can be recombined in the same // way. Let's define a simple geometry with an analytical mesh size field: Point(1) = {-1.25, -.5, 0}; Point(2) = {1.25, -.5, 0}; Point(3) = {1.25, 1.25, 0}; Point(4) = {-1.25, 1.25, 0}; Line(1) = {1, 2}; Line(2) = {2, 3}; Line(3) = {3, 4}; Line(4) = {4, 1}; Curve Loop(4) = {1, 2, 3, 4}; Plane Surface(100) = {4}; Field[1] = MathEval; Field[1].F = "0.01*(1.0+30.*(y-x*x)*(y-x*x) + (1-x)*(1-x))"; Background Field = 1; // To generate quadrangles instead of triangles, we can simply add Recombine Surface{100}; // If we'd had several surfaces, we could have used `Recombine Surface {:};'. // Yet another way would be to specify the global option "Mesh.RecombineAll = // 1;". // The default recombination algorithm is called "Blossom": it uses a minimum // cost perfect matching algorithm to generate fully quadrilateral meshes from // triangulations. More details about the algorithm can be found in the // following paper: J.-F. Remacle, J. Lambrechts, B. Seny, E. Marchandise, // A. Johnen and C. Geuzaine, "Blossom-Quad: a non-uniform quadrilateral mesh // generator using a minimum cost perfect matching algorithm", International // Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 89, pp. 1102-1119, 2012. // For even better 2D (planar) quadrilateral meshes, you can try the // experimental "Frontal-Delaunay for quads" meshing algorithm, which is a // triangulation algorithm that enables to create right triangles almost // everywhere: J.-F. Remacle, F. Henrotte, T. Carrier-Baudouin, E. Bechet, // E. Marchandise, C. Geuzaine and T. Mouton. A frontal Delaunay quad mesh // generator using the L^inf norm. International Journal for Numerical Methods // in Engineering, 94, pp. 494-512, 2013. Uncomment the following line to try // the Frontal-Delaunay algorithms for quads: // // Mesh.Algorithm = 8; // The default recombination algorithm might leave some triangles in the mesh, // if recombining all the triangles leads to badly shaped quads. In such cases, // to generate full-quad meshes, you can either subdivide the resulting hybrid // mesh (with Mesh.SubdivisionAlgorithm = 1), or use the full-quad recombination // algorithm, which will automatically perform a coarser mesh followed by // recombination, smoothing and subdivision. Uncomment the following line to try // the full-quad algorithm: // // Mesh.RecombinationAlgorithm = 2; // or 3 // Note that you could also apply the recombination algorithm and/or the // subdivision step explicitly after meshing, as follows: // // Mesh 2; // RecombineMesh; // Mesh.SubdivisionAlgorithm = 1; // RefineMesh;
Next: t13, Previous: t11, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t12
: Cross-patch meshing with compoundsSee t12.geo/ Also available in C++ (t12.cpp), Python (t12.py), Julia (t12.jl) and Fortran (t12.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 12 // // Cross-patch meshing with compounds // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // "Compound" meshing constraints allow to generate meshes across surface // boundaries, which can be useful e.g. for imported CAD models (e.g. STEP) with // undesired small features. // When a `Compound Curve' or `Compound Surface' meshing constraint is given, // at mesh generation time Gmsh // 1. meshes the underlying elementary geometrical entities, individually // 2. creates a discrete entity that combines all the individual meshes // 3. computes a discrete parametrization (i.e. a piece-wise linear mapping) // on this discrete entity // 4. meshes the discrete entity using this discrete parametrization instead // of the underlying geometrical description of the underlying elementary // entities making up the compound // 5. optionally, reclassifies the mesh elements and nodes on the original // entities // Step 3. above can only be performed if the mesh resulting from the // combination of the individual meshes can be reparametrized, i.e. if the shape // is "simple enough". If the shape is not amenable to reparametrization, you // should create a full mesh of the geometry and first re-classify it to // generate patches amenable to reparametrization (see `t13.geo'). // The mesh of the individual entities performed in Step 1. should usually be // finer than the desired final mesh; this can be controlled with the // `Mesh.CompoundMeshSizeFactor' option. // The optional reclassification on the underlying elementary entities in Step // 5. is governed by the `Mesh.CompoundClassify' option. lc = 0.1; Point(1) = {0, 0, 0, lc}; Point(2) = {1, 0, 0, lc}; Point(3) = {1, 1, 0.5, lc}; Point(4) = {0, 1, 0.4, lc}; Point(5) = {0.3, 0.2, 0, lc}; Point(6) = {0, 0.01, 0.01, lc}; Point(7) = {0, 0.02, 0.02, lc}; Point(8) = {1, 0.05, 0.02, lc}; Point(9) = {1, 0.32, 0.02, lc}; Line(1) = {1, 2}; Line(2) = {2, 8}; Line(3) = {8, 9}; Line(4) = {9, 3}; Line(5) = {3, 4}; Line(6) = {4, 7}; Line(7) = {7, 6}; Line(8) = {6, 1}; Spline(9) = {7, 5, 9}; Line(10) = {6, 8}; Curve Loop(11) = {5, 6, 9, 4}; Surface(1) = {11}; Curve Loop(13) = {-9, 3, 10, 7}; Surface(5) = {13}; Curve Loop(15) = {-10, 2, 1, 8}; Surface(10) = {15}; // Treat curves 2, 3 and 4 as a single curve when meshing (i.e. mesh across // points 6 and 7) Compound Curve{2, 3, 4}; // Idem with curves 6, 7 and 8 Compound Curve{6, 7, 8}; // Treat surfaces 1, 5 and 10 as a single surface when meshing (i.e. mesh across // curves 9 and 10) Compound Surface{1, 5, 10};
Next: t14, Previous: t12, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t13
: Remeshing an STL file without an underlying CAD modelSee t13.geo. Also available in C++ (t13.cpp), Python (t13.py), Julia (t13.jl) and Fortran (t13.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 13 // // Remeshing an STL file without an underlying CAD model // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Let's merge an STL mesh that we would like to remesh. Merge "t13_data.stl"; // We first classify ("color") the surfaces by splitting the original surface // along sharp geometrical features. This will create new discrete surfaces, // curves and points. DefineConstant[ // Angle between two triangles above which an edge is considered as sharp angle = {40, Min 20, Max 120, Step 1, Name "Parameters/Angle for surface detection"}, // For complex geometries, patches can be too complex, too elongated or too // large to be parametrized; setting the following option will force the // creation of patches that are amenable to reparametrization: forceParametrizablePatches = {0, Choices{0,1}, Name "Parameters/Create surfaces guaranteed to be parametrizable"}, // For open surfaces include the boundary edges in the classification process: includeBoundary = 1, // Force curves to be split on given angle: curveAngle = 180 ]; ClassifySurfaces{angle * Pi/180, includeBoundary, forceParametrizablePatches, curveAngle * Pi / 180}; // Create a geometry for all the discrete curves and surfaces in the mesh, by // computing a parametrization for each one CreateGeometry; // In batch mode the two steps above can be performed with `gmsh t13.stl // -reparam 40', which will save `t13.msh' containing the parametrizations, and // which can thus subsequently be remeshed. // Note that if a CAD model (e.g. as a STEP file, see `t20.geo') is available // instead of an STL mesh, it is usually better to use that CAD model instead of // the geometry created by reparametrizing the mesh. Indeed, CAD geometries will // in general be more accurate, with smoother parametrizations, and will lead to // more efficient and higher quality meshing. Discrete surface remeshing in Gmsh // is optimized to handle dense STL meshes coming from e.g. imaging systems // where no CAD is available; it is less well suited for the poor quality STL // triangulations (optimized for size, with e.g. very elongated triangles) that // are usually generated by CAD tools for e.g. 3D printing. // Create a volume as usual Surface Loop(1) = Surface{:}; Volume(1) = {1}; // We specify element sizes imposed by a size field, just because we can :-) funny = DefineNumber[0, Choices{0,1}, Name "Parameters/Apply funny mesh size field?" ]; Field[1] = MathEval; If(funny) Field[1].F = "2*Sin((x+y)/5) + 3"; Else Field[1].F = "4"; EndIf Background Field = 1;
Next: t15, Previous: t13, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t14
: Homology and cohomology computationSee t14.geo. Also available in C++ (t14.cpp), Python (t14.py), Julia (t14.jl) and Fortran (t14.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 14 // // Homology and cohomology computation // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Homology computation in Gmsh finds representative chains of (relative) // (co)homology space bases using a mesh of a model. The representative basis // chains are stored in the mesh as physical groups of Gmsh, one for each chain. // Create an example geometry m = 0.5; // mesh size h = 2; // height in the z-direction Point(1) = {0, 0, 0, m}; Point(2) = {10, 0, 0, m}; Point(3) = {10, 10, 0, m}; Point(4) = {0, 10, 0, m}; Point(5) = {4, 4, 0, m}; Point(6) = {6, 4, 0, m}; Point(7) = {6, 6, 0, m}; Point(8) = {4, 6, 0, m}; Point(9) = {2, 0, 0, m}; Point(10) = {8, 0, 0, m}; Point(11) = {2, 10, 0, m}; Point(12) = {8, 10, 0, m}; Line(1) = {1, 9}; Line(2) = {9, 10}; Line(3) = {10, 2}; Line(4) = {2, 3}; Line(5) = {3, 12}; Line(6) = {12, 11}; Line(7) = {11, 4}; Line(8) = {4, 1}; Line(9) = {5, 6}; Line(10) = {6, 7}; Line(11) = {7, 8}; Line(12) = {8, 5}; Curve Loop(13) = {6, 7, 8, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}; Curve Loop(14) = {11, 12, 9, 10}; Plane Surface(15) = {13, 14}; e() = Extrude {0, 0, h}{ Surface{15}; }; // Create physical groups, which are used to define the domain of the // (co)homology computation and the subdomain of the relative (co)homology // computation. // Whole domain Physical Volume(1) = {e(1)}; // Four "terminals" of the model Physical Surface(70) = {e(3)}; Physical Surface(71) = {e(5)}; Physical Surface(72) = {e(7)}; Physical Surface(73) = {e(9)}; // Whole domain surface bnd() = Abs(Boundary{ Volume{e(1)}; }); Physical Surface(80) = bnd(); // Complement of the domain surface with respect to the four terminals bnd() -= {e(3), e(5), e(7), e(9)}; Physical Surface(75) = bnd(); // Find bases for relative homology spaces of the domain modulo the four // terminals. Homology {{1}, {70, 71, 72, 73}}; // Find homology space bases isomorphic to the previous bases: homology spaces // modulo the non-terminal domain surface, a.k.a the thin cuts. Homology {{1}, {75}}; // Find cohomology space bases isomorphic to the previous bases: cohomology // spaces of the domain modulo the four terminals, a.k.a the thick cuts. Cohomology {{1}, {70, 71, 72, 73}}; // More examples: // Homology {1}; // Homology; // Homology {{1}, {80}}; // Homology {{}, {80}}; // For more information, see M. Pellikka, S. Suuriniemi, L. Kettunen and // C. Geuzaine. Homology and cohomology computation in finite element // modeling. SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing 35(5), pp. 1195-1214, 2013.
Next: t16, Previous: t14, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t15
: Embedded points, lines and surfacesSee t15.geo. Also available in C++ (t15.cpp), Python (t15.py), Julia (t15.jl) and Fortran (t15.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 15 // // Embedded points, lines and surfaces // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // By default, across geometrical dimensions meshes generated by Gmsh are only // conformal if lower dimensional entities are on the boundary of higher // dimensional ones (i.e. if points, curves or surfaces are part of the boundary // of volumes). // Embedding constraints allow to force a mesh to be conformal to other lower // dimensional entities. // We start one again by including the first tutorial: Include "t1.geo"; // We change the mesh size to generate coarser mesh lc = lc * 4; MeshSize {1:4} = lc; // We define a new point Point(5) = {0.02, 0.02, 0, lc}; // One can force this point to be included ("embedded") in the 2D mesh, using // the `Point In Surface' command: Point{5} In Surface{1}; // In the same way, one can force a curve to be embedded in the 2D mesh using // the `Curve in Surface' command: Point(6) = {0.02, 0.12, 0, lc}; Point(7) = {0.04, 0.18, 0, lc}; Line(5) = {6, 7}; Curve{5} In Surface{1}; // One can also embed points and curves in a volume using the `Curve/Point In // Volume' commands: Extrude {0, 0, 0.1}{ Surface {1}; } p = newp; Point(p) = {0.07, 0.15, 0.025, lc}; Point{p} In Volume {1}; l = newc; Point(p+1) = {0.025, 0.15, 0.025, lc}; Line(l) = {7, p+1}; Curve{l} In Volume {1}; // Finally, one can also embed a surface in a volume using the `Surface In // Volume' command: Point(p+2) = {0.02, 0.12, 0.05, lc}; Point(p+3) = {0.04, 0.12, 0.05, lc}; Point(p+4) = {0.04, 0.18, 0.05, lc}; Point(p+5) = {0.02, 0.18, 0.05, lc}; Line(l+1) = {p+2, p+3}; Line(l+2) = {p+3, p+4}; Line(l+3) = {p+4, p+5}; Line(l+4) = {p+5, p+2}; ll = newcl; Curve Loop(ll) = {l+1:l+4}; s = news; Plane Surface(s) = {ll}; Surface{s} In Volume {1}; // Note that with the OpenCASCADE kernel (see `t16.geo'), when the // `BooleanFragments' command is applied to entities of different dimensions, // the lower dimensional entities will be autmatically embedded in the higher // dimensional entities if necessary. Physical Point("Embedded point") = {p}; Physical Curve("Embdded curve") = {l}; Physical Surface("Embedded surface") = {s}; Physical Volume("Volume") = {1};
Next: t17, Previous: t15, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t16
: Constructive Solid Geometry, OpenCASCADE geometry kernelSee t16.geo. Also available in C++ (t16.cpp), C (t16.c), Python (t16.py), Julia (t16.jl) and Fortran (t16.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 16 // // Constructive Solid Geometry, OpenCASCADE geometry kernel // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Instead of constructing a model in a bottom-up fashion with Gmsh's built-in // geometry kernel, starting with version 3 Gmsh allows you to directly use // alternative geometry kernels. Here we use the OpenCASCADE kernel: SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); // Let's build the same model as in `t5.geo', but using constructive solid // geometry. // We first create two cubes: Box(1) = {0,0,0, 1,1,1}; Box(2) = {0,0,0, 0.5,0.5,0.5}; // We apply a boolean difference to create the "cube minus one eighth" shape: BooleanDifference(3) = { Volume{1}; Delete; }{ Volume{2}; Delete; }; // Boolean operations with OpenCASCADE always create new entities. Adding // `Delete' in the arguments allows to automatically delete the original // entities. // We then create the five spheres: x = 0 ; y = 0.75 ; z = 0 ; r = 0.09 ; For t In {1:5} x += 0.166 ; z += 0.166 ; Sphere(3 + t) = {x,y,z,r}; Physical Volume(t) = {3 + t}; EndFor // If we had wanted five empty holes we would have used `BooleanDifference' // again. Here we want five spherical inclusions, whose mesh should be conformal // with the mesh of the cube: we thus use `BooleanFragments', which intersects // all volumes in a conformal manner (without creating duplicate interfaces): v() = BooleanFragments{ Volume{3}; Delete; }{ Volume{3 + 1 : 3 + 5}; Delete; }; // When the boolean operation leads to simple modifications of entities, and if // one deletes the original entities with `Delete', Gmsh tries to assign the // same tag to the new entities. (This behavior is governed by the // `Geometry.OCCBooleanPreserveNumbering' option.) // Here the `Physical Volume' definitions made above will thus still work, as // the five spheres (volumes 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8), which will be deleted by the // fragment operations, will be recreated identically (albeit with new surfaces) // with the same tags. // The tag of the cube will change though, so we need to access it // programmatically: Physical Volume(10) = v(#v()-1); // Creating entities using constructive solid geometry is very powerful, but can // lead to practical issues for e.g. setting mesh sizes at points, or // identifying boundaries. // To identify points or other bounding entities you can take advantage of the // `PointfsOf' (a special case of the more general `Boundary' command) and the // `In BoundingBox' commands. lcar1 = .1; lcar2 = .0005; lcar3 = .055; eps = 1e-3; // Assign a mesh size to all the points of all the volumes: MeshSize{ PointsOf{ Volume{:}; } } = lcar1; // Override this constraint on the points of the five spheres: MeshSize{ PointsOf{ Volume{3 + 1 : 3 + 5}; } } = lcar3; // Select the corner point by searching for it geometrically: p() = Point In BoundingBox{0.5-eps, 0.5-eps, 0.5-eps, 0.5+eps, 0.5+eps, 0.5+eps}; MeshSize{ p() } = lcar2; // Additional examples created with the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel are // available in `t18.geo', `t19.geo' and `t20.geo', as well as in the // `examples/boolean' directory.
Next: t18, Previous: t16, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t17
: Anisotropic background meshSee t17.geo. Also available in C++ (t17.cpp), Python (t17.py), Julia (t17.jl) and Fortran (t17.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 17 // // Anisotropic background mesh // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // As seen in `t7.geo', mesh sizes can be specified very accurately by providing // a background mesh, i.e., a post-processing view that contains the target mesh // sizes. // Here, the background mesh is represented as a metric tensor field defined on // a square. One should use bamg as 2d mesh generator to enable anisotropic // meshes in 2D. SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); // Create a square Rectangle(1) = {-2, -2, 0, 4, 4}; // Merge a post-processing view containing the target anisotropic mesh sizes Merge "t17_bgmesh.pos"; // Apply the view as the current background mesh Background Mesh View[0]; // Use bamg Mesh.SmoothRatio = 3; Mesh.AnisoMax = 1000; Mesh.Algorithm = 7;
Next: t19, Previous: t17, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t18
: Periodic meshesSee t18.geo. Also available in C++ (t18.cpp), Python (t18.py), Julia (t18.jl) and Fortran (t18.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 18 // // Periodic meshes // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Periodic meshing constraints can be imposed on surfaces and curves. // Let's use the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel to build two geometries. SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); // The first geometry is very simple: a unit cube with a non-uniform mesh size // constraint (set on purpose to be able to verify visually that the periodicity // constraint works!): Box(1) = {0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1}; MeshSize {:} = 0.1; MeshSize {1} = 0.02; // To impose that the mesh on surface 2 (the right side of the cube) should // match the mesh from surface 1 (the left side), the following periodicity // constraint is set: Periodic Surface {2} = {1} Translate {1, 0, 0}; // During mesh generation, the mesh on surface 2 will be created by copying the // mesh from surface 1. Periodicity constraints can be specified with a // `Translation', a `Rotation' or a general `Affine' transform. // Multiple periodicities can be imposed in the same way: Periodic Surface {6} = {5} Translate {0, 0, 1}; Periodic Surface {4} = {3} Translate {0, 1, 0}; // For more complicated cases, finding the corresponding surfaces by hand can be // tedious, especially when geometries are created through solid // modelling. Let's construct a slightly more complicated geometry. // We start with a cube and some spheres: Box(10) = {2, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1}; x = 2-0.3; y = 0; z = 0; Sphere(11) = {x, y, z, 0.35}; Sphere(12) = {x+1, y, z, 0.35}; Sphere(13) = {x, y+1, z, 0.35}; Sphere(14) = {x, y, z+1, 0.35}; Sphere(15) = {x+1, y+1, z, 0.35}; Sphere(16) = {x, y+1, z+1, 0.35}; Sphere(17) = {x+1, y, z+1, 0.35}; Sphere(18) = {x+1, y+1, z+1, 0.35}; // We first fragment all the volumes, which will leave parts of spheres // protruding outside the cube: v() = BooleanFragments { Volume{10}; Delete; }{ Volume{11:18}; Delete; }; // Ask OpenCASCADE to compute more accurate bounding boxes of entities using the // STL mesh: Geometry.OCCBoundsUseStl = 1; // We then retrieve all the volumes in the bounding box of the original cube, // and delete all the parts outside it: eps = 1e-3; vin() = Volume In BoundingBox {2-eps,-eps,-eps, 2+1+eps,1+eps,1+eps}; v() -= vin(); Recursive Delete{ Volume{v()}; } // We now set a non-uniform mesh size constraint (again to check results // visually): MeshSize { PointsOf{ Volume{vin()}; }} = 0.1; p() = Point In BoundingBox{2-eps, -eps, -eps, 2+eps, eps, eps}; MeshSize {p()} = 0.001; // We now identify corresponding surfaces on the left and right sides of the // geometry automatically. // First we get all surfaces on the left: Sxmin() = Surface In BoundingBox{2-eps, -eps, -eps, 2+eps, 1+eps, 1+eps}; For i In {0:#Sxmin()-1} // Then we get the bounding box of each left surface bb() = BoundingBox Surface { Sxmin(i) }; // We translate the bounding box to the right and look for surfaces inside it: Sxmax() = Surface In BoundingBox { bb(0)-eps+1, bb(1)-eps, bb(2)-eps, bb(3)+eps+1, bb(4)+eps, bb(5)+eps }; // For all the matches, we compare the corresponding bounding boxes... For j In {0:#Sxmax()-1} bb2() = BoundingBox Surface { Sxmax(j) }; bb2(0) -= 1; bb2(3) -= 1; // ...and if they match, we apply the periodicity constraint If(Fabs(bb2(0)-bb(0)) < eps && Fabs(bb2(1)-bb(1)) < eps && Fabs(bb2(2)-bb(2)) < eps && Fabs(bb2(3)-bb(3)) < eps && Fabs(bb2(4)-bb(4)) < eps && Fabs(bb2(5)-bb(5)) < eps) Periodic Surface {Sxmax(j)} = {Sxmin(i)} Translate {1,0,0}; EndIf EndFor EndFor
Next: t20, Previous: t18, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t19
: Thrusections, fillets, pipes, mesh size from curvatureSee t19.geo. Also available in C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py), Julia (t19.jl) and Fortran (t19.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 19 // // Thrusections, fillets, pipes, mesh size from curvature // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The OpenCASCADE geometry kernel supports several useful features for solid // modelling. SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); // Volumes can be constructed from (closed) curve loops thanks to the // `ThruSections' command Circle(1) = {0,0,0, 0.5}; Curve Loop(1) = 1; Circle(2) = {0.1,0.05,1, 0.1}; Curve Loop(2) = 2; Circle(3) = {-0.1,-0.1,2, 0.3}; Curve Loop(3) = 3; ThruSections(1) = {1:3}; // With `Ruled ThruSections' you can force the use of ruled surfaces: Circle(11) = {2+0,0,0, 0.5}; Curve Loop(11) = 11; Circle(12) = {2+0.1,0.05,1, 0.1}; Curve Loop(12) = 12; Circle(13) = {2-0.1,-0.1,2, 0.3}; Curve Loop(13) = 13; Ruled ThruSections(11) = {11:13}; // We copy the first volume, and fillet all its edges: v() = Translate{4, 0, 0} { Duplicata{ Volume{1}; } }; f() = Abs(Boundary{ Volume{v(0)}; }); e() = Unique(Abs(Boundary{ Surface{f()}; })); Fillet{v(0)}{e()}{0.1} // OpenCASCADE also allows general extrusions along a smooth path. Let's first // define a spline curve: nturns = 1; npts = 20; r = 1; h = 1 * nturns; For i In {0 : npts - 1} theta = i * 2*Pi*nturns/npts; Point(1000 + i) = {r * Cos(theta), r * Sin(theta), i * h/npts}; EndFor Spline(1000) = {1000 : 1000 + npts - 1}; // A wire is like a curve loop, but open: Wire(1000) = {1000}; // We define the shape we would like to extrude along the spline (a disk): Disk(1000) = {1,0,0, 0.2}; Rotate {{1, 0, 0}, {0, 0, 0}, Pi/2} { Surface{1000}; } // We extrude the disk along the spline to create a pipe: Extrude { Surface{1000}; } Using Wire {1000} // We delete the source surface, and increase the number of sub-edges for a // nicer display of the geometry: Delete{ Surface{1000}; } Geometry.NumSubEdges = 1000; // We can activate the calculation of mesh element sizes based on curvature // (here with a target of 20 elements per 2*Pi radians): Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature = 20; // We can constraint the min and max element sizes to stay within reasonnable // values (see `t10.geo' for more details): Mesh.MeshSizeMin = 0.001; Mesh.MeshSizeMax = 0.3;
Next: t21, Previous: t19, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t20
: STEP import and manipulation, geometry partitioningSee t20.geo. Also available in C++ (t20.cpp), Python (t20.py), Julia (t20.jl) and Fortran (t20.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 20 // // STEP import and manipulation, geometry partitioning // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The OpenCASCADE geometry kernel allows to import STEP files and to modify // them. In this tutorial we will load a STEP geometry and partition it into // slices. SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); // Load a STEP file (using `ShapeFromFile' instead of `Merge' allows to directly // retrieve the tags of the highest dimensional imported entities): v() = ShapeFromFile("t20_data.step"); // If we had specified // // Geometry.OCCTargetUnit = "M"; // // before merging the STEP file, OpenCASCADE would have converted the units to // meters (instead of the default, which is millimeters). // Get the bounding box of the volume: bbox() = BoundingBox Volume{v()}; xmin = bbox(0); ymin = bbox(1); zmin = bbox(2); xmax = bbox(3); ymax = bbox(4); zmax = bbox(5); // We want to slice the model into N slices, and either keep the volume slices // or just the surfaces obtained by the cutting: DefineConstant[ N = {5, Min 2, Max 100, Step 1, Name "Parameters/0Number of slices"} dir = {0, Choices{0="X", 1="Y", 2="Z"}, Name "Parameters/1Direction"} surf = {0, Choices{0, 1}, Name "Parameters/2Keep only surfaces?"} ]; dx = (xmax - xmin); dy = (ymax - ymin); dz = (zmax - zmin); L = (dir == 0) ? dz : dx; H = (dir == 1) ? dz : dy; // Create the first cutting plane: s() = {news}; Rectangle(s(0)) = {xmin, ymin, zmin, L, H}; If(dir == 0) Rotate{ {0, 1, 0}, {xmin, ymin, zmin}, -Pi/2 } { Surface{s(0)}; } ElseIf(dir == 1) Rotate{ {1, 0, 0}, {xmin, ymin, zmin}, Pi/2 } { Surface{s(0)}; } EndIf tx = (dir == 0) ? dx / N : 0; ty = (dir == 1) ? dy / N : 0; tz = (dir == 2) ? dz / N : 0; Translate{tx, ty, tz} { Surface{s(0)}; } // Create the other cutting planes: For i In {1:N-2} s() += Translate{i * tx, i * ty, i * tz} { Duplicata{ Surface{s(0)}; } }; EndFor // Fragment (i.e. intersect) the volume with all the cutting planes: BooleanFragments{ Volume{v()}; Delete; }{ Surface{s()}; Delete; } // Now remove all the surfaces (and their bounding entities) that are not on the // boundary of a volume, i.e. the parts of the cutting planes that "stick out" // of the volume: Recursive Delete { Surface{:}; } If(surf) // If we want to only keep the surfaces, retrieve the surfaces in bounding // boxes around the cutting planes... eps = 1e-4; s() = {}; For i In {1:N-1} xx = (dir == 0) ? xmin : xmax; yy = (dir == 1) ? ymin : ymax; zz = (dir == 2) ? zmin : zmax; s() += Surface In BoundingBox {xmin - eps + i * tx, ymin - eps + i * ty, zmin - eps + i * tz, xx + eps + i * tx, yy + eps + i * ty, zz + eps + i * tz}; EndFor // ...and remove all the other entities: dels = Surface{:}; dels -= s(); Delete { Volume{:}; Surface{dels()}; Curve{:}; Point{:}; } EndIf // Finally, let's specify a global mesh size: Mesh.MeshSizeMin = 3; Mesh.MeshSizeMax = 3; // To partition the mesh instead of the geometry, see `t21.geo'.
Next: x1, Previous: t20, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
t21
: Mesh partitioningSee t21.geo. Also available in C++ (t21.cpp), Python (t21.py), Julia (t21.jl) and Fortran (t21.f90).
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Gmsh GEO tutorial 21 // // Mesh partitioning // // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Gmsh can partition meshes using different algorithms, e.g. the graph // partitioner Metis or the `SimplePartition' plugin. For all the partitioning // algorithms, the relationship between mesh elements and mesh partitions is // encoded through the creation of new (discrete) elementary entities, called // "partition entities". // // Partition entities behave exactly like other discrete elementary entities; // the only difference is that they keep track of both a mesh partition index // and their parent elementary entity. // // The major advantage of this approach is that it allows to maintain a full // boundary representation of the partition entities, which Gmsh creates // automatically if `Mesh.PartitionCreateTopology' is set. // Let us start by creating a simple geometry with two adjacent squares sharing // an edge: SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); Rectangle(1) = {0, 0, 0, 1, 1}; Rectangle(2) = {1, 0, 0, 1, 1}; BooleanFragments{ Surface{1}; Delete; }{ Surface{2}; Delete; } MeshSize {:} = 0.05; // We create one physical group for each square, and we mesh the resulting // geometry: Physical Surface("Left", 100) = 1; Physical Surface("Right", 200) = 2; Mesh 2; // We now define several constants to fine-tune how the mesh will be partitioned DefineConstant[ partitioner = {0, Choices{0="Metis", 1="SimplePartition"}, Name "Parameters/0Mesh partitioner"} N = {3, Min 1, Max 256, Step 1, Name "Parameters/1Number of partitions"} topology = {1, Choices{0, 1}, Name "Parameters/2Create partition topology (BRep)?"} ghosts = {0, Choices{0, 1}, Name "Parameters/3Create ghost cells?"} physicals = {0, Choices{0, 1}, Name "Parameters/3Create new physical groups?"} write = {1, Choices {0, 1}, Name "Parameters/3Write file to disk?"} split = {0, Choices {0, 1}, Name "Parameters/4Write one file per partition?"} ]; // Should we create the boundary representation of the partition entities? Mesh.PartitionCreateTopology = topology; // Should we create ghost cells? Mesh.PartitionCreateGhostCells = ghosts; // Should we automatically create new physical groups on the partition entities? Mesh.PartitionCreatePhysicals = physicals; // Should we keep backward compatibility with pre-Gmsh 4, e.g. to save the mesh // in MSH2 format? Mesh.PartitionOldStyleMsh2 = 0; // Should we save one mesh file per partition? Mesh.PartitionSplitMeshFiles = split; If (partitioner == 0) // Use Metis to create N partitions PartitionMesh N; // Several options can be set to control Metis: `Mesh.MetisAlgorithm' (1: // Recursive, 2: K-way), `Mesh.MetisObjective' (1: min. edge-cut, 2: // min. communication volume), `Mesh.PartitionTriWeight' (weight of // triangles), `Mesh.PartitionQuadWeight' (weight of quads), ... Else // Use the `SimplePartition' plugin to create chessboard-like partitions Plugin(SimplePartition).NumSlicesX = N; Plugin(SimplePartition).NumSlicesY = 1; Plugin(SimplePartition).NumSlicesZ = 1; Plugin(SimplePartition).Run; EndIf // Save mesh file (or files, if `Mesh.PartitionSplitMeshFiles' is set): If(write) Save "t21.msh"; EndIf
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x1
: Geometry and mesh dataSee x1.py. Also available in C++ (x1.cpp) and Julia (x1.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 1 # # Geometry and mesh data # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The Python API allows to do much more than what can be done in .geo # files. These additional features are introduced gradually in the extended # tutorials, starting with `x1.py'. # In this first extended tutorial, we start by using the API to access basic # geometrical and mesh data. import gmsh import sys gmsh.initialize() if len(sys.argv) > 1 and sys.argv[1][0] != '-': # If an argument is provided, handle it as a file that Gmsh can read, e.g. a # mesh file in the MSH format (`python x1.py file.msh') gmsh.open(sys.argv[1]) else: # Otherwise, create and mesh a simple geometry gmsh.model.occ.addCone(1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0.5, 0.1) gmsh.model.occ.synchronize() gmsh.model.mesh.generate() # Print the model name and dimension: print('Model ' + gmsh.model.getCurrent() + ' (' + str(gmsh.model.getDimension()) + 'D)') # Geometrical data is made of elementary model `entities', called `points' # (entities of dimension 0), `curves' (entities of dimension 1), `surfaces' # (entities of dimension 2) and `volumes' (entities of dimension 3). As we have # seen in the other Python tutorials, elementary model entities are identified # by their dimension and by a `tag': a strictly positive identification # number. Model entities can be either CAD entities (from the built-in `geo' # kernel or from the OpenCASCADE `occ' kernel) or `discrete' entities (defined # by a mesh). `Physical groups' are collections of model entities and are also # identified by their dimension and by a tag. # Get all the elementary entities in the model, as a vector of (dimension, tag) # pairs: entities = gmsh.model.getEntities() for e in entities: # Dimension and tag of the entity: dim = e[0] tag = e[1] # Mesh data is made of `elements' (points, lines, triangles, ...), defined # by an ordered list of their `nodes'. Elements and nodes are identified by # `tags' as well (strictly positive identification numbers), and are stored # ("classified") in the model entity they discretize. Tags for elements and # nodes are globally unique (and not only per dimension, like entities). # A model entity of dimension 0 (a geometrical point) will contain a mesh # element of type point, as well as a mesh node. A model curve will contain # line elements as well as its interior nodes, while its boundary nodes will # be stored in the bounding model points. A model surface will contain # triangular and/or quadrangular elements and all the nodes not classified # on its boundary or on its embedded entities. A model volume will contain # tetrahedra, hexahedra, etc. and all the nodes not classified on its # boundary or on its embedded entities. # Get the mesh nodes for the entity (dim, tag): nodeTags, nodeCoords, nodeParams = gmsh.model.mesh.getNodes(dim, tag) # Get the mesh elements for the entity (dim, tag): elemTypes, elemTags, elemNodeTags = gmsh.model.mesh.getElements(dim, tag) # Elements can also be obtained by type, by using `getElementTypes()' # followed by `getElementsByType()'. # Let's print a summary of the information available on the entity and its # mesh. # * Type and name of the entity: type = gmsh.model.getType(dim, tag) name = gmsh.model.getEntityName(dim, tag) if len(name): name += ' ' print("Entity " + name + str(e) + " of type " + type) # * Number of mesh nodes and elements: numElem = sum(len(i) for i in elemTags) print(" - Mesh has " + str(len(nodeTags)) + " nodes and " + str(numElem) + " elements") # * Upward and downward adjacencies: up, down = gmsh.model.getAdjacencies(dim, tag) if len(up): print(" - Upward adjacencies: " + str(up)) if len(down): print(" - Downward adjacencies: " + str(down)) # * Does the entity belong to physical groups? physicalTags = gmsh.model.getPhysicalGroupsForEntity(dim, tag) if len(physicalTags): s = '' for p in physicalTags: n = gmsh.model.getPhysicalName(dim, p) if n: n += ' ' s += n + '(' + str(dim) + ', ' + str(p) + ') ' print(" - Physical groups: " + s) # * Is the entity a partition entity? If so, what is its parent entity? partitions = gmsh.model.getPartitions(dim, tag) if len(partitions): print(" - Partition tags: " + str(partitions) + " - parent entity " + str(gmsh.model.getParent(dim, tag))) # * List all types of elements making up the mesh of the entity: for t in elemTypes: name, dim, order, numv, parv, _ = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementProperties( t) print(" - Element type: " + name + ", order " + str(order) + " (" + str(numv) + " nodes in param coord: " + str(parv) + ")") # Launch the GUI to see the model: if '-nopopup' not in sys.argv: gmsh.fltk.run() # We can use this to clear all the model data: gmsh.clear() gmsh.finalize()
Next: x3, Previous: x1, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
x2
: Mesh import, discrete entities, hybrid models, terrain meshingSee x2.py. Also available in C++ (x2.cpp) and Julia (x2.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 2 # # Mesh import, discrete entities, hybrid models, terrain meshing # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import gmsh import sys import math # The API can be used to import a mesh without reading it from a file, by # creating nodes and elements on the fly and storing them in model # entities. These model entities can be existing CAD entities, or can be # discrete entities, entirely defined by the mesh. # # Discrete entities can be reparametrized (see `t13.py') so that they can be # remeshed later on; and they can also be combined with built-in CAD entities to # produce hybrid models. # # We combine all these features in this tutorial to perform terrain meshing, # where the terrain is described by a discrete surface (that we then # reparametrize) combined with a CAD representation of the underground. gmsh.initialize() gmsh.model.add("x2") # We will create the terrain surface mesh from N x N input data points: N = 100 # Helper function to return a node tag given two indices i and j: def tag(i, j): return (N + 1) * i + j + 1 # The x, y, z coordinates of all the nodes: coords = [] # The tags of the corresponding nodes: nodes = [] # The connectivities of the triangle elements (3 node tags per triangle) on the # terrain surface: tris = [] # The connectivities of the line elements on the 4 boundaries (2 node tags # for each line element): lin = [[], [], [], []] # The connectivities of the point elements on the 4 corners (1 node tag for each # point element): pnt = [tag(0, 0), tag(N, 0), tag(N, N), tag(0, N)] for i in range(N + 1): for j in range(N + 1): nodes.append(tag(i, j)) coords.extend([ float(i) / N, float(j) / N, 0.05 * math.sin(10 * float(i + j) / N) ]) if i > 0 and j > 0: tris.extend([tag(i - 1, j - 1), tag(i, j - 1), tag(i - 1, j)]) tris.extend([tag(i, j - 1), tag(i, j), tag(i - 1, j)]) if (i == 0 or i == N) and j > 0: lin[3 if i == 0 else 1].extend([tag(i, j - 1), tag(i, j)]) if (j == 0 or j == N) and i > 0: lin[0 if j == 0 else 2].extend([tag(i - 1, j), tag(i, j)]) # Create 4 discrete points for the 4 corners of the terrain surface: for i in range(4): gmsh.model.addDiscreteEntity(0, i + 1) gmsh.model.setCoordinates(1, 0, 0, coords[3 * tag(0, 0) - 1]) gmsh.model.setCoordinates(2, 1, 0, coords[3 * tag(N, 0) - 1]) gmsh.model.setCoordinates(3, 1, 1, coords[3 * tag(N, N) - 1]) gmsh.model.setCoordinates(4, 0, 1, coords[3 * tag(0, N) - 1]) # Create 4 discrete bounding curves, with their boundary points: for i in range(4): gmsh.model.addDiscreteEntity(1, i + 1, [i + 1, i + 2 if i < 3 else 1]) # Create one discrete surface, with its bounding curves: gmsh.model.addDiscreteEntity(2, 1, [1, 2, -3, -4]) # Add all the nodes on the surface (for simplicity... see below): gmsh.model.mesh.addNodes(2, 1, nodes, coords) # Add point elements on the 4 points, line elements on the 4 curves, and # triangle elements on the surface: for i in range(4): # Type 15 for point elements: gmsh.model.mesh.addElementsByType(i + 1, 15, [], [pnt[i]]) # Type 1 for 2-node line elements: gmsh.model.mesh.addElementsByType(i + 1, 1, [], lin[i]) # Type 2 for 3-node triangle elements: gmsh.model.mesh.addElementsByType(1, 2, [], tris) # Reclassify the nodes on the curves and the points (since we put them all on # the surface before with `addNodes' for simplicity) gmsh.model.mesh.reclassifyNodes() # Create a geometry for the discrete curves and surfaces, so that we can remesh # them later on: gmsh.model.mesh.createGeometry() # Note that for more complicated meshes, e.g. for on input unstructured STL # mesh, we could use `classifySurfaces()' to automatically create the discrete # entities and the topology; but we would then have to extract the boundaries # afterwards. # Create other build-in CAD entities to form one volume below the terrain # surface. Beware that only built-in CAD entities can be hybrid, i.e. have # discrete entities on their boundary: OpenCASCADE does not support this # feature. p1 = gmsh.model.geo.addPoint(0, 0, -0.5) p2 = gmsh.model.geo.addPoint(1, 0, -0.5) p3 = gmsh.model.geo.addPoint(1, 1, -0.5) p4 = gmsh.model.geo.addPoint(0, 1, -0.5) c1 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p1, p2) c2 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p2, p3) c3 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p3, p4) c4 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p4, p1) c10 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p1, 1) c11 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p2, 2) c12 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p3, 3) c13 = gmsh.model.geo.addLine(p4, 4) ll1 = gmsh.model.geo.addCurveLoop([c1, c2, c3, c4]) s1 = gmsh.model.geo.addPlaneSurface([ll1]) ll3 = gmsh.model.geo.addCurveLoop([c1, c11, -1, -c10]) s3 = gmsh.model.geo.addPlaneSurface([ll3]) ll4 = gmsh.model.geo.addCurveLoop([c2, c12, -2, -c11]) s4 = gmsh.model.geo.addPlaneSurface([ll4]) ll5 = gmsh.model.geo.addCurveLoop([c3, c13, 3, -c12]) s5 = gmsh.model.geo.addPlaneSurface([ll5]) ll6 = gmsh.model.geo.addCurveLoop([c4, c10, 4, -c13]) s6 = gmsh.model.geo.addPlaneSurface([ll6]) sl1 = gmsh.model.geo.addSurfaceLoop([s1, s3, s4, s5, s6, 1]) v1 = gmsh.model.geo.addVolume([sl1]) gmsh.model.geo.synchronize() # Set this to True to build a fully hex mesh: #transfinite = True transfinite = False transfiniteAuto = False if transfinite: NN = 30 for c in gmsh.model.getEntities(1): gmsh.model.mesh.setTransfiniteCurve(c[1], NN) for s in gmsh.model.getEntities(2): gmsh.model.mesh.setTransfiniteSurface(s[1]) gmsh.model.mesh.setRecombine(s[0], s[1]) gmsh.model.mesh.setSmoothing(s[0], s[1], 100) gmsh.model.mesh.setTransfiniteVolume(v1) elif transfiniteAuto: gmsh.option.setNumber('Mesh.MeshSizeMin', 0.5) gmsh.option.setNumber('Mesh.MeshSizeMax', 0.5) # setTransfiniteAutomatic() uses the sizing constraints to set the number # of points gmsh.model.mesh.setTransfiniteAutomatic() else: gmsh.option.setNumber('Mesh.MeshSizeMin', 0.05) gmsh.option.setNumber('Mesh.MeshSizeMax', 0.05) gmsh.model.mesh.generate(3) gmsh.write('x2.msh') # Launch the GUI to see the results: if '-nopopup' not in sys.argv: gmsh.fltk.run() gmsh.finalize()
Next: x4, Previous: x2, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
x3
: Post-processing data import: list-basedSee x3.py. Also available in C++ (x3.cpp) and Julia (x3.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 3 # # Post-processing data import: list-based # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import gmsh import sys gmsh.initialize(sys.argv) # Gmsh supports two types of post-processing data: "list-based" and # "model-based". Both types of data are handled through the `view' interface. # List-based views are completely independent from any model and any mesh: they # are self-contained and simply contain lists of coordinates and values, element # by element, for 3 types of fields (scalar "S", vector "V" and tensor "T") and # several types of element shapes (point "P", line "L", triangle "T", quadrangle # "Q", tetrahedron "S", hexahedron "H", prism "I" and pyramid "Y"). (See `x4.py' # for a tutorial on model-based views.) # To create a list-based view one should first create a view: t1 = gmsh.view.add("A list-based view") # List-based data is then added by specifying the type as a 2 character string # that combines a field type and an element shape (e.g. "ST" for a scalar field # on triangles), the number of elements to be added, and the concatenated list # of coordinates (e.g. 3 "x" coordinates, 3 "y" coordinates, 3 "z" coordinates # for first order triangles) and values for each element (e.g. 3 values for # first order scalar triangles, repeated for each step if there are several time # steps). # Let's create two triangles... triangle1 = [0., 1., 1., # x coordinates of the 3 triangle nodes 0., 0., 1., # y coordinates of the 3 triangle nodes 0., 0., 0.] # z coordinates of the 3 triangle nodes triangle2 = [0., 1., 0., 0., 1., 1., 0., 0., 0.] # ... and append values for 10 time steps for step in range(0, 10): triangle1.extend([10., 11. - step, 12.]) # 3 node values for each step triangle2.extend([11., 12., 13. + step]) # List-based data is just added by concatenating the data for all the triangles: gmsh.view.addListData(t1, "ST", 2, triangle1 + triangle2) # Internally, post-processing views parsed by the .geo file parser create such # list-based data (see e.g. `t7.py', `t8.py' and `t9.py'), independently of any # mesh. # Vector or tensor fields can be imported in the same way, the only difference # beeing the type (starting with "V" for vector fields and "T" for tensor # fields) and the number of components. For example a vector field on a line # element can be added as follows: line = [ 0., 1., # x coordinate of the 2 line nodes 1.2, 1.2, # y coordinate of the 2 line nodes 0., 0. # z coordinate of the 2 line nodes ] for step in range(0, 10): # 3 vector components for each node (2 nodes here), for each step line.extend([10. + step, 0., 0., 10. + step, 0., 0.]) gmsh.view.addListData(t1, "VL", 1, line) # List-based data can also hold 2D (in window coordinates) and 3D (in model # coordinates) strings (see `t4.py'). Here we add a 2D string located on the # bottom-left of the window (with a 20 pixels offset), as well as a 3D string # located at model coordinates (0.5, 0.5. 0): gmsh.view.addListDataString(t1, [20., -20.], ["Created with Gmsh"]) gmsh.view.addListDataString(t1, [0.5, 1.5, 0.], ["A multi-step list-based view"], ["Align", "Center", "Font", "Helvetica"]) # The various attributes of the view can be queried and changed using the option # interface: gmsh.view.option.setNumber(t1, "TimeStep", 5) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(t1, "IntervalsType", 3) ns = gmsh.view.option.getNumber(t1, "NbTimeStep") print("View " + str(t1) + " has " + str(ns) + " time steps") # Views can be queried and modified in various ways using plugins (see `t9.py'), # or probed directly using `gmsh.view.probe()' - here at point (0.9, 0.1, 0): print("Value at (0.9, 0.1, 0)", gmsh.view.probe(t1, 0.9, 0.1, 0)) # Views can be saved to disk using `gmsh.view.write()': gmsh.view.write(t1, "x3.pos") # High-order datasets can be provided by setting the interpolation matrices # explicitly. Let's create a second view with second order interpolation on # a 4-node quadrangle. # Add a new view: t2 = gmsh.view.add("Second order quad") # Set the node coordinates: quad = [0., 1., 1., 0., # x coordinates of the 4 quadrangle nodes -1.2, -1.2, -0.2, -0.2, # y coordinates of the 4 quadrangle nodes 0., 0., 0., 0.] # z coordinates of the 4 quadrangle nodes # Add nine values that will be interpolated by second order basis functions quad.extend([1., 1., 1., 1., 3., 3., 3., 3., -3.]) # Set the two interpolation matrices c[i][j] and e[i][j] defining the d = 9 # basis functions: f[i](u, v, w) = sum_(j = 0, ..., d - 1) c[i][j] u^e[j][0] # v^e[j][1] w^e[j][2], i = 0, ..., d-1, with u, v, w the coordinates in the # reference element: gmsh.view.setInterpolationMatrices(t2, "Quadrangle", 9, [0, 0, 0.25, 0, 0, -0.25, -0.25, 0, 0.25, 0, 0, 0.25, 0, 0, -0.25, 0.25, 0, -0.25, 0, 0, 0.25, 0, 0, 0.25, 0.25, 0, 0.25, 0, 0, 0.25, 0, 0, 0.25, -0.25, 0, -0.25, 0, 0, -0.5, 0.5, 0, 0.5, 0, -0.5, 0, 0, 0.5, -0.5, 0, 0.5, 0, -0.5, 0, 0, 0, 0, -0.5, 0.5, 0, -0.5, 0, 0.5, 0, 0, 0.5, -0.5, 0, -0.5, 0, 0.5, 0, 0, 1, -1, 1, -1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0, 2, 0, 0, 2, 2, 0, 0, 2, 0, 1, 0, 0, 2, 1, 0, 1, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0]) # Note that two additional interpolation matrices could also be provided to # interpolate the geometry, i.e. to interpolate curved elements. # Add the data to the view: gmsh.view.addListData(t2, "SQ", 1, quad) # In order to visualize the high-order field, one must activate adaptive # visualization, set a visualization error threshold and a maximum subdivision # level (Gmsh does automatic mesh refinement to visualize the high-order field # with the requested accuracy): gmsh.view.option.setNumber(t2, "AdaptVisualizationGrid", 1) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(t2, "TargetError", 1e-2) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(t2, "MaxRecursionLevel", 5) # Note that the adapted visualization data can be retrived by setting the # `returnAdaptive' argument to the `gmsh.view.getListData()' function. # Launch the GUI to see the results: if '-nopopup' not in sys.argv: gmsh.fltk.run() gmsh.finalize()
Next: x5, Previous: x3, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
x4
: Post-processing data import: model-basedSee x4.py. Also available in C++ (x4.cpp) and Julia (x4.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 4 # # Post-processing data import: model-based # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import gmsh import sys gmsh.initialize(sys.argv) # Contrary to list-based view (see `x3.py'), model-based views are based on one # or more meshes. Compared to list-based views, they are thus linked to one # model (per step). Post-processing data stored in MSH files create such # model-based views. # Let's create a first model-based view using a simple mesh constructed by # hand. We create a model with a discrete surface gmsh.model.add("simple model") surf = gmsh.model.addDiscreteEntity(2) # We add 4 nodes and 2 3-node triangles (element type "2") gmsh.model.mesh.addNodes(2, surf, [1, 2, 3, 4], [0., 0., 0., 1., 0., 0., 1., 1., 0., 0., 1., 0.]) gmsh.model.mesh.addElementsByType(surf, 2, [1, 2], [1, 2, 3, 1, 3, 4]) # We can now create a new model-based view, to which we add 10 steps of # node-based data: t1 = gmsh.view.add("Continuous") for step in range(0, 10): gmsh.view.addHomogeneousModelData( t1, step, "simple model", "NodeData", [1, 2, 3, 4], # tags of nodes [10., 10., 12. + step, 13. + step]) # data, per node # Besided node-based data, which result in continuous fields, one can also add # general discontinous fields defined at the nodes of each element, using # "ElementNodeData": t2 = gmsh.view.add("Discontinuous") for step in range(0, 10): gmsh.view.addHomogeneousModelData( t2, step, "simple model", "ElementNodeData", [1, 2], # tags of elements [10., 10., 12. + step, 14., 15., 13. + step]) # data per element nodes # Constant per element datasets can also be created using "ElementData". Note # that a more general function `addModelData' to add data for hybrid meshes # (when data is not homogeneous, i.e. when the number of nodes changes between # elements) is also available. # Each step of a model-based view can be defined on a different model, i.e. on a # different mesh. Let's define a second model and mesh it gmsh.model.add("another model") gmsh.model.occ.addBox(0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1) gmsh.model.occ.synchronize() gmsh.model.mesh.generate(3) # We can add other steps to view "t" based on this new mesh: nodes, coord, _ = gmsh.model.mesh.getNodes() for step in range(11, 20): gmsh.view.addHomogeneousModelData( t1, step, "another model", "NodeData", nodes, [step * coord[i] for i in range(0, len(coord), 3)]) # This feature allows to create seamless animations for time-dependent datasets # on deforming or remeshed models. # High-order node-based datasets are supported without needing to supply the # interpolation matrices (iso-parametric Lagrange elements). Arbitrary # high-order datasets can be specified as "ElementNodeData", with the # interpolation matrices specified in the same as as for list-based views (see # `x3.py'). # Model-based views can be saved to disk using `gmsh.view.write()'; note that # saving a view based on multiple meshes (like the view `t1') will automatically # create several files. If the `PostProcessing.SaveMesh' option is not set, # `gmsh.view.write()' will only save the view data, without the mesh (which # could be saved independently with `gmsh.write()'). gmsh.view.write(t1, "x4_t1.msh") gmsh.view.write(t2, "x4_t2.msh") # Launch the GUI to see the results: if '-nopopup' not in sys.argv: gmsh.fltk.run() gmsh.finalize()
Next: x6, Previous: x4, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
x5
: Additional geometrical data: parametrizations, normals, curvaturesSee x5.py. Also available in C++ (x5.cpp) and Julia (x5.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 5 # # Additional geometrical data: parametrizations, normals, curvatures # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import gmsh import sys import math gmsh.initialize(sys.argv) # The API provides access to geometrical data in a CAD kernel agnostic manner. # Let's create a simple CAD model by fusing a sphere and a cube, then mesh the # surfaces: gmsh.model.add("x5") s = gmsh.model.occ.addSphere(0, 0, 0, 1) b = gmsh.model.occ.addBox(0.5, 0, 0, 1.3, 2, 3) gmsh.model.occ.fuse([(3, s)], [(3, b)]) gmsh.model.occ.synchronize() gmsh.model.mesh.generate(2) # We can for example retrieve the exact normals and the curvature at all the # mesh nodes (i.e. not normals and curvatures computed from the mesh, but # directly evaluated on the geometry), by querying the CAD kernels at the # corresponding parametric coordinates. normals = [] curvatures = [] # For each surface in the model: for e in gmsh.model.getEntities(2): # Retrieve the surface tag s = e[1] # Get the mesh nodes on the surface, including those on the boundary # (contrary to internal nodes, which store their parametric coordinates, # boundary nodes will be reparametrized on the surface in order to compute # their parametric coordinates, the result being different when # reparametrized on another adjacent surface) tags, coord, param = gmsh.model.mesh.getNodes(2, s, True) # Get the surface normals on all the points on the surface corresponding to # the parametric coordinates of the nodes norm = gmsh.model.getNormal(s, param) # In the same way, get the curvature curv = gmsh.model.getCurvature(2, s, param) # Store the normals and the curvatures so that we can display them as # list-based post-processing views for i in range(0, len(coord), 3): normals.append(coord[i]) normals.append(coord[i + 1]) normals.append(coord[i + 2]) normals.append(norm[i]) normals.append(norm[i + 1]) normals.append(norm[i + 2]) curvatures.append(coord[i]) curvatures.append(coord[i + 1]) curvatures.append(coord[i + 2]) curvatures.append(curv[i // 3]) # Create a list-based vector view on points to display the normals, and a scalar # view on points to display the curvatures vn = gmsh.view.add("normals") gmsh.view.addListData(vn, "VP", len(normals) // 6, normals) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(vn, 'ShowScale', 0) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(vn, 'ArrowSizeMax', 30) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(vn, 'ColormapNumber', 19) vc = gmsh.view.add("curvatures") gmsh.view.addListData(vc, "SP", len(curvatures) // 4, curvatures) gmsh.view.option.setNumber(vc, 'ShowScale', 0) # We can also retrieve the parametrization bounds of model entities, e.g. of # curve 5, and evaluate the parametrization for several parameter values: bounds = gmsh.model.getParametrizationBounds(1, 5) N = 20 t = [bounds[0][0] + i * (bounds[1][0] - bounds[0][0]) / N for i in range(N)] xyz1 = gmsh.model.getValue(1, 5, t) # We can also reparametrize curve 5 on surface 1, and evaluate the points in the # parametric plane of the surface: uv = gmsh.model.reparametrizeOnSurface(1, 5, t, 1) xyz2 = gmsh.model.getValue(2, 1, uv) # Hopefully we get the same x, y, z coordinates! if max([abs(a - b) for (a, b) in zip(xyz1, xyz2)]) < 1e-12: gmsh.logger.write('Evaluation on curve and surface match!') else: gmsh.logger.write('Evaluation on curve and surface do not match!', 'error') # Launch the GUI to see the results: if '-nopopup' not in sys.argv: gmsh.fltk.run() gmsh.finalize()
Next: x7, Previous: x5, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
x6
: Additional mesh data: integration points, Jacobians and basis functionsSee x6.py. Also available in C++ (x6.cpp) and Julia (x6.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 6 # # Additional mesh data: integration points, Jacobians and basis functions # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import gmsh import sys gmsh.initialize(sys.argv) gmsh.model.add("x6") # The API provides access to all the elementary building blocks required to # implement finite-element-type numerical methods. Let's create a simple 2D # model and mesh it: gmsh.model.occ.addRectangle(0, 0, 0, 1, 0.1) gmsh.model.occ.synchronize() gmsh.model.mesh.setTransfiniteAutomatic() gmsh.model.mesh.generate(2) # Set the element order and the desired interpolation order: elementOrder = 1 interpolationOrder = 2 gmsh.model.mesh.setOrder(elementOrder) def pp(label, v, mult): print(" * " + str(len(v) / mult) + " " + label + ": " + str(v)) # Iterate over all the element types present in the mesh: elementTypes = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementTypes() for t in elementTypes: # Retrieve properties for the given element type elementName, dim, order, numNodes, localNodeCoord, numPrimNodes =\ gmsh.model.mesh.getElementProperties(t) print("\n** " + elementName + " **\n") # Retrieve integration points for that element type, enabling exact # integration of polynomials of order "interpolationOrder". The "Gauss" # integration family returns the "economical" Gauss points if available, and # defaults to the "CompositeGauss" (tensor product) rule if not. localCoords, weights =\ gmsh.model.mesh.getIntegrationPoints(t, "Gauss" + str(interpolationOrder)) pp("integration points to integrate order " + str(interpolationOrder) + " polynomials", localCoords, 3) # Return the basis functions evaluated at the integration points. Selecting # "Lagrange" and "GradLagrange" returns the isoparamtric basis functions and # their gradient (in the reference space of the given element type). A # specific interpolation order can be requested using "LagrangeN" and # "GradLagrangeN" with N = 1, 2, ... Other supported function spaces include # "H1LegendreN", "GradH1LegendreN", "HcurlLegendreN", "CurlHcurlLegendreN". numComponents, basisFunctions, numOrientations =\ gmsh.model.mesh.getBasisFunctions(t, localCoords, "Lagrange") pp("basis functions at integration points", basisFunctions, 1) numComponents, basisFunctions, numOrientations =\ gmsh.model.mesh.getBasisFunctions(t, localCoords, "GradLagrange") pp("basis function gradients at integration points", basisFunctions, 3) # Compute the Jacobians (and their determinants) at the integration points # for all the elements of the given type in the mesh. Beware that the # Jacobians are returned "by column": see the API documentation for details. jacobians, determinants, coords =\ gmsh.model.mesh.getJacobians(t, localCoords) pp("Jacobian determinants at integration points", determinants, 1) gmsh.finalize()
Previous: x6, Up: Gmsh tutorial [Contents][Index]
x7
: Additional mesh data: internal edges and facesSee x7.py. Also available in C++ (x7.cpp) and Julia (x7.jl).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Gmsh Python extended tutorial 7 # # Additional mesh data: internal edges and faces # # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import sys import gmsh gmsh.initialize(sys.argv) gmsh.model.add("x7") # Meshes are fully described in Gmsh by nodes and elements, both associated to # model entities. The API can be used to generate and handle other mesh # entities, i.e. mesh edges and faces, which are not stored by default. # Let's create a simple model and mesh it: gmsh.model.occ.addBox(0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1) gmsh.model.occ.synchronize() gmsh.option.setNumber("Mesh.MeshSizeMin", 2.) gmsh.model.mesh.generate(3) # Like elements, mesh edges and faces are described by (an ordered list of) # their nodes. Let us retrieve the edges and the (triangular) faces of all the # first order tetrahedra in the mesh: elementType = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementType("tetrahedron", 1) edgeNodes = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementEdgeNodes(elementType) faceNodes = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementFaceNodes(elementType, 3) # Edges and faces are returned for each element as a list of nodes corresponding # to the canonical orientation of the edges and faces for a given element type. # Gmsh can also identify unique edges and faces (a single edge or face whatever # the ordering of their nodes) and assign them a unique tag. This identification # can be done internally by Gmsh (e.g. when generating keys for basis # functions), or requested explicitly as follows: gmsh.model.mesh.createEdges() gmsh.model.mesh.createFaces() # Edge and face tags can then be retrieved by providing their nodes: edgeTags, edgeOrientations = gmsh.model.mesh.getEdges(edgeNodes) faceTags, faceOrientations = gmsh.model.mesh.getFaces(3, faceNodes) # Since element edge and face nodes are returned in the same order as the # elements, one can easily keep track of which element(s) each edge or face is # connected to: elementTags, elementNodeTags = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementsByType(elementType) edges2Elements = {} faces2Elements = {} for i in range(len(edgeTags)): # 6 edges per tetrahedron if not edgeTags[i] in edges2Elements: edges2Elements[edgeTags[i]] = [elementTags[i // 6]] else: edges2Elements[edgeTags[i]].append(elementTags[i // 6]) for i in range(len(faceTags)): # 4 faces per tetrahedron if not faceTags[i] in faces2Elements: faces2Elements[faceTags[i]] = [elementTags[i // 4]] else: faces2Elements[faceTags[i]].append(elementTags[i // 4]) # New unique lower dimensional elements can also be easily created given the # edge or face nodes. This is especially useful for numerical methods that # require integrating or interpolating on internal edges or faces (like # e.g. Discontinuous Galerkin techniques), since creating elements for the # internal entities will make this additional mesh data readily available (see # `x6.py'). For example, we can create a new discrete surface... s = gmsh.model.addDiscreteEntity(2) # ... and fill it with unique triangles corresponding to the faces of the # tetrahedra: maxElementTag = gmsh.model.mesh.getMaxElementTag() uniqueFaceTags = set() tagsForTriangles = [] faceNodesForTriangles = [] for i in range(len(faceTags)): if faceTags[i] not in uniqueFaceTags: uniqueFaceTags.add(faceTags[i]) tagsForTriangles.append(faceTags[i] + maxElementTag) faceNodesForTriangles.append(faceNodes[3 * i]) faceNodesForTriangles.append(faceNodes[3 * i + 1]) faceNodesForTriangles.append(faceNodes[3 * i + 2]) elementType2D = gmsh.model.mesh.getElementType("triangle", 1) gmsh.model.mesh.addElementsByType(s, elementType2D, tagsForTriangles, faceNodesForTriangles) # Since the tags for the triangles have been created based on the face tags, # the information about neighboring elements can also be readily created, # useful e.g. in Finite Volume or Discontinuous Galerkin techniques: for t in tagsForTriangles: print("triangle " + str(int(t)) + " is connected to tetrahedra " + str(faces2Elements[t - maxElementTag])) # If all you need is the list of all edges or faces in terms of their nodes, you # can also directly call: edgeTags, edgeNodes = gmsh.model.mesh.getAllEdges() faceTags, faceNodes = gmsh.model.mesh.getAllFaces(3) # Launch the GUI to see the results: if '-nopopup' not in sys.argv: gmsh.fltk.run() gmsh.finalize()
Next: Gmsh command-line interface, Previous: Gmsh tutorial, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
Once you have the Gmsh application installed (see Installing and running Gmsh on your computer), to launch the graphical interface just double-click on the Gmsh icon, or type
> gmsh
at the shell prompt in a terminal. This will open the main window of the
Gmsh GUI, with a menu bar on top (except on macOS, where by default the
menu bar is on the top of the screen – this can be changed with the
General.SystemMenuBar
option, see General options), a tree
menu on the left (which by default contains a ‘Modules’ entry with three
children: ‘Geometry’, ‘Mesh’ and ‘Solver’), a graphic area on the right,
and a status bar with some shortcut buttons at the bottom. (You can
detach the tree menu using ‘Window->Attach/Detach Menu’.)
To create a new geometrical model, use the ‘File->New’ menu to create a new model file, and choose for example mymodel.geo as file name. Then in the tree menu, successively open the ‘Geometry’, ‘Elementary entities’ and ‘Add’ submenus, and click for example on ‘Rectangle’. A context window with parameters will pop up: you can enter some parameters in this window (e.g. the width and height of the rectangle) and move the mouse to place it on the canvas. If you don’t want to place the rectangle with the mouse, select ‘X’, ‘Y’ and ‘Z freeze’ in the window and enter the coordinates manually in the context window. Once you are done, either press e (see the status message on the top of the graphic window) or click on the ‘Add’ button in the context window.
There is no need to save your geometrical model: when the rectangle was added, scripting commands were automatically appended to your model file mymodel.geo:
//+ SetFactory("OpenCASCADE"); Rectangle(1) = {0, 0, 0, 1, 0.5, 0};
You can edit this script with any text editor; clicking on ‘Edit script’
in the tree menu will launch the default text editor specified by the
General.Editor
option (see General options). If you edit the
script, you should click on ‘Reload script’ in the tree menu to reload
the modifications in the GUI. The //+
line in the script is a
comment that is used as a placemark between commands added by the GUI;
see Gmsh scripting language for the scripting language reference.
Combining GUI actions and script file editing is a classical way of working with the Gmsh app. For example, it is often faster to define variables and points directly in the script file, and then use the GUI to define the curves, the surfaces and the volumes interactively.
To load an existing model instead of creating a model from scratch, use the ‘File->Open’ menu. For example, to open the first tutorial (see Gmsh tutorial), choose t1.geo. On the terminal, you can also specify the file name directly on the command line, i.e.:
> gmsh t1.geo
To generate a mesh, open ‘Mesh’ in the tree menu and choose the desired dimension: ‘1D’ will mesh all the curves; ‘2D’ will mesh all the surfaces—as well as all the curves if ‘1D’ was not called before; ‘3D’ will mesh all the volumes—and all the surfaces if ‘2D’ was not called before. To save the resulting mesh in the current mesh format click on ‘Save’ in the tree menu, or select the appropriate format and file name with the ‘File->Export’ menu. The default mesh file name is based on the name of the current active model, with an appended extension depending on the mesh format. Note that most interactive commands have keyboard shortcuts: see Keyboard shortcuts, or select ‘Help->Keyboard and Mouse Usage’ in the menu. For example, to quickly generate the 2D mesh and save a mesh, you can first press 2, then Ctrl+Shift+s.
A double-click in the graphic window will pop up a quick shortcut menu, which can be used e.g. to quickly toggle the visibility of mesh entities (like surface faces), reset the viewport, select the rotation center, display axes, or access the full module options (from the ‘Tools->Options’ menu). The shortcut buttons on the bottom left of the status bar can be used to quickly adjust the viewport: ‘X’, ‘Y’, ‘Z’ set viewports with the corresponding axis perpendicular to graphic plane; the rotation button rotates the view by 90 degrees; and ‘1:1’ resets the scale.
Several files can be loaded simultaneously. When specified on the command line, the first one defines the active model (in the same way as using the ‘File->Open’ menu) and the others are ‘merged’ into this model (in the same way as using the the ‘File->Merge’ menu). For example, to merge the post-processing views contained in the files view1.pos and view5.msh together with the geometry of the first tutorial t1, you can type the following command:
> gmsh t1.geo view1.pos view5.msh
When one or more more post-processing views are loaded, a ‘Post-Processing’ entry in the tree menu appears. With the previous command, three views will appear in the tree menu under ‘Post-processing’, respectively labeled ‘A scalar map’, ‘Nodal scalar map’ and ‘Element 1 vector’. In this example the views contain several time steps: you can loop through them with the shortcuts icons on the left of the status bar. A mouse click on the view name will toggle the visibility of the selected view, while a click on the arrow button on the right will provide access to the view’s options.
Note that all the options specified interactively can also be directly specified in the script files. You can save the current options of the current active model with the ‘File->Save Model Options’. This will create a new option file with the same filename as the active model, but with an extra .opt extension added. The next time you open this model, the associated options will be automatically loaded, too. To save the current options as your default preferences for all future Gmsh sessions, use the ‘File->Save Options As Default’ menu instead. You can also save the current options in an arbitrary file by choosing the ‘Gmsh options’ format in ‘File->Export’. For more information about available options (and how to reset them to their default values), see Gmsh options. A full list of options with their current values is also available using the ‘Help->Current Options’ menu.
Finally, note that the GUI can also be run (and modified) using the API: see Namespace gmsh/fltk for details.
The two next sections describe the mouse actions in the GUI, as well as all the predefined keyboard shortcuts. Screencasts explaining how to use the Gmsh GUI are available online at the following address: https://gmsh.info/screencasts/.
• Mouse actions | ||
• Keyboard shortcuts |
Next: Keyboard shortcuts, Previous: Gmsh graphical user interface, Up: Gmsh graphical user interface [Contents][Index]
Highlight the entity under the mouse pointer and display its properties / Resize a lasso zoom or a lasso (un)selection
Rotate / Select an entity / Accept a lasso zoom or a lasso selection
Start a lasso zoom or a lasso (un)selection
Zoom / Unselect an entity / Accept a lasso zoom or a lasso unselection
Orthogonalize display
Pan / Cancel a lasso zoom or a lasso (un)selection / Pop-up menu on post-processing view button
Reset to default viewpoint
For a 2 button mouse, Middle button = Shift+Left button.
For a 1 button mouse, Middle button = Shift+Left button, Right button = Alt+Left button.
Previous: Mouse actions, Up: Gmsh graphical user interface [Contents][Index]
(On macOS, Ctrl is replaced by Cmd in the shortcuts below.)
Go to previous time step
Go to next time step
Make previous view visible
Make next view visible
Reload geometry
Reload full project
Mesh lines
Mesh surfaces
Mesh volumes
Cancel lasso zoom/selection, toggle mouse selection ON/OFF
End/accept selection in geometry creation mode
Go to geometry module
Go to mesh module
Go to post-processing module
Abort selection in geometry creation mode
Go to solver module
Toggle x coordinate freeze in geometry creation mode
Toggle y coordinate freeze in geometry creation mode
Toggle z coordinate freeze in geometry creation mode
Bring all windows to front
Show geometry options
Show mesh options
Show general options
Show post-processing options
Show solver options
Show post-processing view plugins
Show post-processing view options
Move only along x coordinate in geometry creation mode
Move only along y coordinate in geometry creation mode
Move only along z coordinate in geometry creation mode
Enable full mouse selection
Attach/detach menu
Export project
Enter full screen
Show statistics window
Save model options
Show message console
Minimize window
Create new project file
Open project file
Quit
Rename project file
Save mesh in default format
Show clipping plane window
Show current options and workspace window
Save options as default
Show manipulator window
Show option window
Merge file(s)
Open next-to-last opened file
Show plugin window
Show visibility window
Loop through axes modes
Hide/show bounding boxes
Loop through predefined color schemes
Hide/Show element outlines for visible post-pro views
Change redraw mode (fast/full)
Hide/show all post-processing views
Hide/show all post-processing view scales
Hide/show geometry lines
Toggle visibility of all mesh entities
Hide/show all post-processing view annotations
Change projection mode (orthographic/perspective)
Hide/show geometry points
Loop through range modes for visible post-pro views
Hide/show geometry surfaces
Loop through interval modes for visible post-pro views
Hide/show geometry volumes
Enable/disable all lighting
Set X view
Set Y view
Set Z view
Set 1:1 view
Hide/show small axes
Hide/show mesh volume faces
Loop through predefined colormaps
Hide/show mesh surface faces
Hide/show mesh lines
Hide/show mesh nodes
Hide/show mesh surface edges
Same as Alt+t, but with numeric mode included
Hide/show mesh volume edges
Set -X view
Set -Y view
Set -Z view
Reset bounding box around visible entities
Sync scale between viewports
Next: Gmsh scripting language, Previous: Gmsh graphical user interface, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
Gmsh defines a number of commands-line switches that can be used to control Gmsh in “batch” mode from the command line, and pass options without resorting to a script (see Gmsh scripting language) or the API (see Gmsh application programming interface).
For example, meshing the first tutorial in batch mode can be done in a
terminal by passing the -2
command-line switch:
> gmsh t1.geo -2
The same effect could be achieved by adding the Mesh 2;
command
at the end of t1.geo and running
> gmsh t1.geo -parse_and_exit
or further adding the Exit;
command at the end of the script and
simply opening this new file:
> gmsh t1.geo
Note that all numeric and string options (see Gmsh options) can be
set from the command line with the -setnumber
and
-setstring
switches
> gmsh t1.geo -setnumber Mesh.Nodes 1 -setnumber Geometry.SurfaceLabels 1
The list of all command-line switches is given hereafter.
(Related option names, if any, are given between parentheses)
Geometry:
-0
Output model, then exit
-tol value
Set geometrical tolerance (Geometry.Tolerance)
-match
Match geometries and meshes
Mesh:
-1, -2, -3
Perform 1D, 2D or 3D mesh generation, then exit
-format string
Select output mesh format: auto, msh1, msh2, msh22, msh3, msh4, msh40, msh41, msh, unv, vtk, wrl, mail, stl, p3d, mesh, bdf, cgns, med, diff, ir3, inp, ply2, celum, su2, x3d, dat, neu, m, key, off, rad (Mesh.Format)
-bin
Create binary files when possible (Mesh.Binary)
-refine
Perform uniform mesh refinement, then exit
-barycentric_refine
Perform barycentric mesh refinement, then exit
-reclassify angle
Reclassify surface mesh, then exit
-reparam angle
Reparametrize surface mesh, then exit
-hybrid
generate a hybrid hex-tet mesh with trihedron for transitions
-part int
Partition after batch mesh generation (Mesh.NbPartitions)
-part_weight [tri,quad,tet,hex,pri,pyr,trih] int
Weight of a triangle/quad/etc. during partitioning (Mesh.Partition[Tri,Quad,...]Weight)
-part_split
Save mesh partitions in separate files (Mesh.PartitionSplitMeshFiles)
-part_[no_]topo
Create the partition topology (Mesh.PartitionCreateTopology)
-part_[no_]ghosts
Create ghost cells (Mesh.PartitionCreateGhostCells)
-part_[no_]physicals
Create physical groups for partitions (Mesh.PartitionCreatePhysicals)
-part_topo_pro
Save the partition topology .pro file (Mesh.PartitionTopologyFile)
-preserve_numbering_msh2
Preserve element numbering in MSH2 format (Mesh.PreserveNumberingMsh2)
-save_all
Save all elements (Mesh.SaveAll)
-save_parametric
Save nodes with their parametric coordinates (Mesh.SaveParametric)
-save_topology
Save model topology (Mesh.SaveTopology)
-algo string
Select mesh algorithm: auto, meshadapt, del2d, front2d, delquad, quadqs, initial2d, del3d, front3d, mmg3d, hxt, initial3d (Mesh.Algorithm and Mesh.Algorithm3D)
-smooth int
Set number of mesh smoothing steps (Mesh.Smoothing)
-order int
Set mesh order (Mesh.ElementOrder)
-optimize[_netgen]
Optimize quality of tetrahedral elements (Mesh.Optimize[Netgen])
-optimize_threshold
Optimize tetrahedral elements that have a quality less than a threshold (Mesh.OptimizeThreshold)
-optimize_ho
Optimize high order meshes (Mesh.HighOrderOptimize)
-ho_[min,max,nlayers]
High-order optimization parameters (Mesh.HighOrderThreshold[Min,Max], Mesh.HighOrderNumLayers)
-clscale value
Set mesh element size factor (Mesh.MeshSizeFactor)
-clmin value
Set minimum mesh element size (Mesh.MeshSizeMin)
-clmax value
Set maximum mesh element size (Mesh.MeshSizeMax)
-clextend value
Extend mesh element sizes from boundaries (Mesh.MeshSizeExtendFromBoundary)
-clcurv value
Compute mesh element size from curvature, with value the target number of elements per 2*pi radians (Mesh.MeshSizeFromCurvature)
-aniso_max value
Set maximum anisotropy for bamg (Mesh.AnisoMax)
-smooth_ratio value
Set smoothing ration between mesh sizes at nodes of a same edge for bamg (Mesh.SmoothRatio)
-epslc1d value
Set accuracy of evaluation of mesh size field for 1D mesh (Mesh.LcIntegrationPrecision)
-swapangle value
Set the threshold angle (in degrees) between two adjacent faces below which a swap is allowed (Mesh.AllowSwapAngle)
-rand value
Set random perturbation factor (Mesh.RandomFactor)
-bgm file
Load background mesh from file
-check
Perform various consistency checks on mesh
-ignore_periocity
Ignore periodic boundaries (Mesh.IgnorePeriodicity)
Post-processing:
-link int
Select link mode between views (PostProcessing.Link)
-combine
Combine views having identical names into multi-time-step views
Solver:
-listen string
Always listen to incoming connection requests (Solver.AlwaysListen) on the given socket (uses Solver.SocketName if not specified)
-minterpreter string
Name of Octave interpreter (Solver.OctaveInterpreter)
-pyinterpreter string
Name of Python interpreter (Solver.OctaveInterpreter)
-run
Run ONELAB solver(s)
Display:
-n
Hide all meshes and post-processing views on startup (View.Visible, Mesh.[Points,Lines,SurfaceEdges,...])
-nodb
Disable double buffering (General.DoubleBuffer)
-numsubedges
Set num of subdivisions for high order element display (Mesh.NumSubEdges)
-fontsize int
Specify the font size for the GUI (General.FontSize)
-theme string
Specify FLTK GUI theme (General.FltkTheme)
-display string
Specify display (General.Display)
-camera
Use camera mode view (General.CameraMode)
-stereo
OpenGL quad-buffered stereo rendering (General.Stereo)
-gamepad
Use gamepad controller if available
Other:
-, -parse_and_exit
Parse input files, then exit
-save
Save output file, then exit
-o file
Specify output file name
-new
Create new model before merge next file
-merge
Merge next files
-open
Open next files
-log filename
Log all messages to filename
-a, -g, -m, -s, -p
Start in automatic, geometry, mesh, solver or post-processing mode (General.InitialModule)
-pid
Print process id on stdout
-watch pattern
Pattern of files to merge as they become available (General.WatchFilePattern)
-bg file
Load background (image or PDF) file (General.BackgroundImageFileName)
-v int
Set verbosity level (General.Verbosity)
-string "string"
Parse command string at startup
-setnumber name value
Set constant, ONELAB or option number name=value
-setstring name value
Set constant, ONELAB or option string name=value
-nopopup
Don’t popup dialog windows in scripts (General.NoPopup)
-noenv
Don’t modify the environment at startup
-nolocale
Don’t modify the locale at startup
-option file
Parse option file at startup
-convert files
Convert files into latest binary formats, then exit
-nt int
Set number of threads (General.NumThreads)
-cpu
Report CPU times for all operations
-version
Show version number
-info
Show detailed version information
-help
Show command line usage
-help_options
Show all options
Next: Gmsh application programming interface, Previous: Gmsh command-line interface, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
The Gmsh scripting language is interpreted at runtime by Gmsh’s parser. Scripts are written in ASCII files and are usually given the .geo extension, but any extension (or no extension at all) can also be used. For example Gmsh often uses the .pos extension for scripts that contain post-processing commands, in particular parsed post-processing views (see Post-processing scripting commands).
Historically, .geo scripts have been the primary way to perform complex tasks with Gmsh, and they are indeed quite powerful: they can handle (lists of) floating point (see Floating point expressions) and string (see String expressions) variables, loops and tests (see Loops and conditionals), macros (see User-defined macros), etc. However Gmsh’s scripting language is still quite limited compared to actual programming languages: for example there are no private variables, macros don’t take arguments, and the runtime interpretation by the parser can penalize performance on large models. Depending on the workflow and the application, using the Gmsh API (see Gmsh application programming interface) can thus sometimes be preferable. The downside of the API is that, while the scripting language is baked into Gmsh and is thus available directly in the standalone Gmsh app, the API requires external dependencies (a C++, C or Fortran compiler; or a Python or Julia interpreter).
This chapter describes the scripting language by detailing general commands first (see General scripting commands), before detailing the scripting commands specific to the geometry (see Geometry scripting commands), mesh (see Mesh scripting commands) and post-processing (see Post-processing scripting commands) modules.
The following rules are used when describing the scripting language in the rest of this chapter (note that metasyntactic variable definitions stay valid throughout the chapter, not only in the section where the definitions appear):
this
.
:
) after a metasyntactic variable separates the variable
from its definition.
<
>
pairs.
|
.
• General scripting commands | ||
• Geometry scripting commands | ||
• Mesh scripting commands | ||
• Post-processing scripting commands |
Next: Geometry scripting commands, Previous: Gmsh scripting language, Up: Gmsh scripting language [Contents][Index]
• Comments | ||
• Floating point expressions | ||
• String expressions | ||
• Color expressions | ||
• Operators | ||
• Built-in functions | ||
• User-defined macros | ||
• Loops and conditionals | ||
• Other general commands |
Next: Floating point expressions, Previous: General scripting commands, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Gmsh script files support both C and C++ style comments:
/*
and */
pairs is ignored;
//
is ignored.
These commands won’t have the described effects inside double quotes or inside keywords. Also note that ‘white space’ (spaces, tabs, new line characters) is ignored inside all expressions.
Next: String expressions, Previous: Comments, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
The two constant types used in Gmsh scripts are real and string (there is no integer type). These types have the same meaning and syntax as in the C or C++ programming languages.
Floating point expressions (or, more simply, “expressions”) are denoted by the metasyntactic variable expression, and are evaluated during the parsing of the script file:
expression: real | string | string ~ { expression } string [ expression ] | # string [ ] | ( expression ) | operator-unary-left expression | expression operator-unary-right | expression operator-binary expression | expression operator-ternary-left expression operator-ternary-right expression | built-in-function | number-option | Find(expression-list-item, expression-list-item) | StrFind(string-expression, string-expression) | StrCmp(string-expression, string-expression) | StrLen(string-expression) | TextAttributes(string-expression<,string-expression…>) | Exists(string) | Exists(string~{ expression }) | FileExists(string-expression) | StringToName(string-expression) | S2N(string-expression) | GetNumber(string-expression <,expression>) | GetValue("string", expression) | DefineNumber(expression, onelab-options)
Such expressions are used in most of Gmsh’s scripting
commands. When ~{expression}
is appended to a string
string, the result is a new string formed by the concatenation of
string, _
(an underscore) and the value of the
expression. This is most useful in loops (see Loops and conditionals), where it permits to define unique strings
automatically. For example,
For i In {1:3} x~{i} = i; EndFor
is the same as
x_1 = 1; x_2 = 2; x_3 = 3;
The brackets []
permit to extract one item from a list
(parentheses can also be used instead of brackets). The #
permits
to get the size of a list. The operators operator-unary-left,
operator-unary-right, operator-binary,
operator-ternary-left and operator-ternary-right are defined
in Operators. For the definition of built-in-functions,
see Built-in functions. The various number-options are
listed in Gmsh options. Find
searches for occurrences of
the first expression in the second (both of which can be lists).
StrFind
searches the first string-expression for any
occurrence of the second string-expression. StrCmp
compares
the two strings (returns an integer greater than, equal to, or less than
0, according as the first string is greater than, equal to, or less than
the second string). StrLen
returns the length of the
string. TextAttributes
creates attributes for text
strings. Exists
checks if a variable with the given name exists
(i.e., has been defined previously), and FileExists
checks if the
file with the given name exists. StringToName
creates a name
from the provided string. GetNumber
allows to get the value of a
ONELAB variable (the optional second argument is the default value
returned if the variable does not exist). GetValue
allows to ask
the user for a value interactively (the second argument is the value
returned in non-interactive mode). For example, inserting
GetValue("Value of parameter alpha?", 5.76)
in an input file will
query the user for the value of a certain parameter alpha, assuming the
default value is 5.76. If the option General.NoPopup
is set
(see General options), no question is asked and the default value is
automatically used.
DefineNumber
allows to define a ONELAB variable in-line. The
expression given as the first argument is the default value; this
is followed by the various ONELAB options. See the
ONELAB tutorial wiki for more information.
List of expressions are also widely used, and are defined as:
expression-list: expression-list-item <, expression-list-item> …
with
expression-list-item: expression | expression : expression | expression : expression : expression | string [ ] | string ( ) | List [ string ] | List [ expression-list-item ] | List [ { expression-list } ] | Unique [ expression-list-item ] | Abs [ expression-list-item ] | ListFromFile [ expression-char ] | LinSpace[ expression, expression, expression ] | LogSpace[ expression, expression, expression ] | string [ { expression-list } ] | Point { expression } | transform | extrude | boolean | Point|Curve|Surface|Volume In BoundingBox { expression-list } | BoundingBox Point|Curve|Surface|Volume { expression-list } | Mass Curve|Surface|Volume { expression } | CenterOfMass Curve|Surface|Volume { expression } | MatrixOfInertia Curve|Surface|Volume { expression } | Point { expression } | Physical Point|Curve|Surface|Volume { expression-list } | <Physical> Point|Curve|Surface|Volume { : } |
The second case in this last definition permits to create a list
containing the range of numbers comprised between two
expressions, with a unit incrementation step. The third case
also permits to create a list containing the range of numbers comprised
between two expressions, but with a positive or negative
incrementation step equal to the third expression. The fourth,
fifth and sixth cases permit to reference an expression list
(parentheses can also be used instead of brackets). Unique
sorts
the entries in the list and removes all duplicates. Abs
takes
the absolute value of all entries in the list. ListFromFile
reads
a list of numbers from a file. LinSpace
and LogSpace
construct lists using linear or logarithmic spacing. The next two cases
permit to reference an expression sublist (whose elements are those
corresponding to the indices provided by the expression-list).
The next cases permit to retrieve the indices of entities created
through geometrical transformations, extrusions and boolean operations
(see Transformations, Extrusions and Boolean operations).
The next two cases allow to retrieve entities in a given bounding box,
or get the bounding box of a given entity, with the bounding box
specified as (X min, Y min, Z min, X max, Y max, Z max). Beware that the
order of coordinates is different than in the BoundingBox
command
for the scene: see Other general commands. The last cases permit to
retrieve the mass, the center of mass or the matrix of inertia of an
entity, the coordinates of a given geometry point (see Points), the
elementary entities making up physical groups, and the tags of all
(physical or elementary) points, curves, surfaces or volumes in the
model. These operations all trigger a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
To see the practical use of such expressions, have a look at the first
couple of examples in Gmsh tutorial. Note that, in order to
lighten the syntax, you can omit the braces {}
enclosing an
expression-list if this expression-list only contains a
single item. Also note that a braced expression-list can be
preceded by a minus sign in order to change the sign of all the
expression-list-items.
For some commands it makes sense to specify all the possible expressions in a list. This is achieved with expression-list-or-all, defined as:
expression-list-or-all: expression-list | :
The meaning of “all” (:
) depends on context. For example,
Curve { : }
will get the ids of all the existing curves in the
model, while Surface { : }
will get the ids of all existing
surfaces.
Next: Color expressions, Previous: Floating point expressions, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
String expressions are defined as:
string-expression: "string" | string | string[ expression ] | Today | OnelabAction | GmshExecutableName | CurrentDirectory | CurrentDir | CurrentFileName StrPrefix ( string-expression ) | StrRelative ( string-expression ) | StrCat ( string-expression <,…> ) | Str ( string-expression <,…> ) | StrChoice ( expression, string-expression, string-expression ) | StrSub( string-expression, expression, expression ) | StrSub( string-expression, expression ) | UpperCase ( string-expression ) | AbsolutePath ( string-expression ) | DirName ( string-expression ) | Sprintf ( string-expression , expression-list ) | Sprintf ( string-expression ) | Sprintf ( string-option ) | GetEnv ( string-expression ) | GetString ( string-expression <,string-expression>) | GetStringValue ( string-expression , string-expression ) | StrReplace ( string-expression , string-expression , string-expression ) NameToString ( string ) | N2S ( string ) | <Physical> Point|Curve|Surface|Volume { expression } | DefineString(string-expression, onelab-options)
Today
returns the current date. OnelabAction
returns the
current ONELAB action (e.g. check
or
compute
). GmshExecutableName
returns the full path of the
Gmsh executable. CurrentDirectory
(or CurrentDir
) and
CurrentFileName
return the directory and file name of the script
being parsed. StrPrefix
and StrRelative
take the prefix
(e.g. to remove the extension) or the relative path of a given file
name. StrCat
and Str
concatenate string expressions
(Str
adds a newline character after each string except the last).
StrChoice
returns the first or second string-expression
depending on the value of expression. StrSub
returns the
portion of the string that starts at the character position given by the
first expression and spans the number of characters given by the
second expression or until the end of the string (whichever comes
first; or always if the second expression is not
provided). UpperCase
converts the string-expression to
upper case. AbsolutePath
returns the absolute path of a
file. DirName
returns the directory of a file. Sprintf
is
equivalent to the sprintf
C function (where
string-expression is a format string that can contain floating
point formatting characters: %e
, %g
, etc.) The various
string-options are listed in Gmsh options. GetEnvThe
gets the value of an environment variable
from the operating system. GetString
allows to get a ONELAB
string value (the second optional argument is the default value returned
if the variable does not exist). GetStringValue
asks the user
for a value interactively (the second argument is the value used in
non-interactive mode). StrReplace
’s arguments are: input string,
old substring, new substring (brackets can be used instead of
parentheses in Str
and Sprintf
). Physical Point
,
etc., or Point
, etc., retrieve the name of the physical or
elementary entity, if any. NameToString
converts a variable name
into a string.
DefineString
allows to define a ONELAB variable in-line. The
string-expression given as the first argument is the default
value; this is followed by the various ONELAB options. See the
ONELAB tutorial wiki for more information.
String expressions are mostly used to specify non-numeric options and input/output file names. See t8, for an interesting usage of string-expressions in an animation script.
List of string expressions are defined as:
string-expression-list: string-expression <,…>
Next: Operators, Previous: String expressions, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Colors expressions are hybrids between fixed-length braced expression-lists and strings:
color-expression: string-expression | { expression, expression, expression } | { expression, expression, expression, expression } | color-option
The first case permits to use the X Windows names to refer to colors,
e.g., Red
, SpringGreen
, LavenderBlush3
, …
(see src/common/Colors.h
in the source code for a complete list). The second case permits to
define colors by using three expressions to specify their red, green and
blue components (with values comprised between 0 and 255). The third
case permits to define colors by using their red, green and blue color
components as well as their alpha channel. The last case permits to use
the value of a color-option as a color-expression. The
various color-options are listed in Gmsh options.
See t3, for an example of the use of color expressions.
• Operators | ||
• Built-in functions | ||
• User-defined macros | ||
• Loops and conditionals | ||
• Other general commands |
Next: Built-in functions, Previous: Color expressions, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Gmsh’s operators are similar to the corresponding operators in C and C++. Here is the list of available unary, binary and ternary operators.
operator-unary-left:
-
Unary minus.
!
Logical not.
operator-unary-right:
++
Post-incrementation.
--
Post-decrementation.
operator-binary:
^
Exponentiation.
*
Multiplication.
/
Division.
%
Modulo.
+
Addition.
-
Subtraction.
==
Equality.
!=
Inequality.
>
Greater.
>=
Greater or equality.
<
Less.
<=
Less or equality.
&&
Logical ‘and’.
||
Logical ‘or’. (Warning: the logical ‘or’ always implies the evaluation of
both arguments. That is, unlike in C or C++, the second operand of
||
is evaluated even if the first one is true).
operator-ternary-left:
?
operator-ternary-right:
:
The only ternary operator, formed by operator-ternary-left and operator-ternary-right, returns the value of its second argument if the first argument is non-zero; otherwise it returns the value of its third argument.
The evaluation priorities are summarized below12 (from stronger to
weaker, i.e., *
has a highest evaluation priority than +
).
Parentheses ()
may be used anywhere to change the order of
evaluation:
()
, []
, .
, #
^
!
, ++
, --
, -
(unary)
*
, /
, %
+
, -
<
, >
, <=
, >=
==
, !=
&&
||
?:
=
, +=
, -=
, *=
, /=
Next: User-defined macros, Previous: Operators, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
A built-in function is composed of an identifier followed by a pair of parentheses containing an expression-list, the list of its arguments. This list of arguments can also be provided in between brackets, instead of parentheses. Here is the list of the built-in functions currently implemented:
build-in-function:
Acos ( expression )
Arc cosine (inverse cosine) of an expression in [-1,1]. Returns a value in [0,Pi].
Asin ( expression )
Arc sine (inverse sine) of an expression in [-1,1]. Returns a value in [-Pi/2,Pi/2].
Atan ( expression )
Arc tangent (inverse tangent) of expression. Returns a value in [-Pi/2,Pi/2].
Atan2 ( expression, expression )
Arc tangent (inverse tangent) of the first expression divided by the second. Returns a value in [-Pi,Pi].
Ceil ( expression )
Rounds expression up to the nearest integer.
Cos ( expression )
Cosine of expression.
Cosh ( expression )
Hyperbolic cosine of expression.
Exp ( expression )
Returns the value of e (the base of natural logarithms) raised to the power of expression.
Fabs ( expression )
Absolute value of expression.
Fmod ( expression, expression )
Remainder of the division of the first expression by the second, with the sign of the first.
Floor ( expression )
Rounds expression down to the nearest integer.
Hypot ( expression, expression )
Returns the square root of the sum of the square of its two arguments.
Log ( expression )
Natural logarithm of expression (expression > 0).
Log10 ( expression )
Base 10 logarithm of expression (expression > 0).
Max ( expression, expression )
Maximum of the two arguments.
Min ( expression, expression )
Minimum of the two arguments.
Modulo ( expression, expression )
see Fmod( expression, expression )
.
Rand ( expression )
Random number between zero and expression.
Round ( expression )
Rounds expression to the nearest integer.
Sqrt ( expression )
Square root of expression (expression >= 0).
Sin ( expression )
Sine of expression.
Sinh ( expression )
Hyperbolic sine of expression.
Tan ( expression )
Tangent of expression.
Tanh ( expression )
Hyperbolic tangent of expression.
Next: Loops and conditionals, Previous: Built-in functions, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
User-defined macros take no arguments, and are evaluated as if a file
containing the macro body was included at the location of the
Call
statement.
Macro string | string-expression
Begin the declaration of a user-defined macro named string. The
body of the macro starts on the line after ‘Macro string
’,
and can contain any Gmsh command. A synonym for Macro
is
Function
.
Return
End the body of the current user-defined macro. Macro declarations cannot be imbricated.
Call string | string-expression ;
Execute the body of a (previously defined) macro named string.
See t5, for an example of a user-defined macro. A shortcoming of Gmsh’s scripting language is that all variables are “public”. Variables defined inside the body of a macro will thus be available outside, too!
Next: Other general commands, Previous: User-defined macros, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Loops and conditionals are defined as follows, and can be imbricated:
For ( expression : expression )
Iterate from the value of the first expression to the value of the
second expression, with a unit incrementation step. At each
iteration, the commands comprised between ‘For ( expression
: expression )
’ and the matching EndFor
are executed.
For ( expression : expression : expression )
Iterate from the value of the first expression to the value of the
second expression, with a positive or negative incrementation step
equal to the third expression. At each iteration, the commands
comprised between ‘For ( expression : expression :
expression )
’ and the matching EndFor
are executed.
For string In { expression : expression }
Iterate from the value of the first expression to the value of the
second expression, with a unit incrementation step. At each
iteration, the value of the iterate is affected to an expression named
string, and the commands comprised between ‘For string
In { expression : expression }
’ and the matching
EndFor
are executed.
For string In { expression : expression : expression }
Iterate from the value of the first expression to the value of the
second expression, with a positive or negative incrementation step
equal to the third expression. At each iteration, the value of the
iterate is affected to an expression named string, and the
commands comprised between ‘For string In {
expression : expression : expression }
’ and the
matching EndFor
are executed.
EndFor
End a matching For
command.
If ( expression )
The body enclosed between ‘If ( expression )
’ and the
matching ElseIf
, Else
or EndIf
, is evaluated if
expression is non-zero.
ElseIf ( expression )
The body enclosed between ‘ElseIf ( expression )
’ and the
next matching ElseIf
, Else
or EndIf
, is evaluated
if expression is non-zero and none of the expression of the
previous matching codes If
and ElseIf
were non-zero.
Else
The body enclosed between Else
and the matching EndIf
is
evaluated if none of the expression of the previous matching codes
If
and ElseIf
were non-zero.
EndIf
End a matching If
command.
Previous: Loops and conditionals, Up: General scripting commands [Contents][Index]
The following commands can be used anywhere in a Gmsh script:
string = expression;
Create a new expression identifier string, or affects expression to an existing expression identifier. The following expression identifiers are predefined (hardcoded in Gmsh’s parser):
Pi
Return 3.1415926535897932.
GMSH_MAJOR_VERSION
Return Gmsh’s major version number.
GMSH_MINOR_VERSION
Return Gmsh’s minor version number.
GMSH_PATCH_VERSION
Return Gmsh’s patch version number.
MPI_Size
Return the number of processors on which Gmsh is running. It is always
1, except if you compiled Gmsh with ENABLE_MPI
(see Compiling the source code).
MPI_Rank
Return the rank of the current processor.
Cpu
Return the current CPU time (in seconds).
Memory
Return the current memory usage (in Mb).
TotalMemory
Return the total memory available (in Mb).
newp
Return the next available point tag. As explained in Geometry module, a unique tag must be associated with every geometrical point:
newp
permits to know the highest tag already attributed (plus
one). This is mostly useful when writing user-defined macros
(see User-defined macros) or general geometric primitives, when one
does not know a priori which tags are already attributed, and
which ones are still available.
newc
Return the next available curve tag.
news
Return the next available surface tag.
newv
Return the next available volume tag.
newcl
Return the next available curve loop tag.
newsl
Return the next available surface loop tag.
newreg
Return the next available region tag. That is, newreg
returns the
maximum of newp
, newl
, news
, newv
,
newll
, newsl
and all physical group tags13.
string = { };
Create a new expression list identifier string
with an
empty list.
string[] = { expression-list };
Create a new expression list identifier string
with the
list expression-list, or affects expression-list to an
existing expression list identifier. Parentheses are also allowed
instead of square brackets; although not recommended, brackets and
parentheses can also be completely ommitted.
string [ { expression-list } ] = { expression-list };
Affect each item in the right hand side expression-list to the elements (indexed by the left hand side expression-list) of an existing expression list identifier. The two expression-lists must contain the same number of items. Parentheses can also be used instead of brackets.
string += expression;
Add and affect expression to an existing expression identifier.
string -= expression;
Subtract and affect expression to an existing expression identifier.
string *= expression;
Multiply and affect expression to an existing expression identifier.
string /= expression;
Divide and affect expression to an existing expression identifier.
string += { expression-list };
Append expression-list to an existing expression list or creates a new expression list with expression-list.
string -= { expression-list };
Remove the items in expression-list from the existing expression list.
string [ { expression-list } ] += { expression-list };
Add and affect, item per item, the right hand side expression-list to an existing expression list identifier. Parentheses can also be used instead of brackets.
string [ { expression-list } ] -= { expression-list };
Subtract and affect, item per item, the right hand side expression-list to an existing expression list identifier. Parentheses can also be used instead of brackets.
string [ { expression-list } ] *= { expression-list };
Multiply and affect, item per item, the right hand side expression-list to an existing expression list identifier. Parentheses can also be used instead of brackets.
string [ { expression-list } ] /= { expression-list };
Divide and affect, item per item, the right hand side expression-list to an existing expression list identifier. Parentheses can also be used instead of brackets.
string = string-expression;
Create a new string expression identifier string
with a
given string-expression.
string[] = Str( string-expression-list ) ;
Create a new string expression list identifier string
with a given string-expression-list. Parentheses can also be used
instead of brackets.
string[] += Str( string-expression-list ) ;
Append a string expression list to an existing list. Parentheses can also be used instead of brackets.
DefineConstant[ string = expression|string-expression <, ...>];
Create a new expression identifier string, with value expression, only if has not been defined before.
DefineConstant[ string = { expression|string-expression, onelab-options } <, ...>];
Same as the previous case, except that the variable is also exchanged with the ONELAB database if it has not been defined before. See the ONELAB tutorial wiki for more information.
SetNumber( string-expression , expression );
Set the value a numeric ONELAB variable string-expression.
SetString( string-expression , string-expression );
Set the value a string ONELAB variable string-expression.
number-option = expression;
Affect expression to a real option.
string-option = string-expression;
Affect string-expression to a string option.
color-option = color-expression;
Affect color-expression to a color option.
number-option += expression;
Add and affect expression to a real option.
number-option -= expression;
Subtract and affect expression to a real option.
number-option *= expression;
Multiply and affect expression to a real option.
number-option /= expression;
Divide and affect expression to a real option.
Abort;
Abort the current script.
Exit < expression >;
Exit Gmsh (optionally with level expression instead of 0).
CreateDir string-expression;
Create the directory string-expression.
Printf ( string-expression <, expression-list> );
Print a string expression in the information window and/or on the
terminal. Printf
is equivalent to the printf
C function:
string-expression is a format string that can contain formatting
characters (%f
, %e
, etc.). Note that all
expressions are evaluated as floating point values in Gmsh
(see Floating point expressions), so that only valid floating point
formatting characters make sense in string-expression. See t5,
for an example of the use of Printf
.
Printf ( string-expression , expression-list ) > string-expression;
Same as Printf
above, but output the expression in a file.
Printf ( string-expression , expression-list ) >> string-expression;
Same as Printf
above, but appends the expression at the end of
the file.
Warning|Error ( string-expression <, expression-list> );
Same as Printf
, but raises a warning or an error.
Merge string-expression;
Merge a file named string-expression. This command is equivalent to the ‘File->Merge’ menu in the GUI. If the path in string-expression is not absolute, string-expression is appended to the path of the current file. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
ShapeFromFile( string-expression );
Merge a BREP, STEP or IGES file and returns the tags of the highest-dimensional entities. Only available with the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel.
Draw;
Redraw the scene.
SplitCurrentWindowHorizontal expression;
Split the current window horizontally, with the ratio given by expression.
SplitCurrentWindowVertical expression;
Split the current window vertically, with the ratio given by expression.
SetCurrentWindow expression;
Set the current window by speficying its index (starting at 0) in the list of all windows. When new windows are created by splits, new windows are appended at the end of the list.
UnsplitWindow;
Restore a single window.
SetChanged;
Force the mesh and post-processing vertex arrays to be regenerated. Useful e.g. for creating animations with changing clipping planes, etc.
BoundingBox;
Recompute the bounding box of the scene (which is normally computed only after new model entities are added or after files are included or merged). The bounding box is computed as follows:
This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
BoundingBox { expression, expression, expression, expression, expression, expression };
Force the bounding box of the scene to the given expressions
(X min, X max, Y min, Y max, Z min, Z max). Beware that order of the
coordinates is different than in the BoundingBox
commands for
model entities: see Floating point expressions.
Delete Model;
Delete the current model (all model entities and their associated meshes).
Delete Meshes;
Delete all the meshes in the current model.
Delete Physicals;
Delete all physical groups.
Delete Variables;
Delete all the expressions.
Delete Options;
Delete the current options and revert to the default values.
Delete string;
Delete the expression string.
Print string-expression;
Print the graphic window in a file named string-expression, using
the current Print.Format
(see General options). If the
path in string-expression is not absolute, string-expression is
appended to the path of the current file. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Sleep expression;
Suspend the execution of Gmsh during expression seconds.
SystemCall string-expression;
Executes a (blocking) system call.
NonBlockingSystemCall string-expression;
Execute a (non-blocking) system call.
OnelabRun ( string-expression <, string-expression > )
Run a ONELAB client (first argument is the client name, second optional argument is the command line).
SetName string-expression;
Change the name of the current model.
SetFactory(string-expression);
Change the current geometry kernel (i.e. determines the CAD kernel that
is used for all subsequent geometrical commands). Currently available
kernels: "Built-in"
and "OpenCASCADE"
.
SyncModel;
Force an immediate transfer from the old geometrical database into the new one (this transfer normally occurs right after a file is read).
NewModel;
Create a new current model.
Include string-expression;
Include the file named string-expression at the current position in the input file. The include command should be given on a line of its own. If the path in string-expression is not absolute, string-expression is appended to the path of the current file.
Next: Mesh scripting commands, Previous: General scripting commands, Up: Gmsh scripting language [Contents][Index]
Both the built-in and the OpenCASCADE CAD kernels can be used in the
scripting language, by specifying SetFactory("Built-in")
or
SetFactory("OpenCASCADE")
, respectively, before geometrical
scripting commands. If SetFactory
is not specified, the built-in
kernel is used.
A bottom-up boundary representation approach can be used by first
defining points (using the Point
command), then curves (using
Line
, Circle
, Spline
, …, commands or by
extruding points), then surfaces (using for example the Plane
Surface
or Surface
commands, or by extruding curves), and
finally volumes (using the Volume
command or by extruding
surfaces). Entities can then be manipulated in various ways, for example
using the Translate
, Rotate
, Scale
or
Symmetry
commands. They can be deleted with the Delete
command, provided that no higher-dimension entity references them. With
the OpenCASCADE kernel, additional boolean operations are available:
BooleanIntersection
, BooleanUnion
,
BooleanDifference
and BooleanFragments
.
The next subsections describe all the available geometry commands in the scripting language. Note that the following general rule is followed for the definition of model entities: if an expression defines a new entity, it is enclosed between parentheses. If an expression refers to a previously defined entity, it is enclosed between braces.
• Points | ||
• Curves | ||
• Surfaces | ||
• Volumes | ||
• Extrusions | ||
• Boolean operations | ||
• Transformations | ||
• Other geometry commands |
Next: Curves, Previous: Geometry scripting commands, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Point ( expression ) = { expression, expression, expression <, expression > };
Create a point. The expression inside the parentheses is the point’s tag; the three first expressions inside the braces on the right hand side give the three X, Y and Z coordinates of the point in the three-dimensional Euclidean space; the optional last expression sets the prescribed mesh element size at that point. See Specifying mesh element sizes, for more information about how this value is used in the meshing process.
Physical Point ( expression | string-expression <, expression> ) <+|->= { expression-list };
Create a physical point. The expression inside the parentheses is the physical point’s tag; the expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of all the elementary points that need to be grouped inside the physical point. If a string-expression is given instead instead of expression inside the parentheses, a string label is associated with the physical tag, which can be either provided explicitly (after the comma) or not (in which case a unique tag is automatically created).
Next: Surfaces, Previous: Points, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Line ( expression ) = { expression, expression };
Create a straight line segment. The expression inside the parentheses is the line segment’s tag; the two expressions inside the braces on the right hand side give tags of the start and end points of the segment.
Bezier ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a Bezier curve. The expression-list contains the tags of the control points.
BSpline ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a cubic BSpline. The expression-list contains the tags of the control points. Creates a periodic curve if the first and last points are identical.
Spline ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a spline going through the points in expression-list. With the built-in geometry kernel this constructs a Catmull-Rom spline. With the OpenCASCADE kernel, this constructs a C2 BSpline. Creates a periodic curve if the first and last points are identical.
Circle ( expression ) = { expression, expression, expression <, ...> };
Create a circle arc. If three expressions are provided on the right-hand-side they define the start point, the center and the end point of the arc. With the built-in geometry kernel the arc should be strictly smaller than Pi. With the OpenCASCADE kernel, if between 4 and 6 expressions are provided, the first three define the coordinates of the center, the next one defines the radius, and the optional next two the start and end angle.
Ellipse ( expression ) = { expression, expression, expression <, ...> };
Create an ellipse arc. If four expressions are provided on the right-hand-side they define the start point, the center point, a point anywhere on the major axis and the end point. If the first point is a major axis point, the third expression can be ommitted. With the OpenCASCADE kernel, if between 5 and 7 expressions are provided, the first three define the coordinates of the center, the next two define the major (along the x-axis) and minor radii (along the y-axis), and the next two the start and end angle. Note that OpenCASCADE does not allow creating ellipse arcs with the major radius smaller than the minor radius.
Compound Spline | BSpline ( expression ) = { expression-list } Using expression;
Create a spline or a BSpline from control points sampled on the curves
in expression-list. Using
expression specifies the
number of intervals on each curve to compute the sampling
points. Compound splines and BSplines are only available with the
built-in geometry kernel.
Curve Loop ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create an oriented loop of curves, i.e. a closed wire. The
expression inside the parentheses is the curve loop’s tag; the
expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of
all the curves that constitute the curve loop. A curve loop must be a
closed loop. With the built-in geometry kernel, the curves should be
ordered and oriented, using negative tags to specify reverse
orientation. (If the orientation is correct, but the ordering is wrong,
Gmsh will actually reorder the list internally to create a consistent
loop; the built-in kernel also supports multiple curve loops (or
subloops) in a single Curve Loop
command, but this is not
recommended). With the OpenCASCADE kernel the curve loop is always
oriented according to the orientation of its first curve; negative tags
can be specified for compatibility with the built-in kernel, but are
simply ignored. Curve loops are used to create surfaces: see
Surfaces.
Wire ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a path made of curves. Wires are only available with the
OpenCASCADE kernel. They are used to create ThruSections
and
extrusions along paths.
Physical Curve ( expression | string-expression <, expression> ) <+|->= { expression-list };
Create a physical curve. The expression inside the parentheses is the physical curve’s tag; the expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of all the elementary curves that need to be grouped inside the physical curve. If a string-expression is given instead instead of expression inside the parentheses, a string label is associated with the physical tag, which can be either provided explicitly (after the comma) or not (in which case a unique tag is automatically created). In some mesh file formats (e.g. MSH2), specifying negative tags in the expression-list will reverse the orientation of the mesh elements belonging to the corresponding elementary curves in the saved mesh file.
Next: Volumes, Previous: Curves, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Plane Surface ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a plane surface. The expression inside the parentheses is the plane surface’s tag; the expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of all the curve loops defining the surface. The first curve loop defines the exterior boundary of the surface; all other curve loops define holes in the surface. A curve loop defining a hole should not have any curves in common with the exterior curve loop (in which case it is not a hole, and the two surfaces should be defined separately). Likewise, a curve loop defining a hole should not have any curves in common with another curve loop defining a hole in the same surface (in which case the two curve loops should be combined).
Surface ( expression ) = { expression-list } < In Sphere { expression }, Using Point { expression-list } >;
Create a surface filling. With the built-in kernel, the first curve
loop should be composed of either three or four curves, the surface is
constructed using transfinite interpolation, and the optional In
Sphere
argument forces the surface to be a spherical patch (the extra
parameter gives the tag of the center of the sphere). With the
OpenCASCADE kernel, a BSpline surface is constructucted by optimization
to match the bounding curves, as well as the (optional) points provided
after Using Point
.
BSpline Surface ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a BSpline surface filling. Only a single curve loop made of 2, 3
or 4 BSpline curves can be provided. BSpline Surface
is only
available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Bezier Surface ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a Bezier surface filling. Only a single curve loop made of 2, 3
or 4 Bezier curves can be provided. Bezier Surface
is only
available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Disk ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Creates a disk. When four expressions are provided on the right hand
side (3 coordinates of the center and the radius), the disk is circular.
A fifth expression defines the radius along Y, leading to an ellipse.
Disk
is only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Rectangle ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a rectangle. The 3 first expressions define the lower-left
corner; the next 2 define the width and height. If a 6th expression is
provided, it defines a radius to round the rectangle
corners. Rectangle
is only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Surface Loop ( expression ) = { expression-list } < Using Sewing >;
Create a surface loop (a shell). The expression inside the
parentheses is the surface loop’s tag; the expression-list on the
right hand side should contain the tags of all the surfaces that
constitute the surface loop. A surface loop must always represent a
closed shell, and the surfaces should be oriented consistently (using
negative tags to specify reverse orientation). (Surface loops are used
to create volumes: see Volumes.) With the OpenCASCADE kernel, the
optional Using Sewing
argument allows to build a shell made of
surfaces that share geometrically identical (but topologically
different) curves.
Physical Surface ( expression | string-expression <, expression> ) <+|->= { expression-list };
Create a physical surface. The expression inside the parentheses is the physical surface’s tag; the expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of all the elementary surfaces that need to be grouped inside the physical surface. If a string-expression is given instead instead of expression inside the parentheses, a string label is associated with the physical tag, which can be either provided explicitly (after the comma) or not (in which case a unique tag is automatically created). In some mesh file formats (e.g. MSH2), specifying negative tags in the expression-list will reverse the orientation of the mesh elements belonging to the corresponding elementary surfaces in the saved mesh file.
Next: Extrusions, Previous: Surfaces, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Volume ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a volume. The expression inside the parentheses is the volume’s tag; the expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of all the surface loops defining the volume. The first surface loop defines the exterior boundary of the volume; all other surface loops define holes in the volume. A surface loop defining a hole should not have any surfaces in common with the exterior surface loop (in which case it is not a hole, and the two volumes should be defined separately). Likewise, a surface loop defining a hole should not have any surfaces in common with another surface loop defining a hole in the same volume (in which case the two surface loops should be combined).
Sphere ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a sphere, defined by the 3 coordinates of its center and a
radius. Additional expressions define 3 angle limits. The first two
optional arguments define the polar angle opening (from -Pi/2 to
Pi/2). The optional ‘angle3’ argument defines the azimuthal opening
(from 0 to 2*Pi). Sphere
is only available with the OpenCASCADE
kernel.
Box ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a box, defined by the 3 coordinates of a point and the 3
extents. Box
is only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Cylinder ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a cylinder, defined by the 3 coordinates of the center of the
first circular face, the 3 components of the vector defining its axis
and its radius. An additional expression defines the angular
opening. Cylinder
is only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Torus ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a torus, defined by the 3 coordinates of its center and 2 radii.
An additional expression defines the angular opening. Torus
is
only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Cone ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a cone, defined by the 3 coordinates of the center of the first
circular face, the 3 components of the vector defining its axis and the
two radii of the faces (these radii can be zero). An additional
expression defines the angular opening. Cone
is only available
with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Wedge ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a right angular wedge, defined by the 3 coordinates of the
right-angle point and the 3 extends. An additional parameter defines the
top X extent (zero by default). Wedge
is only available with the
OpenCASCADE kernel.
ThruSections ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Create a volume defined through curve loops. ThruSections
is only
available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Ruled ThruSections ( expression ) = { expression-list };
Same as ThruSections
, but the surfaces created on the boundary
are forced to be ruled. Ruled ThruSections
is only available with
the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Physical Volume ( expression | string-expression <, expression> ) <+|->= { expression-list };
Create a physical volume. The expression inside the parentheses is the physical volume’s tag; the expression-list on the right hand side should contain the tags of all the elementary volumes that need to be grouped inside the physical volume. If a string-expression is given instead instead of expression inside the parentheses, a string label is associated with the physical tag, which can be either provided explicitly (after the comma) or not (in which case a unique tag is automatically created).
Next: Boolean operations, Previous: Volumes, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Curves, surfaces and volumes can also be created through extrusion of points, curves and surfaces, respectively. Here is the syntax of the geometrical extrusion commands (go to Structured grids, to see how these commands can be extended in order to also extrude the mesh):
extrude:
Extrude { expression-list } { extrude-list }
Extrude all elementary entities (points, curves or surfaces) in extrude-list using a translation. The expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z components of the translation vector.
Extrude { { expression-list }, { expression-list }, expression } { extrude-list }
Extrude all elementary entities (points, curves or surfaces) in extrude-list using a rotation. The first expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z direction of the rotation axis; the second expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z components of any point on this axis; the last expression should contain the rotation angle (in radians). With the built-in geometry kernel the angle should be strictly smaller than Pi.
Extrude { { expression-list }, { expression-list }, { expression-list }, expression } { extrude-list }
Extrude all elementary entities (points, curves or surfaces) in extrude-list using a translation combined with a rotation (to produce a “twist”). The first expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z components of the translation vector; the second expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z direction of the rotation axis, which should match the direction of the translation; the third expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z components of any point on this axis; the last expression should contain the rotation angle (in radians). With the built-in geometry kernel the angle should be strictly smaller than Pi.
Extrude { extrude-list }
Extrude entities in extrude-list using a translation along their normal. Only available with the built-in geometry kernel.
Extrude { extrude-list } Using Wire { expression-list }
Extrude entities in extrude-list along the give wire. Only available with the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel.
ThruSections { expression-list }
Create surfaces through the given curve loops or
wires. ThruSections
is only available with the OpenCASCADE
kernel.
Ruled ThruSections { expression-list }
Create ruled surfaces through the given curve loops or
wires. Ruled ThruSections
is only available with the OpenCASCADE
kernel.
Fillet { expression-list } { expression-list } { expression-list }
Fillet volumes (first list) on some curves (second list), using the
provided radii (third list). The radius list can either contain a single
radius, as many radii as curves, or twice as many as curves (in which
case different radii are provided for the begin and end points of the
curves). Fillet
is only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Chamfer { expression-list } { expression-list } { expression-list } { expression-list }
Chamfer volumes (first list) on some curves (second list), using the
provided distance (fourth list) measured on the given surfaces (third
list). The distance list can either contain a single distance, as many
distances as curves, or twice as many as curves (in which case the first
in each pair is measured on the given corresponding
surface). Chamfer
is only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
with
extrude-list: <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface { expression-list-or-all }; …
As explained in Floating point expressions, extrude can be used in an expression, in which case it returns a list of tags. By default, the list contains the “top” of the extruded entity at index 0 and the extruded entity at index 1, followed by the “sides” of the extruded entity at indices 2, 3, etc. For example:
Point(1) = {0,0,0}; Point(2) = {1,0,0}; Line(1) = {1, 2}; out[] = Extrude{0,1,0}{ Curve{1}; }; Printf("top curve = %g", out[0]); Printf("surface = %g", out[1]); Printf("side curves = %g and %g", out[2], out[3]);
This behaviour can be changed with the
Geometry.ExtrudeReturnLateralEntities
option (see Geometry options).
Next: Transformations, Previous: Extrusions, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Boolean operations can be applied on curves, surfaces and volumes. All boolean operation act on two lists of elementary entities. The first list represents the object; the second represents the tool. The general syntax for boolean operations is as follows:
boolean:
BooleanIntersection { boolean-list } { boolean-list }
Compute the intersection of the object and the tool.
BooleanUnion { boolean-list } { boolean-list }
Compute the union of the object and the tool.
BooleanDifference { boolean-list } { boolean-list }
Subtract the tool from the object.
BooleanFragments { boolean-list } { boolean-list }
Compute all the fragments resulting from the intersection of the entities in the object and in the tool, making all interfaces conformal. When applied to entities of different dimensions, the lower dimensional entities will be automatically embedded in the higher dimensional entities if they are not on their boundary.
with
boolean-list: <Physical> Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … | Delete ;
If Delete
is specified in the boolean-list, the tool and/or
the object is deleted.
As explained in Floating point expressions, boolean can be used in an expression, in which case it returns the list of tags of the highest dimensional entities created by the boolean operation. See examples/boolean for examples.
An alternative syntax exists for boolean operations, which can be used when it is known beforehand that the operation will result in a single (highest-dimensional) entity:
boolean-explicit:
BooleanIntersection ( expression ) = { boolean-list } { boolean-list };
Compute the intersection of the object and the tool and assign the result the tag expression.
BooleanUnion ( expression ) = { boolean-list } { boolean-list };
Compute the union of the object and the tool and assign the result the tag expression.
BooleanDifference ( expression ) = { boolean-list } { boolean-list };
Subtract the tool from the object and assign the result the tag expression.
Again, see examples/boolean for examples.
Boolean operations are only available with the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel.
Next: Other geometry commands, Previous: Boolean operations, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Geometrical transformations can be applied to elementary entities, or to
copies of elementary entities (using the Duplicata
command: see
below). The syntax of the transformation commands is:
transform:
Dilate { { expression-list }, expression } { transform-list }
Scale all elementary entities in transform-list by a factor expression. The expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y, and Z coordinates of the center of the homothetic transformation.
Dilate { { expression-list }, { expression, expression, expression } } { transform-list }
Scale all elementary entities in transform-list using different factors along X, Y and Z (the three expressions). The expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y, and Z coordinates of the center of the homothetic transformation.
Rotate { { expression-list }, { expression-list }, expression } { transform-list }
Rotate all elementary entities in transform-list by an angle of expression radians. The first expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z direction of the rotation axis; the second expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z components of any point on this axis.
Symmetry { expression-list } { transform-list }
Transform all elementary entities symmetrically to a plane. The expression-list should contain four expressions giving the coefficients of the plane’s equation.
Affine { expression-list } { transform-list }
Apply a 4 x 4 affine transformation matrix (16 entries given by row; only 12 can be provided for convenience) to all elementary entities. Currently only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel.
Translate { expression-list } { transform-list }
Translate all elementary entities in transform-list. The expression-list should contain three expressions giving the X, Y and Z components of the translation vector.
Boundary { transform-list }
(Not a transformation per-se.) Return the entities on the boundary of
the elementary entities in transform-list, with signs indicating
their orientation in the boundary. To get unsigned tags (e.g. to reuse
the output in other commands), apply the Abs
function on the
returned list. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
CombinedBoundary { transform-list }
(Not a transformation per-se.) Return the boundary of the elementary entities, combined as if a single entity, in transform-list. Useful to compute the boundary of a complex part. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
PointsOf { transform-list }
(Not a transformation per-se.) Return all the geometrical points on the boundary of the elementary entities. Useful to compute the boundary of a complex part. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Intersect Curve { expression-list } Surface { expression }
(Not a transformation per-se.) Return the intersections of the curves given in expression-list with the specified surface. Currently only available with the built-in kernel.
Split Curve { expression } Point { expression-list }
(Not a transformation per-se.) Split the curve expression on the specified control points. Only available with the built-in kernel, for lines, splines and BSplines.
with
transform-list: <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … | Duplicata { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … } | transform
Previous: Transformations, Up: Geometry scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Here is a list of all other geometry commands currently available:
Coherence;
Remove all duplicate elementary entities (e.g., points having identical
coordinates). Note that with the built-in geometry kernel Gmsh executes
the Coherence
command automatically after each geometrical
transformation, unless Geometry.AutoCoherence
is set to zero
(see Geometry options). With the OpenCASCADE geometry kernel,
Coherence
is simply a shortcut for a BooleanFragments
operation on all entities, with the Delete
operator applied to
all operands.
HealShapes;
Apply the shape healing procedure(s), according to
Geometry.OCCFixDegenerated
, Geometry.OCCFixSmallEdges
,
Geometry.OCCFixSmallFaces
, Geometry.OCCSewFaces
,
Geometry.OCCMakeSolids
. Only available with the OpenCASCADE
geometry kernel.
< Recursive > Delete { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … }
Delete all elementary entities whose tags are given in
expression-list-or-all. If an entity is linked to another entity
(for example, if a point is used as a control point of a curve),
Delete
has no effect (the curve will have to be deleted before
the point can). The Recursive
variant deletes the entities as
well as all its sub-entities of lower dimension. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Delete Embedded { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … }
Delete all the embedded entities in the elementary entities whose tags are given in expression-list-or-all. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
SetMaxTag Point | Curve | Surface | Volume ( expression )
Force the maximum tag for a category of entities to a given value, so that subsequently created entities in the same category will not have tags smaller than the given value.
< Recursive > Hide { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … }
Hide the entities listed in expression-list-or-all.
Hide { : }
Hide all entities.
< Recursive > Show { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … }
Show the entities listed in expression-list-or-all.
Show { : }
Show all entities.
Sphere | PolarSphere ( expression ) = {expression, expression};
Change the current (surface) geometry used by the built-in geometry kernel to a (polar) sphere, defined by the two point tags specified on the right hand side. The expression between parentheses on the left hand side specifies a new unique tag for this geometry.
Parametric Surface ( expression ) = "string" "string" "string";
Change the current (surface) geometry used by the built-in geometry kernel to a parametric surface defined by the three strings expression evaluating to the x, y and z coordinates. The expression between parentheses on the left hand side specifies a new unique tag for this geometry.
Coordinates Surface expression;
Change the current (surface) geometry used by the built-in geometry kernel to the geometry identified by the given expression.
Euclidian Coordinates ;
Restore the default planar geometry for the built-in geometry kernel.
Next: Post-processing scripting commands, Previous: Geometry scripting commands, Up: Gmsh scripting language [Contents][Index]
The mesh module scripting commands allow to modify the mesh element sizes and specify structured grid parameters. Certain meshing actions (e.g. “mesh all the surfaces”) can also be specified in the script files, but are usually performed either in the GUI or on the command line (see Gmsh graphical user interface, and Gmsh command-line interface).
• Mesh element sizes | ||
• Structured grids | ||
• Other mesh commands |
Next: Structured grids, Previous: Mesh scripting commands, Up: Mesh scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Here are the mesh commands that are related to the specification of mesh element sizes:
MeshSize { expression-list } = expression;
Modify the prescribed mesh element size of the points whose tags are listed in expression-list. The new value is given by expression.
Field[expression] = string;
Create a new field (with tag expression), of type string.
Field[expression].string = string-expression | expression | expression-list;
Set the option string of the expression-th field.
Background Field = expression;
Select the expression-th field as the one used to compute element
sizes. Only one background field can be given; if you want to combine
several field, use the Min
or Max
field (see below).
Next: Other mesh commands, Previous: Mesh element sizes, Up: Mesh scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Extrude { expression-list } { extrude-list layers }
Extrude both the geometry and the mesh using a translation (see Extrusions). The layers option determines how the mesh is extruded and has the following syntax:
layers:
Layers { expression } | Layers { { expression-list }, { expression-list } } | Recombine < expression >; … QuadTriNoNewVerts <RecombLaterals>; | QuadTriAddVerts <RecombLaterals>; ...
In the first Layers
form, expression gives the number of
elements to be created in the (single) layer. In the second form, the
first expression-list defines how many elements should be created
in each extruded layer, and the second expression-list gives the
normalized height of each layer (the list should contain a sequence of
n numbers 0 < h1 < h2 < … < hn <= 1). See
t3, for an example.
For curve extrusions, the Recombine
option will recombine triangles
into quadrangles when possible. For surface extrusions, the
Recombine
option will recombine tetrahedra into prisms, hexahedra or
pyramids.
Please note that, starting with Gmsh 2.0, region tags cannot be
specified explicitly anymore in Layers
commands. Instead, as with
all other geometry commands, you must use the automatically created
entity identifier created by the extrusion command. For example, the
following extrusion command will return the tag of the new “top”
surface in num[0]
and the tag of the new volume in num[1]
:
num[] = Extrude {0,0,1} { Surface{1}; Layers{10}; };
QuadTriNoNewVerts
and QuadTriAddVerts
allow to connect
structured, extruded volumes containing quadrangle-faced elements to
structured or unstructured tetrahedral volumes, by subdividing into
triangles any quadrangles on boundary surfaces shared with tetrahedral
volumes. (They have no effect for 1D or 2D extrusions.)
QuadTriNoNewVerts
subdivides any of the region’s quad-faced 3D
elements that touch these boundary triangles into pyramids, prisms, or
tetrahedra as necessary, all without adding new
nodes. QuadTriAddVerts
works in a similar way, but subdivides 3D
elements touching the boundary triangles by adding a new node inside
each element at the node-based centroid. Either method results in a
structured extrusion with an outer layer of subdivided elements that
interface the inner, unmodified elements to the triangle-meshed region
boundaries.
In some rare cases, due to certain lateral boundary conditions, it may
not be possible make a valid element subdivision with
QuadTriNoNewVerts
without adding additional nodes. In this
case, an internal node is created at the node-based centroid of the
element. The element is then divided using that node. When an internal
node is created with QuadTriNoNewVerts
, the user is alerted by
a warning message sent for each instance; however, the mesh will still
be valid and conformal.
Both QuadTriNoNewVerts
and QuadTriAddVerts
can be used
with the optional RecombLaterals
keyword. By default, the QuadTri
algorithms will mesh any free laterals as triangles, if
possible. RecombLaterals
forces any free laterals to remain as
quadrangles, if possible. Lateral surfaces between two QuadTri regions
will always be meshed as quadrangles.
Note that the QuadTri algorithms will handle all potential meshing conflicts along the lateral surfaces of the extrusion. In other words, QuadTri will not subdivide a lateral that must remain as quadrangles, nor will it leave a lateral as quadrangles if it must be divided. The user should therefore feel free to mix different types of neighboring regions with a QuadTri meshed region; the mesh should work. However, be aware that the top surface of the QuadTri extrusion will always be meshed as triangles, unless it is extruded back onto the original source in a toroidal loop (a case which also works with QuadTri).
QuadTriNoNewVerts
and QuadTriAddVerts
may be used
interchangeably, but QuadTriAddVerts
often gives better element
quality.
If the user wishes to interface a structured extrusion to a tetrahedral volume without modifying the original structured mesh, the user may create dedicated interface volumes around the structured geometry and apply a QuadTri algorithm to those volumes only.
Extrude { { expression-list }, { expression-list }, expression } { extrude-list layers }
Extrude both the geometry and the mesh using a rotation (see Extrusions). The layers option is defined as above. With the built-in geometry kernel the angle should be strictly smaller than Pi. With the OpenCASCADE kernel the angle should be strictly smaller than 2 Pi.
Extrude { { expression-list }, { expression-list }, { expression-list }, expression } { extrude-list layers }
Extrude both the geometry and the mesh using a combined translation and rotation (see Extrusions). The layers option is defined as above. With the built-in geometry kernel the angle should be strictly smaller than Pi. With the OpenCASCADE kernel the angle should be strictly smaller than 2 Pi.
Extrude { Surface { expression-list }; layers < Using Index[expr]; > < Using View[expr]; > < ScaleLastLayer; > }
Extrude a “topological” boundary layer from the specified surfaces. If
no view is specified, the mesh of the boundary layer entities is created
using a gouraud-shaded (smoothed) normal field. If a scalar view is
specified, it locally prescribes the thickness of the layer. If a
vector-valued view is specified it locally prescribes both the extrusion
direction and the thickness. Specifying a boundary layer index allows to
extrude several independent boundary layers (with independent normal
smoothing). ScaleLastLayer
scales the height of the last (top)
layer of each normal’s extrusion by the average length of the edges in
all the source elements that contain the source node (actually, the
average of the averages for each element–edges actually touching the
source node are counted twice). This allows the height of the last layer
to vary along with the size of the source elements in order to achieve
better element quality. For example, in a boundary layer extruded with
the Layers definition ’Layers{ {1,4,2}, {0.5, 0.6, 1.6} },’ a
source node adjacent to elements with an overall average edge length of
5.0 will extrude to have a last layer height = (1.6-0.6) * 5.0 =
5.0. Topological boundary layers are only available with the built-in
kernel. See
sphere_boundary_layer.geo
or
sphere_boundary_layer_from_view.geo
for .geo file examples, and
aneurysm.py for an API
example.
The advantage of this approach is that it provides a topological
description of the boundary layer, which means that it can be connected
to other geometrical entities. The disadvantage is that the mesh is just
a “simple” extrusion: no fans, no special treatments of reentrant
corners, etc. Another boundary layer algorithm is currently available
through the BoundaryLayer
field (see Specifying mesh element sizes). It only works in 2D however, and is a meshing constraint: it
works directly at the mesh level, without creating geometrical
entities. See
e.g. BL0.geo or
naca12_2d.geo.
Transfinite Curve { expression-list-or-all } = expression < Using Progression | Bump expression >;
Select the curves in expression-list to be meshed with the 1D
transfinite algorithm. The expression on the right hand side gives
the number of nodes that will be created on the curve (this overrides
any other mesh element size prescription—see Specifying mesh element sizes). The optional argument ‘Using Progression
expression
’ instructs the transfinite algorithm to distribute the
nodes following a geometric progression (Progression 2
meaning
for example that each line element in the series will be twice as long
as the preceding one). The optional argument ‘Using Bump
expression
’ instructs the transfinite algorithm to distribute the
nodes with a refinement at both ends of the curve. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Transfinite Surface { expression-list-or-all } < = { expression-list } > < Left | Right | Alternate | AlternateRight | AlternateLeft > ;
Select surfaces to be meshed with the 2D transfinite algorithm. The
expression-list on the right-hand-side should contain the tags of
three or four points on the boundary of the surface that define the
corners of the transfinite interpolation. If no tags are given, the
transfinite algorithm will try to find the corners automatically. The
optional argument specifies the way the triangles are oriented when the
mesh is not recombined. Alternate
is a synonym for
AlternateRight
. For 3-sided surfaces a specific algorithm can be
used to generate structured triangular by setting
Mesh.TransfiniteTri
to 1. Examples can be found in
benchmarks/transfinite.
This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Transfinite Volume { expression-list } < = { expression-list } > ;
Select five- or six-face volumes to be meshed with the 3D transfinite algorithm. The expression-list on the right-hand-side should contain the tags of the six or eight points on the boundary of the volume that define the corners of the transfinite interpolation. If no tags are given, the transfinite algorithm will try to find the corners automatically. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
TransfQuadTri { expression-list } ;
Apply the transfinite QuadTri algorithm on the expression-list
list of volumes. A transfinite volume with any combination of
recombined and un-recombined transfinite boundary surfaces is valid when
meshed with TransfQuadTri
. When applied to non-Transfinite
volumes, TransfQuadTri has no effect on those volumes. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Previous: Structured grids, Up: Mesh scripting commands [Contents][Index]
Here is a list of all other mesh commands currently available:
Mesh expression;
Generate expression-D mesh. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
TransformMesh { expression-list };
Transform all the node coordinates in the current mesh using the 4x4 affine transformation matrix given by row (only 12 entries can be provided for convenience).
TransformMesh { expression-list } { transform-list };
Transform the node coordinates in the current mesh of all the elementary entities in transform-list using the 4x4 affine transformation matrix given by row (only 12 entries can be provided for convenience).
RefineMesh;
Refine the current mesh by splitting all elements. If
Mesh.SecondOrderLinear
is set, the new nodes are inserted by
linear interpolation. Otherwise they are snapped on the actual
geometry. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
OptimizeMesh string-expression;
Optimize the current mesh with the given algorithm (currently
"Gmsh"
for default tetrahedral mesh optimizer, "Netgen"
for Netgen optimizer, "HighOrder"
for direct high-order mesh
optimizer, "HighOrderElastic"
for high-order elastic smoother,
"HighOrderFastCurving"
for fast curving algorithm,
"UntangleTets''
for untangling tetrahedral meshes,
"UntangleTris''
for untangling xy-planar triangular meshes,
"Laplace2D"
for Laplace smoothing, "Relocate2D"
and
"Relocate3D"
for node relocation).
AdaptMesh { expression-list } { expression-list } { { expression-list < , … > } };
Perform adaptive mesh generation. Documentation not yet available.
RelocateMesh Point | Curve | Surface { expression-list-or-all };
Relocate the mesh nodes on the given entities using the parametric coordinates stored in the nodes. Useful for creating perturbation of meshes e.g. for sensitivity analyzes. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
RecombineMesh;
Recombine the current mesh into quadrangles. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
SetOrder expression;
Change the order of the elements in the current mesh.
PartitionMesh expression;
Partition the mesh into expression, using current partitioning options.
Point | Curve { expression-list } In Surface { expression };
Add a meshing constraint to embed the point(s) or curve(s) in the given surface. The surface mesh will conform to the mesh of the point(s) or curves(s). This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Point | Curve | Surface { expression-list } In Volume { expression };
Add a meshing constraint to embed the point(s), curve(s) or surface(s) in the given volume. The volume mesh will conform to the mesh of the corresponding point(s), curve(s) or surface(s). This is only supported with the 3D Delaunay algorithms. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Periodic Curve { expression-list } = { expression-list } ;
Add a meshing constraint to force the mesh of the curves on the left-hand side to match the mesh of the curves on the right-hand side (masters). If used after meshing, generate the periodic node correspondence information assuming the mesh of the curves on the left-hand side effectively matches the mesh of the curves on the right-hand side. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Periodic Surface expression { expression-list } = expression { expression-list } ;
Add a meshing constraint to force the mesh of the surface on the left-hand side (with boundary edges specified between braces) to match the mesh of the master surface on the right-hand side (with boundary edges specified between braces). If used after meshing, generate the periodic node correspondence information assuming the mesh of the surface on the left-hand side effectively matches the mesh of the master surface on the right-hand side (useful for structured and extruded meshes). This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Periodic Curve | Surface { expression-list } = { expression-list } Affine | Translate { expression-list } ;
Add a meshing constraint to force mesh of curves or surfaces on the
left-hand side to match the mesh of the curves or surfaces on the
right-hand side (masters), using prescribed geometrical
transformations. If used after meshing, generate the periodic node
correspondence information assuming the mesh of the curves or surfaces
on the left-hand side effectively matches the mesh of the curves or
surfaces on the right-hand side (useful for structured and extruded
meshes). Affine
takes a 4 x 4 affine transformation matrix given
by row (only 12 entries can be provided for convenience);
Translate
takes the 3 components of the translation as in
Transformations. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Periodic Curve | Surface { expression-list } = { expression-list } Rotate { expression-list }, { expression-list }, expression } ;
Add a meshing constraint to force the mesh of curves or surfaces on the left-hand side to match the mesh of the curves on the right-hand side (masters), using a rotation specified as in Transformations. If used after meshing, generate the periodic node correspondence information assuming the mesh of the curves or surfaces on the left-hand side effectively matches the mesh of the curves or surfaces on the right-hand side (useful for structured and extruded meshes). This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Coherence Mesh;
Remove all duplicate mesh nodes in the current mesh.
CreateTopology < { expression , expression } > ;
Create a boundary representation from the mesh of the current model if the model does not have one (e.g. when imported from mesh file formats with no BRep representation of the underlying model). If the first optional argument is set (or not given), make all volumes and surfaces simply connected first; if the second optional argument is set (or not given), clear any built-in CAD kernel entities and export the discrete entities in the built-in CAD kernel.
CreateGeometry < { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … } > ;
Create a geometry for discrete entities (represented solely by a mesh, without an underlying CAD description) in the current model, i.e. create a parametrization for discrete curves and surfaces, assuming that each can be parametrized with a single map. If no entities are given, create a geometry for all discrete entities.
ClassifySurfaces { expression , expression , expression < , expression > };
Classify (“color”) the current surface mesh based on an angle
threshold (the first argument, in radians), and create new discrete
surfaces, curves and points accordingly. If the second argument is set,
also create discrete curves on the boundary if the surface is open. If
the third argument is set, create edges and surfaces that can be
reparametrized with CreateGeometry
. The last optional argument
sets an angle threshold to force splitting of the generated curves.
RenumberMeshNodes;
Renumber the node tags in the current mesh in a continuous sequence.
RenumberMeshElements;
Renumber the elements tags in the current mesh in a continuous sequence.
< Recursive > Color color-expression { <Physical> Point | Curve | Surface | Volume { expression-list-or-all }; … }
Set the mesh color of the entities in expression-list to color-expression. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Recombine Surface { expression-list-or-all } < = expression >;
Recombine the triangular meshes of the surfaces listed in expression-list into mixed triangular/quadrangular meshes. The optional expression on the right hand side specifies the maximum difference (in degrees) allowed between the largest angle of a quadrangle and a right angle (a value of 0 would only accept quadrangles with right angles; a value of 90 would allow degenerate quadrangles; default value is 45). This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
MeshAlgorithm Surface { expression-list } = expression;
Specify the meshing algorithm for the surfaces expression-list.
MeshSizeFromBoundary Surface { expression-list } = expression;
Force the mesh size to be extended from the boundary (or not, depending on the value of expression) for the surfaces expression-list.
Compound Curve | Surface { expression-list-or-all } ;
Treat the given entities as a single entity when meshing, i.e. perform cross-patch meshing of the entities.
ReverseMesh Curve | Surface { expression-list-or-all } ;
Add a constraint to reverse the orientation of the mesh of the given curve(s) or surface(s) during meshing. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
ReorientMesh Volume { expression-list } ;
Add a constraint to reorient the meshes (during mesh generation) of the bounding surfaces of the given volumes so that the normals point outward to the volumes; and if a mesh already exists, reorient it. Currently only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel, as it relies on the STL triangulation. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Save string-expression;
Save the current mesh in a file named string-expression, using the
current Mesh.Format
(see Mesh options). If the path in
string-expression is not absolute, string-expression is appended
to the path of the current file. This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Smoother Surface { expression-list } = expression;
Set the number of elliptic smoothing steps for the surfaces listed in expression-list (smoothing only applies to transfinite meshes at the moment). This operation triggers a synchronization of the CAD model with the internal Gmsh model.
Homology ( { expression-list } ) { { expression-list } , { expression-list } };
Compute a basis representation for homology spaces after a mesh has been generated. The first expression-list is a list of dimensions whose homology bases are computed; if empty, all bases are computed. The second expression-list is a list physical groups that constitute the computation domain; if empty, the whole mesh is the domain. The third expression-list is a list of physical groups that constitute the relative subdomain of relative homology computation; if empty, absolute homology is computed. Resulting basis representation chains are stored as physical groups in the mesh.
Cohomology ( { expression-list } ) { { expression-list } , { expression-list } };
Similar to command Homology
, but computes a basis representation
for cohomology spaces instead.
Previous: Mesh scripting commands, Up: Gmsh scripting language [Contents][Index]
Here is the list of available post-processing scripting commands.
Alias View[expression];
Create an alias of the expression-th post-processing view.
Note that Alias
creates a logical duplicate of the view without
actually duplicating the data in memory. This is very useful when you want
multiple simultaneous renderings of the same large dataset (usually with
different display options), but you cannot afford to store all copies in
memory. If what you really want is multiple physical copies of the data,
just merge the file containing the post-processing view multiple times.
AliasWithOptions View[expression];
Create an alias of the expression-th post-processing view and copies all the options of the expression-th view to the new aliased view.
CopyOptions View[expression, expression];
Copy all the options from the first expression-th post-processing view to the second one.
Combine ElementsByViewName;
Combine all the post-processing views having the same name into new views. The combination is done “spatially”, i.e., simply by appending the elements at the end of the new views.
Combine ElementsFromAllViews | Combine Views;
Combine all the post-processing views into a single new view. The combination is done “spatially”, i.e., simply by appending the elements at the end of the new view.
Combine ElementsFromVisibleViews;
Combine all the visible post-processing views into a single new view. The combination is done “spatially”, i.e., simply by appending the elements at the end of the new view.
Combine TimeStepsByViewName | Combine TimeSteps;
Combine the data from all the post-processing views having the same name into new multi-time-step views. The combination is done “temporally”, i.e., as if the data in each view corresponds to a different time instant. The combination will fail if the meshes in all the views are not identical.
Combine TimeStepsFromAllViews;
Combine the data from all the post-processing views into a new multi-time-step view. The combination is done “temporally”, i.e., as if the data in each view corresponds to a different time instant. The combination will fail if the meshes in all the views are not identical.
Combine TimeStepsFromVisibleViews;
Combine the data from all the visible post-processing views into a new multi-time-step view. The combination is done “temporally”, i.e., as if the data in each view corresponds to a different time instant. The combination will fail if the meshes in all the views are not identical.
Delete View[expression];
Delete (remove) the expression-th post-processing view. Note that post-processing view indices start at 0.
Delete Empty Views;
Delete (remove) all the empty post-processing views.
Background Mesh View[expression];
Apply the expression-th post-processing view as the current background mesh. Note that post-processing view indices start at 0.
Plugin (string) . Run;
Execute the plugin string. The list of default plugins is given in Gmsh plugins.
Plugin (string) . string = expression | string-expression;
Set an option for a given plugin. See Gmsh plugins, for a list of default plugins and t9, for some examples.
Save View[expression] string-expression;
Save the expression-th post-processing view in a file named string-expression. If the path in string-expression is not absolute, string-expression is appended to the path of the current file.
SendToServer View[expression] string-expression;
Send the expression-th post-processing view to the ONELAB server, with parameter name string-expression.
View "string" { string < ( expression-list ) > { expression-list }; … };
Create a new post-processing view, named "string"
. This is
an easy and quite powerful way to import post-processing data: all the
values are expressions, you can embed datasets directly into your
geometrical descriptions (see, e.g., t4), the data can be easily
generated “on-the-fly” (there is no header containing a priori
information on the size of the dataset). The syntax is also very
permissive, which makes it ideal for testing purposes.
However this “parsed format” is read by Gmsh’s script parser, which makes it inefficient if there are many elements in the dataset. Also, there is no connectivity information in parsed views and all the elements are independent (all fields can be discontinuous), so a lot of information can be duplicated. For large datasets, you should thus use the mesh-based post-processing file format described in Gmsh file formats, or use one of the standard formats like MED.
More explicitly, the syntax for a parsed View
is the following
View "string" { type ( coordinates ) { values }; … < TIME { expression-list }; > < INTERPOLATION_SCHEME { val-coef-matrix } { val-exp-matrix } < { geo-coef-matrix } { geo-exp-matrix } > ; > };
where the 47 object types that can be displayed are:
type #coordinates #values ------------------------------------------------------------- Scalar point SP 3 1 * nb-time-steps Vector point VP 3 3 * nb-time-steps Tensor point TP 3 9 * nb-time-steps Scalar line SL 6 2 * nb-time-steps Vector line VL 6 6 * nb-time-steps Tensor line TL 6 18 * nb-time-steps Scalar triangle ST 9 3 * nb-time-steps Vector triangle VT 9 9 * nb-time-steps Tensor triangle TT 9 27 * nb-time-steps Scalar quadrangle SQ 12 4 * nb-time-steps Vector quadrangle VQ 12 12 * nb-time-steps Tensor quadrangle TQ 12 36 * nb-time-steps Scalar tetrahedron SS 12 4 * nb-time-steps Vector tetrahedron VS 12 12 * nb-time-steps Tensor tetrahedron TS 12 36 * nb-time-steps Scalar hexahedron SH 24 8 * nb-time-steps Vector hexahedron VH 24 24 * nb-time-steps Tensor hexahedron TH 24 72 * nb-time-steps Scalar prism SI 18 6 * nb-time-steps Vector prism VI 18 18 * nb-time-steps Tensor prism TI 18 54 * nb-time-steps Scalar pyramid SY 15 5 * nb-time-steps Vector pyramid VY 15 15 * nb-time-steps Tensor pyramid TY 15 45 * nb-time-steps 2D text T2 3 arbitrary 3D text T3 4 arbitrary
The coordinates are given ‘by node’, i.e.,
(coord1, coord2, coord3)
for a point,
(coord1-node1, coord2-node1, coord3-node1,
coord1-node2, coord2-node2, coord3-node2)
for a line,
(coord1-node1, coord2-node1, coord3-node1,
coord1-node2, coord2-node2, coord3-node2,
coord1-node3, coord2-node3, coord3-node3)
for a triangle,
The ordering of the nodes is given in Node ordering.
The values are given by time step, by node and by component, i.e.:
comp1-node1-time1, comp2-node1-time1, comp3-node1-time1, comp1-node2-time1, comp2-node2-time1, comp3-node2-time1, comp1-node3-time1, comp2-node3-time1, comp3-node3-time1, comp1-node1-time2, comp2-node1-time2, comp3-node1-time2, comp1-node2-time2, comp2-node2-time2, comp3-node2-time2, comp1-node3-time2, comp2-node3-time2, comp3-node3-time2, …
For the 2D text objects, the two first expressions in coordinates give the X-Y position of the string in screen coordinates, measured from the top-left corner of the window. If the first (respectively second) expression is negative, the position is measured from the right (respectively bottom) edge of the window. If the value of the first (respectively second) expression is larger than 99999, the string is centered horizontally (respectively vertically). If the third expression is equal to zero, the text is aligned bottom-left and displayed using the default font and size. Otherwise, the third expression is converted into an integer whose eight lower bits give the font size, whose eight next bits select the font (the index corresponds to the position in the font menu in the GUI), and whose eight next bits define the text alignment (0=bottom-left, 1=bottom-center, 2=bottom-right, 3=top-left, 4=top-center, 5=top-right, 6=center-left, 7=center-center, 8=center-right).
For the 3D text objects, the three first expressions in coordinates give the XYZ position of the string in model (real world) coordinates. The fourth expression has the same meaning as the third expression in 2D text objects.
For both 2D and 3D text objects, the values can contain an
arbitrary number of string-expressions. If the
string-expression starts with file://
, the remainder of the
string is interpreted as the name of an image file, and the image is
displayed instead of the string. A format string in the form
@wxh
or @wxh,wx,wy,wz,hx,hy,hz
, where w
and
h
are the width and height (in model coordinates for T3
or
in pixels for T2
) of the image, wx,wy,wz
is the direction
of the bottom edge of the image and hx,hy,hz
is the direction of
the left edge of the image.
The optional TIME
list can contain a list of expressions giving the
value of the time (or any other variable) for which an evolution was saved.
The optional INTERPOLATION_SCHEME
lists can contain the
interpolation matrices used for high-order adaptive visualization.
Let us assume that the approximation of the view’s value over an element is written as a linear combination of d basis functions f[i], i=0, ..., d-1 (the coefficients being stored in values). Defining f[i] = Sum(j=0, ..., d-1) F[i][j] p[j], with p[j] = u^P[j][0] v^P[j][1] w^P[j][2] (u, v and w being the coordinates in the element’s parameter space), then val-coef-matrix denotes the d x d matrix F and val-exp-matrix denotes the d x 3 matrix P.
In the same way, let us also assume that the coordinates x, y and z of the element are obtained through a geometrical mapping from parameter space as a linear combination of m basis functions g[i], i=0, ..., m-1 (the coefficients being stored in coordinates). Defining g[i] = Sum(j=0, ..., m-1) G[i][j] q[j], with q[j] = u^Q[j][0] v^Q[j][1] w^Q[j][2], then geo-coef-matrix denotes the m x m matrix G and geo-exp-matrix denotes the m x 3 matrix Q.
Here are for example the interpolation matrices for a first order quadrangle:
INTERPOLATION_SCHEME { {1/4,-1/4, 1/4,-1/4}, {1/4, 1/4,-1/4,-1/4}, {1/4, 1/4, 1/4, 1/4}, {1/4,-1/4,-1/4, 1/4} } { {0, 0, 0}, {1, 0, 0}, {0, 1, 0}, {1, 1, 0} };
Next: Gmsh options, Previous: Gmsh scripting language, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
The Gmsh application programming interface (API) allows to integrate the Gmsh library in external applications written in C++, C, Python, Julia or Fortran. By design, the Gmsh API is purely functional, and only uses elementary types from the target languages. See the tutorials/c++, tutorials/c, tutorials/python, tutorials/julia and tutorials/fortran directories from the Gmsh tutorial for examples. For other API examples, see the examples/api directory.
The different versions of the API are generated automatically from the master API definition file api/gen.py:
The additional
gmsh.h_cwrap
header redefines the C++ API in terms of the C API. This is provided as
a convenience for users of the binary Gmsh
Software Development Kit (SDK) whose C++ compiler Application Binary
Interface (ABI) is not compatible with the ABI of the C++ compiler used
to create the SDK. To use these C++ bindings of the C API instead of the
native C++ API, simply rename gmsh.h_cwrap
as gmsh.h
. Note
that this will lead to (slightly) reduced performance compared to using
the native Gmsh C++ API, as it entails additional data copies between
the C++ wrapper, the C API and the native C++ code.
The structure of the API reflects the underlying Gmsh data model (see also Source code structure):
gmsh/model
and gmsh/view
,
respectively. The other top-level namespaces are gmsh/option
(which handles all options), gmsh/plugin
(which handles
extensions to core Gmsh functionality), gmsh/graphics
(which
handles drawing), gmsh/fltk
(which handles the graphical user
interface), gmsh/parser
(which handles the Gmsh parser),
gmsh/onelab
(which handles ONELAB parameters and communications
with external codes) and gmsh/logger
(which handles information
logging).
gmsh/model/geo
or gmsh/model/occ
namespaces,
respectively), as Gmsh does not translate across CAD formats but rather
directly accesses the native representation. CAD entities must be
synchronized with the model in order to be meshed, or, more
generally, for functions outside of gmsh/model/geo
or
gmsh/model/occ
to manipulate them. 1D and 2D meshing algorithms
use the parametrization of the underlying geometrical curve or
surface to generate the mesh. Discrete entities can be remeshed provided
that a parametrization is explicitly recomputed for them.
gmsh/model/mesh
namespace.
All the functions available in the API are given below. See the relevant
header/module file for the exact definition in each supported language:
in C++
gmsh/model/geo/addPoint
will lead to a namespaced function
gmsh::model::geo::addPoint
, while in
Python and
Julia it will lead to
gmsh.model.geo.addPoint
, in
C to gmshModelGeoAddPoint
and in Fortran to
gmsh%model%geo%addPoint
. In addition to the default
“camelCase” function names, the Python and Julia APIs also define
“snake case” aliases, i.e. gmsh.model.geo.add_point
, as this is
the recommended style in these languages. Output values are passed by
reference in C++, as pointers in C and directly returned (after the
return value, if any) in Python and Julia.
gmsh
: top-level functionsgmsh/initialize
Initialize the Gmsh API. This must be called before any call to the other functions in the API. If argc
and argv
(or just argv
in Python or Julia) are provided, they will be handled in the same way as the command line arguments in the Gmsh app. If readConfigFiles
is set, read system Gmsh configuration files (gmshrc and gmsh-options). If run
is set, run in the same way as the Gmsh app, either interactively or in batch mode depending on the command line arguments. If run
is not set, initializing the API sets the options "General.AbortOnError" to 2 and "General.Terminal" to 1.
gmsh/isInitialized
Return 1 if the Gmsh API is initialized, and 0 if not.
gmsh/finalize
Finalize the Gmsh API. This must be called when you are done using the Gmsh API.
gmsh/open
Open a file. Equivalent to the File->Open
menu in the Gmsh app. Handling of the file depends on its extension and/or its contents: opening a file with model data will create a new model.
fileName
(string)
-
-
C++ (x1.cpp), Python (x1.py, explore.py, flatten2.py, flatten.py, heal.py, ...)
gmsh/merge
Merge a file. Equivalent to the File->Merge
menu in the Gmsh app. Handling of the file depends on its extension and/or its contents. Merging a file with model data will add the data to the current model.
gmsh/write
Write a file. The export format is determined by the file extension.
gmsh/clear
Clear all loaded models and post-processing data, and add a new empty model.
Next: Namespace gmsh/model, Previous: Namespace gmsh, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/option
: option handling functionsgmsh/option/setNumber
Set a numerical option to value
. name
is of the form "Category.Option" or "Category[num].Option". Available categories and options are listed in the "Gmsh options" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/option/getNumber
Get the value
of a numerical option. name
is of the form "Category.Option" or "Category[num].Option". Available categories and options are listed in the "Gmsh options" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/option/setString
Set a string option to value
. name
is of the form "Category.Option" or "Category[num].Option". Available categories and options are listed in the "Gmsh options" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/option/getString
Get the value
of a string option. name
is of the form "Category.Option" or "Category[num].Option". Available categories and options are listed in the "Gmsh options" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/option/setColor
Set a color option to the RGBA value (r
, g
, b
, a
), where where r
, g
, b
and a
should be integers between 0 and 255. name
is of the form "Category.Color.Option" or "Category[num].Color.Option". Available categories and options are listed in the "Gmsh options" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual. For conciseness "Color." can be ommitted in name
.
gmsh/option/getColor
Get the r
, g
, b
, a
value of a color option. name
is of the form "Category.Color.Option" or "Category[num].Color.Option". Available categories and options are listed in the "Gmsh options" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual. For conciseness "Color." can be ommitted in name
.
gmsh/option/restoreDefaults
Restore all options to default settings.
Next: Namespace gmsh/model/mesh, Previous: Namespace gmsh/option, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model
: model functionsgmsh/model/add
Add a new model, with name name
, and set it as the current model.
gmsh/model/remove
Remove the current model.
gmsh/model/list
List the names of all models.
gmsh/model/getCurrent
Get the name of the current model.
gmsh/model/setCurrent
Set the current model to the model with name name
. If several models have the same name, select the one that was added first.
name
(string)
-
-
Python (copy_mesh.py)
gmsh/model/getFileName
Get the file name (if any) associated with the current model. A file name is associated when a model is read from a file on disk.
gmsh/model/setFileName
Set the file name associated with the current model.
gmsh/model/getEntities
Get all the entities in the current model. A model entity is represented by two integers: its dimension (dim == 0, 1, 2 or 3) and its tag (its unique, strictly positive identifier). If dim
is >= 0, return only the entities of the specified dimension (e.g. points if dim
== 0). The entities are returned as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
gmsh/model/setEntityName
Set the name of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/getEntityName
Get the name of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/removeEntityName
Remove the entity name name
from the current model.
gmsh/model/getPhysicalGroups
Get all the physical groups in the current model. If dim
is >= 0, return only the entities of the specified dimension (e.g. physical points if dim
== 0). The entities are returned as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
dim = -1
(integer)
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
Python (poisson.py)
gmsh/model/getEntitiesForPhysicalGroup
Get the tags of the model entities making up the physical group of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/getEntitiesForPhysicalName
Get the model entities (as a vector (dim, tag) pairs) making up the physical group with name name
.
gmsh/model/getPhysicalGroupsForEntity
Get the tags of the physical groups (if any) to which the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
belongs.
gmsh/model/addPhysicalGroup
Add a physical group of dimension dim
, grouping the model entities with tags tags
. Return the tag of the physical group, equal to tag
if tag
is positive, or a new tag if tag
< 0. Set the name of the physical group if name
is not empty.
gmsh/model/removePhysicalGroups
Remove the physical groups dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) from the current model. If dimTags
is empty, remove all groups.
gmsh/model/setPhysicalName
Set the name of the physical group of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), name
(string)
-
-
Python (poisson.py, step_assembly.py)
gmsh/model/getPhysicalName
Get the name of the physical group of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/removePhysicalName
Remove the physical name name
from the current model.
gmsh/model/setTag
Set the tag of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
to the new value newTag
.
gmsh/model/getBoundary
Get the boundary of the model entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. Return in outDimTags
the boundary of the individual entities (if combined
is false) or the boundary of the combined geometrical shape formed by all input entities (if combined
is true). Return tags multiplied by the sign of the boundary entity if oriented
is true. Apply the boundary operator recursively down to dimension 0 (i.e. to points) if recursive
is true.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), combined = True
(boolean), oriented = True
(boolean), recursive = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (t14.cpp, t16.cpp, t18.cpp, t19.cpp, t21.cpp), Python (t14.py, t16.py, t18.py, t19.py, t21.py, ...)
gmsh/model/getAdjacencies
Get the upward and downward adjacencies of the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. The upward
vector returns the tags of adjacent entities of dimension dim
+ 1; the downward
vector returns the tags of adjacent entities of dimension dim
- 1.
gmsh/model/getEntitiesInBoundingBox
Get the model entities in the bounding box defined by the two points (xmin
, ymin
, zmin
) and (xmax
, ymax
, zmax
). If dim
is >= 0, return only the entities of the specified dimension (e.g. points if dim
== 0).
xmin
(double), ymin
(double), zmin
(double), xmax
(double), ymax
(double), zmax
(double), dim = -1
(integer)
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (t16.cpp, t18.cpp, t20.cpp), Python (t16.py, t18.py, t20.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py)
gmsh/model/getBoundingBox
Get the bounding box (xmin
, ymin
, zmin
), (xmax
, ymax
, zmax
) of the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If dim
and tag
are negative, get the bounding box of the whole model.
gmsh/model/getDimension
Return the geometrical dimension of the current model.
gmsh/model/addDiscreteEntity
Add a discrete model entity (defined by a mesh) of dimension dim
in the current model. Return the tag of the new discrete entity, equal to tag
if tag
is positive, or a new tag if tag
< 0. boundary
specifies the tags of the entities on the boundary of the discrete entity, if any. Specifying boundary
allows Gmsh to construct the topology of the overall model.
gmsh/model/removeEntities
Remove the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) of the current model, provided that they are not on the boundary of (or embedded in) higher-dimensional entities. If recursive
is true, remove all the entities on their boundaries, down to dimension 0.
gmsh/model/getType
Get the type of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer)
entityType
(string)
-
C++ (t21.cpp, x1.cpp), Python (t21.py, x1.py, explore.py, partition.py)
gmsh/model/getParent
In a partitioned model, get the parent of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
, i.e. from which the entity is a part of, if any. parentDim
and parentTag
are set to -1 if the entity has no parent.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer)
parentDim
(integer), parentTag
(integer)
-
C++ (t21.cpp, x1.cpp), Python (t21.py, x1.py, explore.py, partition.py)
gmsh/model/getNumberOfPartitions
Return the number of partitions in the model.
gmsh/model/getPartitions
In a partitioned model, return the tags of the partition(s) to which the entity belongs.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer)
partitions
(vector of integers)
-
C++ (t21.cpp, x1.cpp), Python (t21.py, x1.py, explore.py, partition.py)
gmsh/model/getValue
Evaluate the parametrization of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
at the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
. Only valid for dim
equal to 0 (with empty parametricCoord
), 1 (with parametricCoord
containing parametric coordinates on the curve) or 2 (with parametricCoord
containing u, v parametric coordinates on the surface, concatenated: [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...]). Return x, y, z coordinates in coord
, concatenated: [p1x, p1y, p1z, p2x, ...].
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), parametricCoord
(vector of doubles)
coord
(vector of doubles)
-
C++ (t2.cpp, x5.cpp), Python (t2.py, x5.py, reparamOnFace.py, terrain_stl.py)
gmsh/model/getDerivative
Evaluate the derivative of the parametrization of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
at the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
. Only valid for dim
equal to 1 (with parametricCoord
containing parametric coordinates on the curve) or 2 (with parametricCoord
containing u, v parametric coordinates on the surface, concatenated: [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...]). For dim
equal to 1 return the x, y, z components of the derivative with respect to u [d1ux, d1uy, d1uz, d2ux, ...]; for dim
equal to 2 return the x, y, z components of the derivative with respect to u and v: [d1ux, d1uy, d1uz, d1vx, d1vy, d1vz, d2ux, ...].
gmsh/model/getSecondDerivative
Evaluate the second derivative of the parametrization of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
at the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
. Only valid for dim
equal to 1 (with parametricCoord
containing parametric coordinates on the curve) or 2 (with parametricCoord
containing u, v parametric coordinates on the surface, concatenated: [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...]). For dim
equal to 1 return the x, y, z components of the second derivative with respect to u [d1uux, d1uuy, d1uuz, d2uux, ...]; for dim
equal to 2 return the x, y, z components of the second derivative with respect to u and v, and the mixed derivative with respect to u and v: [d1uux, d1uuy, d1uuz, d1vvx, d1vvy, d1vvz, d1uvx, d1uvy, d1uvz, d2uux, ...].
gmsh/model/getCurvature
Evaluate the (maximum) curvature of the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
at the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
. Only valid for dim
equal to 1 (with parametricCoord
containing parametric coordinates on the curve) or 2 (with parametricCoord
containing u, v parametric coordinates on the surface, concatenated: [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...]).
gmsh/model/getPrincipalCurvatures
Evaluate the principal curvatures of the surface with tag tag
at the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
, as well as their respective directions. parametricCoord
are given by pair of u and v coordinates, concatenated: [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...].
gmsh/model/getNormal
Get the normal to the surface with tag tag
at the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
. The parametricCoord
vector should contain u and v coordinates, concatenated: [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...]. normals
are returned as a vector of x, y, z components, concatenated: [n1x, n1y, n1z, n2x, ...].
gmsh/model/getParametrization
Get the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
for the points coord
on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. coord
are given as x, y, z coordinates, concatenated: [p1x, p1y, p1z, p2x, ...]. parametricCoord
returns the parametric coordinates t on the curve (if dim
= 1) or u and v coordinates concatenated on the surface (if dim
== 2), i.e. [p1t, p2t, ...] or [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...].
gmsh/model/getParametrizationBounds
Get the min
and max
bounds of the parametric coordinates for the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/isInside
Check if the coordinates (or the parametric coordinates if parametric
is set) provided in coord
correspond to points inside the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
, and return the number of points inside. This feature is only available for a subset of entities, depending on the underlying geometrical representation.
gmsh/model/getClosestPoint
Get the points closestCoord
on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
to the points coord
, by orthogonal projection. coord
and closestCoord
are given as x, y, z coordinates, concatenated: [p1x, p1y, p1z, p2x, ...]. parametricCoord
returns the parametric coordinates t on the curve (if dim
== 1) or u and v coordinates concatenated on the surface (if dim
= 2), i.e. [p1t, p2t, ...] or [p1u, p1v, p2u, ...].
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), coord
(vector of doubles)
closestCoord
(vector of doubles), parametricCoord
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (closest_point.py)
gmsh/model/reparametrizeOnSurface
Reparametrize the boundary entity (point or curve, i.e. with dim
== 0 or dim
== 1) of tag tag
on the surface surfaceTag
. If dim
== 1, reparametrize all the points corresponding to the parametric coordinates parametricCoord
. Multiple matches in case of periodic surfaces can be selected with which
. This feature is only available for a subset of entities, depending on the underlying geometrical representation.
gmsh/model/setVisibility
Set the visibility of the model entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) to value
. Apply the visibility setting recursively if recursive
is true.
gmsh/model/getVisibility
Get the visibility of the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/setVisibilityPerWindow
Set the global visibility of the model per window to value
, where windowIndex
identifies the window in the window list.
gmsh/model/setColor
Set the color of the model entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) to the RGBA value (r
, g
, b
, a
), where r
, g
, b
and a
should be integers between 0 and 255. Apply the color setting recursively if recursive
is true.
gmsh/model/getColor
Get the color of the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If no color is specified for the entity, return fully transparent blue, i.e. (0, 0, 255, 0).
dim
(integer), tag
(integer)
r
(integer), g
(integer), b
(integer), a
(integer)
-
Python (step_boundary_colors.py)
gmsh/model/setCoordinates
Set the x
, y
, z
coordinates of a geometrical point.
gmsh/model/setAttribute
Set the values of the attribute with name name
.
name
(string), values
(vector of strings)
-
-
Python (msh_attributes.py)
gmsh/model/getAttribute
Get the values of the attribute with name name
.
name
(string)
values
(vector of strings)
-
Python (msh_attributes.py)
gmsh/model/getAttributeNames
Get the names of any optional attributes stored in the model.
-
names
(vector of strings)
-
Python (msh_attributes.py)
gmsh/model/removeAttribute
Remove the attribute with name name
.
Next: Namespace gmsh/model/mesh/field, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model/mesh
: mesh functionsgmsh/model/mesh/generate
Generate a mesh of the current model, up to dimension dim
(0, 1, 2 or 3).
gmsh/model/mesh/partition
Partition the mesh of the current model into numPart
partitions. Optionally, elementTags
and partitions
can be provided to specify the partition of each element explicitly.
gmsh/model/mesh/unpartition
Unpartition the mesh of the current model.
gmsh/model/mesh/optimize
Optimize the mesh of the current model using method
(empty for default tetrahedral mesh optimizer, "Netgen" for Netgen optimizer, "HighOrder" for direct high-order mesh optimizer, "HighOrderElastic" for high-order elastic smoother, "HighOrderFastCurving" for fast curving algorithm, "Laplace2D" for Laplace smoothing, "Relocate2D" and "Relocate3D" for node relocation, "QuadQuasiStructured" for quad mesh optimization, "UntangleMeshGeometry" for untangling). If force
is set apply the optimization also to discrete entities. If dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) is given, only apply the optimizer to the given entities.
method = ""
(string), force = False
(boolean), niter = 1
(integer), dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
Python (naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, opt.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/recombine
Recombine the mesh of the current model.
-
-
-
Python (stl_to_mesh.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/refine
Refine the mesh of the current model by uniformly splitting the elements.
gmsh/model/mesh/setOrder
Change the order of the elements in the mesh of the current model to order
.
order
(integer)
-
-
C++ (x6.cpp), Python (x6.py, hybrid_order.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getLastEntityError
Get the last entities dimTags
(as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) where a meshing error occurred. Currently only populated by the new 3D meshing algorithms.
gmsh/model/mesh/getLastNodeError
Get the last node tags nodeTags
where a meshing error occurred. Currently only populated by the new 3D meshing algorithms.
gmsh/model/mesh/clear
Clear the mesh, i.e. delete all the nodes and elements, for the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, clear the whole mesh. Note that the mesh of an entity can only be cleared if this entity is not on the boundary of another entity with a non-empty mesh.
dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
Python (copy_mesh.py, flatten.py, remesh_partial_move.py, remove_elements.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/removeElements
Remove the elements with tags elementTags
from the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If elementTags
is empty, remove all the elements classified on the entity. To get consistent node classification on model entities, reclassifyNodes()
should be called afterwards.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), elementTags = []
(vector of sizes)
-
-
Python (remove_elements.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/reverse
Reverse the orientation of the elements in the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, reverse the orientation of the elements in the whole mesh.
dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
Python (mirror_mesh.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/reverseElements
Reverse the orientation of the elements with tags elementTags
.
gmsh/model/mesh/affineTransform
Apply the affine transformation affineTransform
(16 entries of a 4x4 matrix, by row; only the 12 first can be provided for convenience) to the coordinates of the nodes classified on the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, transform all the nodes in the mesh.
affineTransform
(vector of doubles), dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
Python (flatten2.py, remesh_partial_move.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getNodes
Get the nodes classified on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If tag
< 0, get the nodes for all entities of dimension dim
. If dim
and tag
are negative, get all the nodes in the mesh. nodeTags
contains the node tags (their unique, strictly positive identification numbers). coord
is a vector of length 3 times the length of nodeTags
that contains the x, y, z coordinates of the nodes, concatenated: [n1x, n1y, n1z, n2x, ...]. If dim
>= 0 and returnParamtricCoord
is set, parametricCoord
contains the parametric coordinates ([u1, u2, ...] or [u1, v1, u2, ...]) of the nodes, if available. The length of parametricCoord
can be 0 or dim
times the length of nodeTags
. If includeBoundary
is set, also return the nodes classified on the boundary of the entity (which will be reparametrized on the entity if dim
>= 0 in order to compute their parametric coordinates).
dim = -1
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), includeBoundary = False
(boolean), returnParametricCoord = True
(boolean)
nodeTags
(vector of sizes), coord
(vector of doubles), parametricCoord
(vector of doubles)
-
C++ (x1.cpp, x4.cpp, x5.cpp), Python (x1.py, x4.py, x5.py, adapt_mesh.py, copy_mesh.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/getNodesByElementType
Get the nodes classified on the entity of tag tag
, for all the elements of type elementType
. The other arguments are treated as in getNodes
.
elementType
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), returnParametricCoord = True
(boolean)
nodeTags
(vector of sizes), coord
(vector of doubles), parametricCoord
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (stl_to_brep.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getNode
Get the coordinates and the parametric coordinates (if any) of the node with tag tag
, as well as the dimension dim
and tag tag
of the entity on which the node is classified. This function relies on an internal cache (a vector in case of dense node numbering, a map otherwise); for large meshes accessing nodes in bulk is often preferable.
gmsh/model/mesh/setNode
Set the coordinates and the parametric coordinates (if any) of the node with tag tag
. This function relies on an internal cache (a vector in case of dense node numbering, a map otherwise); for large meshes accessing nodes in bulk is often preferable.
gmsh/model/mesh/rebuildNodeCache
Rebuild the node cache.
gmsh/model/mesh/rebuildElementCache
Rebuild the element cache.
gmsh/model/mesh/getNodesForPhysicalGroup
Get the nodes from all the elements belonging to the physical group of dimension dim
and tag tag
. nodeTags
contains the node tags; coord
is a vector of length 3 times the length of nodeTags
that contains the x, y, z coordinates of the nodes, concatenated: [n1x, n1y, n1z, n2x, ...].
gmsh/model/mesh/getMaxNodeTag
Get the maximum tag maxTag
of a node in the mesh.
gmsh/model/mesh/addNodes
Add nodes classified on the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. nodeTags
contains the node tags (their unique, strictly positive identification numbers). coord
is a vector of length 3 times the length of nodeTags
that contains the x, y, z coordinates of the nodes, concatenated: [n1x, n1y, n1z, n2x, ...]. The optional parametricCoord
vector contains the parametric coordinates of the nodes, if any. The length of parametricCoord
can be 0 or dim
times the length of nodeTags
. If the nodeTags
vector is empty, new tags are automatically assigned to the nodes.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), nodeTags
(vector of sizes), coord
(vector of doubles), parametricCoord = []
(vector of doubles)
-
-
C++ (x2.cpp, x4.cpp), Python (x2.py, x4.py, copy_mesh.py, cylinderFFD.py, discrete.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/reclassifyNodes
Reclassify all nodes on their associated model entity, based on the elements. Can be used when importing nodes in bulk (e.g. by associating them all to a single volume), to reclassify them correctly on model surfaces, curves, etc. after the elements have been set.
-
-
-
C++ (x2.cpp), Python (x2.py, remove_elements.py, terrain.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/relocateNodes
Relocate the nodes classified on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
using their parametric coordinates. If tag
< 0, relocate the nodes for all entities of dimension dim
. If dim
and tag
are negative, relocate all the nodes in the mesh.
dim = -1
(integer), tag = -1
(integer)
-
-
Python (relocate_nodes.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getElements
Get the elements classified on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If tag
< 0, get the elements for all entities of dimension dim
. If dim
and tag
are negative, get all the elements in the mesh. elementTypes
contains the MSH types of the elements (e.g. 2
for 3-node triangles: see getElementProperties
to obtain the properties for a given element type). elementTags
is a vector of the same length as elementTypes
; each entry is a vector containing the tags (unique, strictly positive identifiers) of the elements of the corresponding type. nodeTags
is also a vector of the same length as elementTypes
; each entry is a vector of length equal to the number of elements of the given type times the number N of nodes for this type of element, that contains the node tags of all the elements of the given type, concatenated: [e1n1, e1n2, ..., e1nN, e2n1, ...].
dim = -1
(integer), tag = -1
(integer)
elementTypes
(vector of integers), elementTags
(vector of vectors of sizes), nodeTags
(vector of vectors of sizes)
-
C++ (x1.cpp), Python (x1.py, copy_mesh.py, cylinderFFD.py, explore.py, flatten.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/getElement
Get the type and node tags of the element with tag tag
, as well as the dimension dim
and tag tag
of the entity on which the element is classified. This function relies on an internal cache (a vector in case of dense element numbering, a map otherwise); for large meshes accessing elements in bulk is often preferable.
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementByCoordinates
Search the mesh for an element located at coordinates (x
, y
, z
). This function performs a search in a spatial octree. If an element is found, return its tag, type and node tags, as well as the local coordinates (u
, v
, w
) within the reference element corresponding to search location. If dim
is >= 0, only search for elements of the given dimension. If strict
is not set, use a tolerance to find elements near the search location.
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementsByCoordinates
Search the mesh for element(s) located at coordinates (x
, y
, z
). This function performs a search in a spatial octree. Return the tags of all found elements in elementTags
. Additional information about the elements can be accessed through getElement
and getLocalCoordinatesInElement
. If dim
is >= 0, only search for elements of the given dimension. If strict
is not set, use a tolerance to find elements near the search location.
gmsh/model/mesh/getLocalCoordinatesInElement
Return the local coordinates (u
, v
, w
) within the element elementTag
corresponding to the model coordinates (x
, y
, z
). This function relies on an internal cache (a vector in case of dense element numbering, a map otherwise); for large meshes accessing elements in bulk is often preferable.
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementTypes
Get the types of elements in the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If tag
< 0, get the types for all entities of dimension dim
. If dim
and tag
are negative, get all the types in the mesh.
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementType
Return an element type given its family name familyName
("Point", "Line", "Triangle", "Quadrangle", "Tetrahedron", "Pyramid", "Prism", "Hexahedron") and polynomial order order
. If serendip
is true, return the corresponding serendip element type (element without interior nodes).
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementProperties
Get the properties of an element of type elementType
: its name (elementName
), dimension (dim
), order (order
), number of nodes (numNodes
), local coordinates of the nodes in the reference element (localNodeCoord
vector, of length dim
times numNodes
) and number of primary (first order) nodes (numPrimaryNodes
).
elementType
(integer)
elementName
(string), dim
(integer), order
(integer), numNodes
(integer), localNodeCoord
(vector of doubles), numPrimaryNodes
(integer)
-
C++ (x1.cpp), Python (x1.py, x6.py, explore.py, poisson.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementsByType
Get the elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
. If tag
< 0, get the elements for all entities. elementTags
is a vector containing the tags (unique, strictly positive identifiers) of the elements of the corresponding type. nodeTags
is a vector of length equal to the number of elements of the given type times the number N of nodes for this type of element, that contains the node tags of all the elements of the given type, concatenated: [e1n1, e1n2, ..., e1nN, e2n1, ...]. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vectors must be preallocated).
elementType
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), task = 0
(size), numTasks = 1
(size)
elementTags
(vector of sizes), nodeTags
(vector of sizes)
-
C++ (x7.cpp), Python (tri.py, x7.py, adapt_mesh.py, neighbors.py, poisson.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/getMaxElementTag
Get the maximum tag maxTag
of an element in the mesh.
gmsh/model/mesh/preallocateElementsByType
Preallocate data before calling getElementsByType
with numTasks
> 1. For C++ only.
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementQualities
Get the quality elementQualities
of the elements with tags elementTags
. qualityType
is the requested quality measure: "minDetJac" and "maxDetJac" for the adaptively computed minimal and maximal Jacobian determinant, "minSJ" for the sampled minimal scaled jacobien, "minSICN" for the sampled minimal signed inverted condition number, "minSIGE" for the sampled signed inverted gradient error, "gamma" for the ratio of the inscribed to circumcribed sphere radius, "innerRadius" for the inner radius, "outerRadius" for the outerRadius, "minIsotropy" for the minimum isotropy measure, "angleShape" for the angle shape measure, "minEdge" for the minimum straight edge length, "maxEdge" for the maximum straight edge length, "volume" for the volume. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vector must be preallocated).
elementTags
(vector of sizes), qualityName = "minSICN"
(string), task = 0
(size), numTasks = 1
(size)
elementsQuality
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (mesh_quality.py, min_edge.py, view_element_size.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/addElements
Add elements classified on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. types
contains the MSH types of the elements (e.g. 2
for 3-node triangles: see the Gmsh reference manual). elementTags
is a vector of the same length as types
; each entry is a vector containing the tags (unique, strictly positive identifiers) of the elements of the corresponding type. nodeTags
is also a vector of the same length as types
; each entry is a vector of length equal to the number of elements of the given type times the number N of nodes per element, that contains the node tags of all the elements of the given type, concatenated: [e1n1, e1n2, ..., e1nN, e2n1, ...].
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), elementTypes
(vector of integers), elementTags
(vector of vectors of integers (size)), nodeTags
(vector of vectors of integers (size))
-
-
Python (copy_mesh.py, cylinderFFD.py, discrete.py, flatten.py, mesh_from_discrete_curve.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/addElementsByType
Add elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
. elementTags
contains the tags (unique, strictly positive identifiers) of the elements of the corresponding type. nodeTags
is a vector of length equal to the number of elements times the number N of nodes per element, that contains the node tags of all the elements, concatenated: [e1n1, e1n2, ..., e1nN, e2n1, ...]. If the elementTag
vector is empty, new tags are automatically assigned to the elements.
gmsh/model/mesh/getIntegrationPoints
Get the numerical quadrature information for the given element type elementType
and integration rule integrationType
, where integrationType
concatenates the integration rule family name with the desired order (e.g. "Gauss4" for a quadrature suited for integrating 4th order polynomials). The "CompositeGauss" family uses tensor-product rules based the 1D Gauss-Legendre rule; the "Gauss" family uses an economic scheme when available (i.e. with a minimal number of points), and falls back to "CompositeGauss" otherwise. Note that integration points for the "Gauss" family can fall outside of the reference element for high-order rules. localCoord
contains the u, v, w coordinates of the G integration points in the reference element: [g1u, g1v, g1w, ..., gGu, gGv, gGw]. weights
contains the associated weights: [g1q, ..., gGq].
elementType
(integer), integrationType
(string)
localCoord
(vector of doubles), weights
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (x6.py, adapt_mesh.py, poisson.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getJacobians
Get the Jacobians of all the elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
, at the G evaluation points localCoord
given as concatenated u, v, w coordinates in the reference element [g1u, g1v, g1w, ..., gGu, gGv, gGw]. Data is returned by element, with elements in the same order as in getElements
and getElementsByType
. jacobians
contains for each element the 9 entries of the 3x3 Jacobian matrix at each evaluation point. The matrix is returned by column: [e1g1Jxu, e1g1Jyu, e1g1Jzu, e1g1Jxv, ..., e1g1Jzw, e1g2Jxu, ..., e1gGJzw, e2g1Jxu, ...], with Jxu = dx/du, Jyu = dy/du, etc. determinants
contains for each element the determinant of the Jacobian matrix at each evaluation point: [e1g1, e1g2, ... e1gG, e2g1, ...]. coord
contains for each element the x, y, z coordinates of the evaluation points. If tag
< 0, get the Jacobian data for all entities. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vectors must be preallocated).
elementType
(integer), localCoord
(vector of doubles), tag = -1
(integer), task = 0
(size), numTasks = 1
(size)
jacobians
(vector of doubles), determinants
(vector of doubles), coord
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (x6.py, adapt_mesh.py, poisson.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/preallocateJacobians
Preallocate data before calling getJacobians
with numTasks
> 1. For C++ only.
elementType
(integer), numEvaluationPoints
(integer), allocateJacobians
(boolean), allocateDeterminants
(boolean), allocateCoord
(boolean), tag = -1
(integer)
jacobians
(vector of doubles), determinants
(vector of doubles), coord
(vector of doubles)
-
gmsh/model/mesh/getJacobian
Get the Jacobian for a single element elementTag
, at the G evaluation points localCoord
given as concatenated u, v, w coordinates in the reference element [g1u, g1v, g1w, ..., gGu, gGv, gGw]. jacobians
contains the 9 entries of the 3x3 Jacobian matrix at each evaluation point. The matrix is returned by column: [e1g1Jxu, e1g1Jyu, e1g1Jzu, e1g1Jxv, ..., e1g1Jzw, e1g2Jxu, ..., e1gGJzw, e2g1Jxu, ...], with Jxu = dx/du, Jyu = dy/du, etc. determinants
contains the determinant of the Jacobian matrix at each evaluation point. coord
contains the x, y, z coordinates of the evaluation points. This function relies on an internal cache (a vector in case of dense element numbering, a map otherwise); for large meshes accessing Jacobians in bulk is often preferable.
gmsh/model/mesh/getBasisFunctions
Get the basis functions of the element of type elementType
at the evaluation points localCoord
(given as concatenated u, v, w coordinates in the reference element [g1u, g1v, g1w, ..., gGu, gGv, gGw]), for the function space functionSpaceType
. Currently supported function spaces include "Lagrange" and "GradLagrange" for isoparametric Lagrange basis functions and their gradient in the u, v, w coordinates of the reference element; "LagrangeN" and "GradLagrangeN", with N = 1, 2, ..., for N-th order Lagrange basis functions; "H1LegendreN" and "GradH1LegendreN", with N = 1, 2, ..., for N-th order hierarchical H1 Legendre functions; "HcurlLegendreN" and "CurlHcurlLegendreN", with N = 1, 2, ..., for N-th order curl-conforming basis functions. numComponents
returns the number C of components of a basis function (e.g. 1 for scalar functions and 3 for vector functions). basisFunctions
returns the value of the N basis functions at the evaluation points, i.e. [g1f1, g1f2, ..., g1fN, g2f1, ...] when C == 1 or [g1f1u, g1f1v, g1f1w, g1f2u, ..., g1fNw, g2f1u, ...] when C == 3. For basis functions that depend on the orientation of the elements, all values for the first orientation are returned first, followed by values for the second, etc. numOrientations
returns the overall number of orientations. If the wantedOrientations
vector is not empty, only return the values for the desired orientation indices.
elementType
(integer), localCoord
(vector of doubles), functionSpaceType
(string), wantedOrientations = []
(vector of integers)
numComponents
(integer), basisFunctions
(vector of doubles), numOrientations
(integer)
-
Python (x6.py, adapt_mesh.py, poisson.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getBasisFunctionsOrientation
Get the orientation index of the elements of type elementType
in the entity of tag tag
. The arguments have the same meaning as in getBasisFunctions
. basisFunctionsOrientation
is a vector giving for each element the orientation index in the values returned by getBasisFunctions
. For Lagrange basis functions the call is superfluous as it will return a vector of zeros. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vector must be preallocated).
gmsh/model/mesh/getBasisFunctionsOrientationForElement
Get the orientation of a single element elementTag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/getNumberOfOrientations
Get the number of possible orientations for elements of type elementType
and function space named functionSpaceType
.
gmsh/model/mesh/preallocateBasisFunctionsOrientation
Preallocate data before calling getBasisFunctionsOrientation
with numTasks
> 1. For C++ only.
gmsh/model/mesh/getEdges
Get the global unique mesh edge identifiers edgeTags
and orientations edgeOrientation
for an input list of node tag pairs defining these edges, concatenated in the vector nodeTags
. Mesh edges are created e.g. by createEdges()
, getKeys()
or addEdges()
. The reference positive orientation is n1 < n2, where n1 and n2 are the tags of the two edge nodes, which corresponds to the local orientation of edge-based basis functions as well.
gmsh/model/mesh/getFaces
Get the global unique mesh face identifiers faceTags
and orientations faceOrientations
for an input list of a multiple of three (if faceType
== 3) or four (if faceType
== 4) node tags defining these faces, concatenated in the vector nodeTags
. Mesh faces are created e.g. by createFaces()
, getKeys()
or addFaces()
.
gmsh/model/mesh/createEdges
Create unique mesh edges for the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
gmsh/model/mesh/createFaces
Create unique mesh faces for the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
gmsh/model/mesh/getAllEdges
Get the global unique identifiers edgeTags
and the nodes edgeNodes
of the edges in the mesh. Mesh edges are created e.g. by createEdges()
, getKeys()
or addEdges().
gmsh/model/mesh/getAllFaces
Get the global unique identifiers faceTags
and the nodes faceNodes
of the faces of type faceType
in the mesh. Mesh faces are created e.g. by createFaces()
, getKeys()
or addFaces().
gmsh/model/mesh/addEdges
Add mesh edges defined by their global unique identifiers edgeTags
and their nodes edgeNodes
.
gmsh/model/mesh/addFaces
Add mesh faces of type faceType
defined by their global unique identifiers faceTags
and their nodes faceNodes
.
gmsh/model/mesh/getKeys
Generate the pair of keys for the elements of type elementType
in the entity of tag tag
, for the functionSpaceType
function space. Each pair (typeKey
, entityKey
) uniquely identifies a basis function in the function space. If returnCoord
is set, the coord
vector contains the x, y, z coordinates locating basis functions for sorting purposes. Warning: this is an experimental feature and will probably change in a future release.
gmsh/model/mesh/getKeysForElement
Get the pair of keys for a single element elementTag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/getNumberOfKeys
Get the number of keys by elements of type elementType
for function space named functionSpaceType
.
gmsh/model/mesh/getKeysInformation
Get information about the pair of keys
. infoKeys
returns information about the functions associated with the pairs (typeKeys
, entityKey
). infoKeys[0].first
describes the type of function (0 for vertex function, 1 for edge function, 2 for face function and 3 for bubble function). infoKeys[0].second
gives the order of the function associated with the key. Warning: this is an experimental feature and will probably change in a future release.
gmsh/model/mesh/getBarycenters
Get the barycenters of all elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
. If primary
is set, only the primary nodes of the elements are taken into account for the barycenter calculation. If fast
is set, the function returns the sum of the primary node coordinates (without normalizing by the number of nodes). If tag
< 0, get the barycenters for all entities. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vector must be preallocated).
gmsh/model/mesh/preallocateBarycenters
Preallocate data before calling getBarycenters
with numTasks
> 1. For C++ only.
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementEdgeNodes
Get the nodes on the edges of all elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
. nodeTags
contains the node tags of the edges for all the elements: [e1a1n1, e1a1n2, e1a2n1, ...]. Data is returned by element, with elements in the same order as in getElements
and getElementsByType
. If primary
is set, only the primary (begin/end) nodes of the edges are returned. If tag
< 0, get the edge nodes for all entities. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vector must be preallocated).
gmsh/model/mesh/getElementFaceNodes
Get the nodes on the faces of type faceType
(3 for triangular faces, 4 for quadrangular faces) of all elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
. nodeTags
contains the node tags of the faces for all elements: [e1f1n1, ..., e1f1nFaceType, e1f2n1, ...]. Data is returned by element, with elements in the same order as in getElements
and getElementsByType
. If primary
is set, only the primary (corner) nodes of the faces are returned. If tag
< 0, get the face nodes for all entities. If numTasks
> 1, only compute and return the part of the data indexed by task
(for C++ only; output vector must be preallocated).
gmsh/model/mesh/getGhostElements
Get the ghost elements elementTags
and their associated partitions
stored in the ghost entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/setSize
Set a mesh size constraint on the model entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. Currently only entities of dimension 0 (points) are handled.
gmsh/model/mesh/getSizes
Get the mesh size constraints (if any) associated with the model entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. A zero entry in the output sizes
vector indicates that no size constraint is specified on the corresponding entity.
gmsh/model/mesh/setSizeAtParametricPoints
Set mesh size constraints at the given parametric points parametricCoord
on the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. Currently only entities of dimension 1 (lines) are handled.
gmsh/model/mesh/setSizeCallback
Set a mesh size callback for the current model. The callback function should take six arguments as input (dim
, tag
, x
, y
, z
and lc
). The first two integer arguments correspond to the dimension dim
and tag tag
of the entity being meshed. The next four double precision arguments correspond to the coordinates x
, y
and z
around which to prescribe the mesh size and to the mesh size lc
that would be prescribed if the callback had not been called. The callback function should return a double precision number specifying the desired mesh size; returning lc
is equivalent to a no-op.
gmsh/model/mesh/removeSizeCallback
Remove the mesh size callback from the current model.
gmsh/model/mesh/setTransfiniteCurve
Set a transfinite meshing constraint on the curve tag
, with numNodes
nodes distributed according to meshType
and coef
. Currently supported types are "Progression" (geometrical progression with power coef
), "Bump" (refinement toward both extremities of the curve) and "Beta" (beta law).
tag
(integer), numNodes
(integer), meshType = "Progression"
(string), coef = 1.
(double)
-
-
C++ (x2.cpp), Python (x2.py, terrain.py, terrain_bspline.py, terrain_stl.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/setTransfiniteSurface
Set a transfinite meshing constraint on the surface tag
. arrangement
describes the arrangement of the triangles when the surface is not flagged as recombined: currently supported values are "Left", "Right", "AlternateLeft" and "AlternateRight". cornerTags
can be used to specify the (3 or 4) corners of the transfinite interpolation explicitly; specifying the corners explicitly is mandatory if the surface has more that 3 or 4 points on its boundary.
tag
(integer), arrangement = "Left"
(string), cornerTags = []
(vector of integers)
-
-
C++ (x2.cpp), Python (x2.py, get_data_perf.py, terrain.py, terrain_bspline.py, terrain_stl.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/setTransfiniteVolume
Set a transfinite meshing constraint on the surface tag
. cornerTags
can be used to specify the (6 or 8) corners of the transfinite interpolation explicitly.
tag
(integer), cornerTags = []
(vector of integers)
-
-
C++ (x2.cpp), Python (x2.py, terrain.py, terrain_bspline.py, terrain_stl.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/setTransfiniteAutomatic
Set transfinite meshing constraints on the model entities in dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. Transfinite meshing constraints are added to the curves of the quadrangular surfaces and to the faces of 6-sided volumes. Quadragular faces with a corner angle superior to cornerAngle
(in radians) are ignored. The number of points is automatically determined from the sizing constraints. If dimTag
is empty, the constraints are applied to all entities in the model. If recombine
is true, the recombine flag is automatically set on the transfinite surfaces.
gmsh/model/mesh/setRecombine
Set a recombination meshing constraint on the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. Currently only entities of dimension 2 (to recombine triangles into quadrangles) are supported; angle
specifies the threshold angle for the simple recombination algorithm..
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), angle = 45.
(double)
-
-
C++ (t11.cpp, x2.cpp), Python (t11.py, x2.py, poisson.py, terrain.py, terrain_bspline.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/setSmoothing
Set a smoothing meshing constraint on the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. val
iterations of a Laplace smoother are applied.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), val
(integer)
-
-
C++ (x2.cpp), Python (x2.py, terrain.py, terrain_bspline.py, terrain_stl.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/setReverse
Set a reverse meshing constraint on the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If val
is true, the mesh orientation will be reversed with respect to the natural mesh orientation (i.e. the orientation consistent with the orientation of the geometry). If val
is false, the mesh is left as-is.
gmsh/model/mesh/setAlgorithm
Set the meshing algorithm on the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. Supported values are those of the Mesh.Algorithm
option, as listed in the Gmsh reference manual. Currently only supported for dim
== 2.
gmsh/model/mesh/setSizeFromBoundary
Force the mesh size to be extended from the boundary, or not, for the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. Currently only supported for dim
== 2.
gmsh/model/mesh/setCompound
Set a compound meshing constraint on the model entities of dimension dim
and tags tags
. During meshing, compound entities are treated as a single discrete entity, which is automatically reparametrized.
gmsh/model/mesh/setOutwardOrientation
Set meshing constraints on the bounding surfaces of the volume of tag tag
so that all surfaces are oriented with outward pointing normals; and if a mesh already exists, reorient it. Currently only available with the OpenCASCADE kernel, as it relies on the STL triangulation.
gmsh/model/mesh/removeConstraints
Remove all meshing constraints from the model entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, remove all constraings.
dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
Python (terrain_bspline.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/embed
Embed the model entities of dimension dim
and tags tags
in the (inDim
, inTag
) model entity. The dimension dim
can 0, 1 or 2 and must be strictly smaller than inDim
, which must be either 2 or 3. The embedded entities should not intersect each other or be part of the boundary of the entity inTag
, whose mesh will conform to the mesh of the embedded entities. With the OpenCASCADE kernel, if the fragment
operation is applied to entities of different dimensions, the lower dimensional entities will be automatically embedded in the higher dimensional entities if they are not on their boundary.
gmsh/model/mesh/removeEmbedded
Remove embedded entities from the model entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. if dim
is >= 0, only remove embedded entities of the given dimension (e.g. embedded points if dim
== 0).
gmsh/model/mesh/getEmbedded
Get the entities (if any) embedded in the model entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/reorderElements
Reorder the elements of type elementType
classified on the entity of tag tag
according to the ordering
vector.
gmsh/model/mesh/computeRenumbering
Compute a renumbering vector newTags
corresponding to the input tags oldTags
for a given list of element tags elementTags
. If elementTags
is empty, compute the renumbering on the full mesh. If method
is equal to "RCMK", compute a node renumering with Reverse Cuthill McKee. If method
is equal to "Hilbert", compute a node renumering along a Hilbert curve. If method
is equal to "Metis", compute a node renumering using Metis. Element renumbering is not available yet.
method = "RCMK"
(string), elementTags = []
(vector of sizes)
oldTags
(vector of sizes), newTags
(vector of sizes)
-
Python (renumbering.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/renumberNodes
Renumber the node tags. If no explicit renumbering is provided through the oldTags
and newTags
vectors, renumber the nodes in a continuous sequence, taking into account the subset of elements to be saved later on if the option "Mesh.SaveAll" is not set.
oldTags = []
(vector of sizes), newTags = []
(vector of sizes)
-
-
Python (renumbering.py, view_renumbering.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/renumberElements
Renumber the element tags in a continuous sequence. If no explicit renumbering is provided through the oldTags
and newTags
vectors, renumber the elements in a continuous sequence, taking into account the subset of elements to be saved later on if the option "Mesh.SaveAll" is not set.
oldTags = []
(vector of sizes), newTags = []
(vector of sizes)
-
-
Python (view_renumbering.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/setPeriodic
Set the meshes of the entities of dimension dim
and tag tags
as periodic copies of the meshes of entities tagsMaster
, using the affine transformation specified in affineTransformation
(16 entries of a 4x4 matrix, by row). If used after meshing, generate the periodic node correspondence information assuming the meshes of entities tags
effectively match the meshes of entities tagsMaster
(useful for structured and extruded meshes). Currently only available for dim
== 1 and dim
== 2.
gmsh/model/mesh/getPeriodic
Get master entities tagsMaster
for the entities of dimension dim
and tags tags
.
gmsh/model/mesh/getPeriodicNodes
Get the master entity tagMaster
, the node tags nodeTags
and their corresponding master node tags nodeTagsMaster
, and the affine transform affineTransform
for the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If includeHighOrderNodes
is set, include high-order nodes in the returned data.
dim
(integer), tag
(integer), includeHighOrderNodes = False
(boolean)
tagMaster
(integer), nodeTags
(vector of sizes), nodeTagsMaster
(vector of sizes), affineTransform
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (periodic.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getPeriodicKeys
Get the master entity tagMaster
and the key pairs (typeKeyMaster
, entityKeyMaster
) corresponding to the entity tag
and the key pairs (typeKey
, entityKey
) for the elements of type elementType
and function space type functionSpaceType
. If returnCoord
is set, the coord
and coordMaster
vectors contain the x, y, z coordinates locating basis functions for sorting purposes.
elementType
(integer), functionSpaceType
(string), tag
(integer), returnCoord = True
(boolean)
tagMaster
(integer), typeKeys
(vector of integers), typeKeysMaster
(vector of integers), entityKeys
(vector of sizes), entityKeysMaster
(vector of sizes), coord
(vector of doubles), coordMaster
(vector of doubles)
-
Python (periodic.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/importStl
Import the model STL representation (if available) as the current mesh.
-
-
-
Python (stl_to_mesh.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/getDuplicateNodes
Get the tags
of any duplicate nodes in the mesh of the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, consider the whole mesh.
gmsh/model/mesh/removeDuplicateNodes
Remove duplicate nodes in the mesh of the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, consider the whole mesh.
dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
Python (glue_and_remesh_stl.py, mirror_mesh.py, stl_to_mesh.py, view_adaptive_to_mesh.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/removeDuplicateElements
Remove duplicate elements (defined by the same nodes, in the same entity) in the mesh of the entities dimTags
, given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dimTags
is empty, consider the whole mesh.
gmsh/model/mesh/splitQuadrangles
Split (into two triangles) all quadrangles in surface tag
whose quality is lower than quality
. If tag
< 0, split quadrangles in all surfaces.
gmsh/model/mesh/setVisibility
Set the visibility of the elements of tags elementTags
to value
.
gmsh/model/mesh/getVisibility
Get the visibility of the elements of tags elementTags
.
gmsh/model/mesh/classifySurfaces
Classify ("color") the surface mesh based on the angle threshold angle
(in radians), and create new discrete surfaces, curves and points accordingly. If boundary
is set, also create discrete curves on the boundary if the surface is open. If forReparametrization
is set, create curves and surfaces that can be reparametrized using a single map. If curveAngle
is less than Pi, also force curves to be split according to curveAngle
. If exportDiscrete
is set, clear any built-in CAD kernel entities and export the discrete entities in the built-in CAD kernel.
angle
(double), boundary = True
(boolean), forReparametrization = False
(boolean), curveAngle = pi
(double), exportDiscrete = True
(boolean)
-
-
C++ (t13.cpp), Python (t13.py, aneurysm.py, glue_and_remesh_stl.py, remesh_stl.py, terrain_stl.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/createGeometry
Create a geometry for the discrete entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) represented solely by a mesh (without an underlying CAD description), i.e. create a parametrization for discrete curves and surfaces, assuming that each can be parametrized with a single map. If dimTags
is empty, create a geometry for all the discrete entities.
dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
-
C++ (t13.cpp, x2.cpp), Python (t13.py, x2.py, aneurysm.py, glue_and_remesh_stl.py, remesh_stl.py, ...)
gmsh/model/mesh/createTopology
Create a boundary representation from the mesh if the model does not have one (e.g. when imported from mesh file formats with no BRep representation of the underlying model). If makeSimplyConnected
is set, enforce simply connected discrete surfaces and volumes. If exportDiscrete
is set, clear any built-in CAD kernel entities and export the discrete entities in the built-in CAD kernel.
gmsh/model/mesh/addHomologyRequest
Add a request to compute a basis representation for homology spaces (if type
== "Homology") or cohomology spaces (if type
== "Cohomology"). The computation domain is given in a list of physical group tags domainTags
; if empty, the whole mesh is the domain. The computation subdomain for relative (co)homology computation is given in a list of physical group tags subdomainTags
; if empty, absolute (co)homology is computed. The dimensions of the (co)homology bases to be computed are given in the list dim
; if empty, all bases are computed. Resulting basis representation (co)chains are stored as physical groups in the mesh. If the request is added before mesh generation, the computation will be performed at the end of the meshing pipeline.
gmsh/model/mesh/clearHomologyRequests
Clear all (co)homology computation requests.
gmsh/model/mesh/computeHomology
Perform the (co)homology computations requested by addHomologyRequest(). The newly created physical groups are returned in dimTags
as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
gmsh/model/mesh/computeCrossField
Compute a cross field for the current mesh. The function creates 3 views: the H function, the Theta function and cross directions. Return the tags of the views.
gmsh/model/mesh/triangulate
Triangulate the points given in the coord
vector as pairs of u, v coordinates, and return the node tags (with numbering starting at 1) of the resulting triangles in tri
.
coord
(vector of doubles)
tri
(vector of sizes)
-
Python (raw_triangulation.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/tetrahedralize
Tetrahedralize the points given in the coord
vector as x, y, z coordinates, concatenated, and return the node tags (with numbering starting at 1) of the resulting tetrahedra in tetra
.
coord
(vector of doubles)
tetra
(vector of sizes)
-
Python (raw_tetrahedralization.py)
Next: Namespace gmsh/model/geo, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model/mesh, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model/mesh/field
: mesh size field functionsgmsh/model/mesh/field/add
Add a new mesh size field of type fieldType
. If tag
is positive, assign the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is assigned automatically. Return the field tag. Available field types are listed in the "Gmsh mesh size fields" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/remove
Remove the field with tag tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/list
Get the list of all fields.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/getType
Get the type fieldType
of the field with tag tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/setNumber
Set the numerical option option
to value value
for field tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/getNumber
Get the value of the numerical option option
for field tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/setString
Set the string option option
to value value
for field tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/getString
Get the value of the string option option
for field tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/setNumbers
Set the numerical list option option
to value values
for field tag
.
tag
(integer), option
(string), values
(vector of doubles)
-
-
C++ (t10.cpp), Python (t10.py, extend_field.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, ocean.py)
gmsh/model/mesh/field/getNumbers
Get the value of the numerical list option option
for field tag
.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/setAsBackgroundMesh
Set the field tag
as the background mesh size field.
gmsh/model/mesh/field/setAsBoundaryLayer
Set the field tag
as a boundary layer size field.
tag
(integer)
-
-
Python (naca_boundary_layer_2d.py)
Next: Namespace gmsh/model/geo/mesh, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model/mesh/field, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model/geo
: built-in CAD kernel functionsgmsh/model/geo/addPoint
Add a geometrical point in the built-in CAD representation, at coordinates (x
, y
, z
). If meshSize
is > 0, add a meshing constraint at that point. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the point. (Note that the point will be added in the current model only after synchronize
is called. This behavior holds for all the entities added in the geo module.)
gmsh/model/geo/addLine
Add a straight line segment in the built-in CAD representation, between the two points with tags startTag
and endTag
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the line.
gmsh/model/geo/addCircleArc
Add a circle arc (strictly smaller than Pi) in the built-in CAD representation, between the two points with tags startTag
and endTag
, and with center centerTag
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If (nx
, ny
, nz
) != (0, 0, 0), explicitly set the plane of the circle arc. Return the tag of the circle arc.
gmsh/model/geo/addEllipseArc
Add an ellipse arc (strictly smaller than Pi) in the built-in CAD representation, between the two points startTag
and endTag
, and with center centerTag
and major axis point majorTag
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If (nx
, ny
, nz
) != (0, 0, 0), explicitly set the plane of the circle arc. Return the tag of the ellipse arc.
gmsh/model/geo/addSpline
Add a spline (Catmull-Rom) curve in the built-in CAD representation, going through the points pointTags
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Create a periodic curve if the first and last points are the same. Return the tag of the spline curve.
gmsh/model/geo/addBSpline
Add a cubic b-spline curve in the built-in CAD representation, with pointTags
control points. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Creates a periodic curve if the first and last points are the same. Return the tag of the b-spline curve.
gmsh/model/geo/addBezier
Add a Bezier curve in the built-in CAD representation, with pointTags
control points. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the Bezier curve.
gmsh/model/geo/addPolyline
Add a polyline curve in the built-in CAD representation, going through the points pointTags
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Create a periodic curve if the first and last points are the same. Return the tag of the polyline curve.
gmsh/model/geo/addCompoundSpline
Add a spline (Catmull-Rom) curve in the built-in CAD representation, going through points sampling the curves in curveTags
. The density of sampling points on each curve is governed by numIntervals
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the spline.
gmsh/model/geo/addCompoundBSpline
Add a b-spline curve in the built-in CAD representation, with control points sampling the curves in curveTags
. The density of sampling points on each curve is governed by numIntervals
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the b-spline.
gmsh/model/geo/addCurveLoop
Add a curve loop (a closed wire) in the built-in CAD representation, formed by the curves curveTags
. curveTags
should contain (signed) tags of model entities of dimension 1 forming a closed loop: a negative tag signifies that the underlying curve is considered with reversed orientation. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If reorient
is set, automatically reorient the curves if necessary. Return the tag of the curve loop.
gmsh/model/geo/addCurveLoops
Add curve loops in the built-in CAD representation based on the curves curveTags
. Return the tags
of found curve loops, if any.
curveTags
(vector of integers)
tags
(vector of integers)
-
Python (aneurysm.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/geo/addPlaneSurface
Add a plane surface in the built-in CAD representation, defined by one or more curve loops wireTags
. The first curve loop defines the exterior contour; additional curve loop define holes. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface.
gmsh/model/geo/addSurfaceFilling
Add a surface in the built-in CAD representation, filling the curve loops in wireTags
using transfinite interpolation. Currently only a single curve loop is supported; this curve loop should be composed by 3 or 4 curves only. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface.
gmsh/model/geo/addSurfaceLoop
Add a surface loop (a closed shell) formed by surfaceTags
in the built-in CAD representation. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the shell.
gmsh/model/geo/addVolume
Add a volume (a region) in the built-in CAD representation, defined by one or more shells shellTags
. The first surface loop defines the exterior boundary; additional surface loop define holes. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the volume.
gmsh/model/geo/addGeometry
Add a geometry
in the built-in CAD representation. geometry
can currently be one of "Sphere" or "PolarSphere" (where numbers
should contain the x, y, z coordinates of the center, followed by the radius), or "Parametric" (where strings
should contains three expression evaluating to the x, y and z coordinates. If tag
is positive, set the tag of the geometry explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the geometry.
gmsh/model/geo/addPointOnGeometry
Add a point in the built-in CAD representation, at coordinates (x
, y
, z
) on the geometry geometryTag
. If meshSize
is > 0, add a meshing constraint at that point. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the point. For surface geometries, only the x
and y
coordinates are used.
gmsh/model/geo/extrude
Extrude the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation, using a translation along (dx
, dy
, dz
). Return extruded entities in outDimTags
. If the numElements
vector is not empty, also extrude the mesh: the entries in numElements
give the number of elements in each layer. If the height
vector is not empty, it provides the (cumulative) height of the different layers, normalized to 1. If recombine
is set, recombine the mesh in the layers.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), dx
(double), dy
(double), dz
(double), numElements = []
(vector of integers), heights = []
(vector of doubles), recombine = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (t2.cpp, t3.cpp, t14.cpp, t15.cpp), Python (t2.py, t3.py, t14.py, t15.py, hex.py)
gmsh/model/geo/revolve
Extrude the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation, using a rotation of angle
radians around the axis of revolution defined by the point (x
, y
, z
) and the direction (ax
, ay
, az
). The angle should be strictly smaller than Pi. Return extruded entities in outDimTags
. If the numElements
vector is not empty, also extrude the mesh: the entries in numElements
give the number of elements in each layer. If the height
vector is not empty, it provides the (cumulative) height of the different layers, normalized to 1. If recombine
is set, recombine the mesh in the layers.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), ax
(double), ay
(double), az
(double), angle
(double), numElements = []
(vector of integers), heights = []
(vector of doubles), recombine = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
gmsh/model/geo/twist
Extrude the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation, using a combined translation and rotation of angle
radians, along (dx
, dy
, dz
) and around the axis of revolution defined by the point (x
, y
, z
) and the direction (ax
, ay
, az
). The angle should be strictly smaller than Pi. Return extruded entities in outDimTags
. If the numElements
vector is not empty, also extrude the mesh: the entries in numElements
give the number of elements in each layer. If the height
vector is not empty, it provides the (cumulative) height of the different layers, normalized to 1. If recombine
is set, recombine the mesh in the layers.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), dx
(double), dy
(double), dz
(double), ax
(double), ay
(double), az
(double), angle
(double), numElements = []
(vector of integers), heights = []
(vector of doubles), recombine = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
gmsh/model/geo/extrudeBoundaryLayer
Extrude the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation along the normals of the mesh, creating discrete boundary layer entities. Return extruded entities in outDimTags
. The entries in numElements
give the number of elements in each layer. If the height
vector is not empty, it provides the (cumulative) height of the different layers. If recombine
is set, recombine the mesh in the layers. A second boundary layer can be created from the same entities if second
is set. If viewIndex
is >= 0, use the corresponding view to either specify the normals (if the view contains a vector field) or scale the normals (if the view is scalar).
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), numElements = [1]
(vector of integers), heights = []
(vector of doubles), recombine = False
(boolean), second = False
(boolean), viewIndex = -1
(integer)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
Python (aneurysm.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/geo/translate
Translate the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation along (dx
, dy
, dz
).
gmsh/model/geo/rotate
Rotate the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation by angle
radians around the axis of revolution defined by the point (x
, y
, z
) and the direction (ax
, ay
, az
).
gmsh/model/geo/dilate
Scale the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation by factors a
, b
and c
along the three coordinate axes; use (x
, y
, z
) as the center of the homothetic transformation.
gmsh/model/geo/mirror
Mirror the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation, with respect to the plane of equation a
* x + b
* y + c
* z + d
= 0.
gmsh/model/geo/symmetrize
Mirror the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation, with respect to the plane of equation a
* x + b
* y + c
* z + d
= 0. (This is a synonym for mirror
, which will be deprecated in a future release.)
gmsh/model/geo/copy
Copy the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation; the new entities are returned in outDimTags
.
gmsh/model/geo/remove
Remove the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD representation, provided that they are not on the boundary of higher-dimensional entities. If recursive
is true, remove all the entities on their boundaries, down to dimension 0.
gmsh/model/geo/removeAllDuplicates
Remove all duplicate entities in the built-in CAD representation (different entities at the same geometrical location).
gmsh/model/geo/splitCurve
Split the curve of tag tag
in the built-in CAD representation, on the specified control points pointTags
. This feature is only available for lines, splines and b-splines. Return the tag(s) curveTags
of the newly created curve(s).
gmsh/model/geo/getMaxTag
Get the maximum tag of entities of dimension dim
in the built-in CAD representation.
gmsh/model/geo/setMaxTag
Set the maximum tag maxTag
for entities of dimension dim
in the built-in CAD representation.
gmsh/model/geo/addPhysicalGroup
Add a physical group of dimension dim
, grouping the entities with tags tags
in the built-in CAD representation. Return the tag of the physical group, equal to tag
if tag
is positive, or a new tag if tag
< 0. Set the name of the physical group if name
is not empty.
gmsh/model/geo/removePhysicalGroups
Remove the physical groups dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) from the built-in CAD representation. If dimTags
is empty, remove all groups.
gmsh/model/geo/synchronize
Synchronize the built-in CAD representation with the current Gmsh model. This can be called at any time, but since it involves a non trivial amount of processing, the number of synchronization points should normally be minimized. Without synchronization the entities in the built-in CAD representation are not available to any function outside of the built-in CAD kernel functions.
Next: Namespace gmsh/model/occ, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model/geo, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model/geo/mesh
: built-in CAD kernel meshing constraintsgmsh/model/geo/mesh/setSize
Set a mesh size constraint on the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the built-in CAD kernel representation. Currently only entities of dimension 0 (points) are handled.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setTransfiniteCurve
Set a transfinite meshing constraint on the curve tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation, with numNodes
nodes distributed according to meshType
and coef
. Currently supported types are "Progression" (geometrical progression with power coef
) and "Bump" (refinement toward both extremities of the curve).
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setTransfiniteSurface
Set a transfinite meshing constraint on the surface tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. arrangement
describes the arrangement of the triangles when the surface is not flagged as recombined: currently supported values are "Left", "Right", "AlternateLeft" and "AlternateRight". cornerTags
can be used to specify the (3 or 4) corners of the transfinite interpolation explicitly; specifying the corners explicitly is mandatory if the surface has more that 3 or 4 points on its boundary.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setTransfiniteVolume
Set a transfinite meshing constraint on the surface tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. cornerTags
can be used to specify the (6 or 8) corners of the transfinite interpolation explicitly.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setRecombine
Set a recombination meshing constraint on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. Currently only entities of dimension 2 (to recombine triangles into quadrangles) are supported; angle
specifies the threshold angle for the simple recombination algorithm.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setSmoothing
Set a smoothing meshing constraint on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. val
iterations of a Laplace smoother are applied.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setReverse
Set a reverse meshing constraint on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. If val
is true, the mesh orientation will be reversed with respect to the natural mesh orientation (i.e. the orientation consistent with the orientation of the geometry). If val
is false, the mesh is left as-is.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setAlgorithm
Set the meshing algorithm on the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. Currently only supported for dim
== 2.
gmsh/model/geo/mesh/setSizeFromBoundary
Force the mesh size to be extended from the boundary, or not, for the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
in the built-in CAD kernel representation. Currently only supported for dim
== 2.
Next: Namespace gmsh/model/occ/mesh, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model/geo/mesh, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model/occ
: OpenCASCADE CAD kernel functionsgmsh/model/occ/addPoint
Add a geometrical point in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, at coordinates (x
, y
, z
). If meshSize
is > 0, add a meshing constraint at that point. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the point. (Note that the point will be added in the current model only after synchronize
is called. This behavior holds for all the entities added in the occ module.)
x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), meshSize = 0.
(double), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py, bspline_bezier_patches.py, bspline_bezier_trimmed.py, bspline_filling.py, circle_arc.py, ...)
gmsh/model/occ/addLine
Add a straight line segment in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, between the two points with tags startTag
and endTag
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the line.
startTag
(integer), endTag
(integer), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
Python (crack.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, relocate_nodes.py, stl_to_brep.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addCircleArc
Add a circle arc in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, between the two points with tags startTag
and endTag
, with middle point middleTag
. If center
is true, the middle point is the center of the circle; otherwise the circle goes through the middle point. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the circle arc.
startTag
(integer), middleTag
(integer), endTag
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), center = True
(boolean)
-
integer
Python (circle_arc.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addCircle
Add a circle of center (x
, y
, z
) and radius r
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If angle1
and angle2
are specified, create a circle arc between the two angles. If a vector zAxis
of size 3 is provided, use it as the normal to the circle plane (z-axis). If a vector xAxis
of size 3 is provided in addition to zAxis
, use it to define the x-axis. Return the tag of the circle.
x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), r
(double), tag = -1
(integer), angle1 = 0.
(double), angle2 = 2*pi
(double), zAxis = []
(vector of doubles), xAxis = []
(vector of doubles)
-
integer
C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py, bspline_bezier_trimmed.py, closest_point.py, prim_axis.py, trimmed.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addEllipseArc
Add an ellipse arc in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, between the two points startTag
and endTag
, and with center centerTag
and major axis point majorTag
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the ellipse arc. Note that OpenCASCADE does not allow creating ellipse arcs with the major radius smaller than the minor radius.
gmsh/model/occ/addEllipse
Add an ellipse of center (x
, y
, z
) and radii r1
and r2
(with r1
>= r2
) along the x- and y-axes, respectively, in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If angle1
and angle2
are specified, create an ellipse arc between the two angles. If a vector zAxis
of size 3 is provided, use it as the normal to the ellipse plane (z-axis). If a vector xAxis
of size 3 is provided in addition to zAxis
, use it to define the x-axis. Return the tag of the ellipse.
x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), r1
(double), r2
(double), tag = -1
(integer), angle1 = 0.
(double), angle2 = 2*pi
(double), zAxis = []
(vector of doubles), xAxis = []
(vector of doubles)
-
integer
Python (prim_axis.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addSpline
Add a spline (C2 b-spline) curve in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, going through the points pointTags
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Create a periodic curve if the first and last points are the same. Return the tag of the spline curve. If the tangents
vector contains 6 entries, use them as concatenated x, y, z components of the initial and final tangents of the b-spline; if it contains 3 times as many entries as the number of points, use them as concatenated x, y, z components of the tangents at each point, unless the norm of the tangent is zero.
pointTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer), tangents = []
(vector of doubles)
-
integer
C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, pipe.py, spline.py, ...)
gmsh/model/occ/addBSpline
Add a b-spline curve of degree degree
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with pointTags
control points. If weights
, knots
or multiplicities
are not provided, default parameters are computed automatically. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Create a periodic curve if the first and last points are the same. Return the tag of the b-spline curve.
pointTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer), degree = 3
(integer), weights = []
(vector of doubles), knots = []
(vector of doubles), multiplicities = []
(vector of integers)
-
integer
Python (bspline_filling.py, spline.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addBezier
Add a Bezier curve in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with pointTags
control points. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the Bezier curve.
gmsh/model/occ/addWire
Add a wire (open or closed) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, formed by the curves curveTags
. Note that an OpenCASCADE wire can be made of curves that share geometrically identical (but topologically different) points. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the wire.
curveTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer), checkClosed = False
(boolean)
-
integer
C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py, bspline_bezier_trimmed.py, bspline_filling.py, pipe.py, trimmed.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addCurveLoop
Add a curve loop (a closed wire) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, formed by the curves curveTags
. curveTags
should contain tags of curves forming a closed loop. Negative tags can be specified for compatibility with the built-in kernel, but are simply ignored: the wire is oriented according to the orientation of its first curve. Note that an OpenCASCADE curve loop can be made of curves that share geometrically identical (but topologically different) points. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the curve loop.
curveTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, relocate_nodes.py, stl_to_brep.py, surface_filling.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addRectangle
Add a rectangle in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with lower left corner at (x
, y
, z
) and upper right corner at (x
+ dx
, y
+ dy
, z
). If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Round the corners if roundedRadius
is nonzero. Return the tag of the rectangle.
gmsh/model/occ/addDisk
Add a disk in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with center (xc
, yc
, zc
) and radius rx
along the x-axis and ry
along the y-axis (rx
>= ry
). If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If a vector zAxis
of size 3 is provided, use it as the normal to the disk (z-axis). If a vector xAxis
of size 3 is provided in addition to zAxis
, use it to define the x-axis. Return the tag of the disk.
xc
(double), yc
(double), zc
(double), rx
(double), ry
(double), tag = -1
(integer), zAxis = []
(vector of doubles), xAxis = []
(vector of doubles)
-
integer
C++ (t19.cpp), Python (t19.py, pipe.py, poisson.py, prim_axis.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addPlaneSurface
Add a plane surface in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by one or more curve loops (or closed wires) wireTags
. The first curve loop defines the exterior contour; additional curve loop define holes. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface.
wireTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
Python (naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, stl_to_brep.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addSurfaceFilling
Add a surface in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, filling the curve loop wireTag
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface. If pointTags
are provided, force the surface to pass through the given points. The other optional arguments are degree
(the degree of the energy criterion to minimize for computing the deformation of the surface), numPointsOnCurves
(the average number of points for discretisation of the bounding curves), numIter
(the maximum number of iterations of the optimization process), anisotropic
(improve performance when the ratio of the length along the two parametric coordinates of the surface is high), tol2d
(tolerance to the constraints in the parametric plane of the surface), tol3d
(the maximum distance allowed between the support surface and the constraints), tolAng
(the maximum angle allowed between the normal of the surface and the constraints), tolCurv
(the maximum difference of curvature allowed between the surface and the constraint), maxDegree
(the highest degree which the polynomial defining the filling surface can have) and, maxSegments
(the largest number of segments which the filling surface can have).
wireTag
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), pointTags = []
(vector of integers), degree = 2
(integer), numPointsOnCurves = 15
(integer), numIter = 2
(integer), anisotropic = False
(boolean), tol2d = 0.00001
(double), tol3d = 0.0001
(double), tolAng = 0.01
(double), tolCurv = 0.1
(double), maxDegree = 8
(integer), maxSegments = 9
(integer)
-
integer
Python (relocate_nodes.py, surface_filling.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addBSplineFilling
Add a BSpline surface in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, filling the curve loop wireTag
. The curve loop should be made of 2, 3 or 4 curves. The optional type
argument specifies the type of filling: "Stretch" creates the flattest patch, "Curved" (the default) creates the most rounded patch, and "Coons" creates a rounded patch with less depth than "Curved". If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface.
wireTag
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), type = ""
(string)
-
integer
Python (bspline_filling.py, surface_filling.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addBezierFilling
Add a Bezier surface in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, filling the curve loop wireTag
. The curve loop should be made of 2, 3 or 4 Bezier curves. The optional type
argument specifies the type of filling: "Stretch" creates the flattest patch, "Curved" (the default) creates the most rounded patch, and "Coons" creates a rounded patch with less depth than "Curved". If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface.
gmsh/model/occ/addBSplineSurface
Add a b-spline surface of degree degreeU
x degreeV
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with pointTags
control points given as a single vector [Pu1v1, ... PunumPointsU
v1, Pu1v2, ...]. If weights
, knotsU
, knotsV
, multiplicitiesU
or multiplicitiesV
are not provided, default parameters are computed automatically. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If wireTags
is provided, trim the b-spline patch using the provided wires: the first wire defines the external contour, the others define holes. If wire3D
is set, consider wire curves as 3D curves and project them on the b-spline surface; otherwise consider the wire curves as defined in the parametric space of the surface. Return the tag of the b-spline surface.
pointTags
(vector of integers), numPointsU
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), degreeU = 3
(integer), degreeV = 3
(integer), weights = []
(vector of doubles), knotsU = []
(vector of doubles), knotsV = []
(vector of doubles), multiplicitiesU = []
(vector of integers), multiplicitiesV = []
(vector of integers), wireTags = []
(vector of integers), wire3D = False
(boolean)
-
integer
Python (bspline_bezier_patches.py, bspline_bezier_trimmed.py, terrain_bspline.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addBezierSurface
Add a Bezier surface in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with pointTags
control points given as a single vector [Pu1v1, ... PunumPointsU
v1, Pu1v2, ...]. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. If wireTags
is provided, trim the Bezier patch using the provided wires: the first wire defines the external contour, the others define holes. If wire3D
is set, consider wire curves as 3D curves and project them on the Bezier surface; otherwise consider the wire curves as defined in the parametric space of the surface. Return the tag of the Bezier surface.
pointTags
(vector of integers), numPointsU
(integer), tag = -1
(integer), wireTags = []
(vector of integers), wire3D = False
(boolean)
-
integer
Python (bspline_bezier_patches.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addTrimmedSurface
Trim the surface surfaceTag
with the wires wireTags
, replacing any existing trimming curves. The first wire defines the external contour, the others define holes. If wire3D
is set, consider wire curves as 3D curves and project them on the surface; otherwise consider the wire curves as defined in the parametric space of the surface. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the trimmed surface.
surfaceTag
(integer), wireTags = []
(vector of integers), wire3D = False
(boolean), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
Python (trimmed.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addSurfaceLoop
Add a surface loop (a closed shell) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, formed by surfaceTags
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the surface loop. Setting sewing
allows one to build a shell made of surfaces that share geometrically identical (but topologically different) curves.
surfaceTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer), sewing = False
(boolean)
-
integer
Python (stl_to_brep.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addVolume
Add a volume (a region) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by one or more surface loops shellTags
. The first surface loop defines the exterior boundary; additional surface loop define holes. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the volume.
shellTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
Python (stl_to_brep.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addSphere
Add a sphere of center (xc
, yc
, zc
) and radius r
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. The optional angle1
and angle2
arguments define the polar angle opening (from -Pi/2 to Pi/2). The optional angle3
argument defines the azimuthal opening (from 0 to 2*Pi). If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the sphere.
xc
(double), yc
(double), zc
(double), radius
(double), tag = -1
(integer), angle1 = -pi/2
(double), angle2 = pi/2
(double), angle3 = 2*pi
(double)
-
integer
C++ (t16.cpp, t18.cpp, x5.cpp), Python (t16.py, t18.py, x5.py, boolean.py, extend_field.py, ...)
gmsh/model/occ/addBox
Add a parallelepipedic box in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by a point (x
, y
, z
) and the extents along the x-, y- and z-axes. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the box.
gmsh/model/occ/addCylinder
Add a cylinder in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by the center (x
, y
, z
) of its first circular face, the 3 components (dx
, dy
, dz
) of the vector defining its axis and its radius r
. The optional angle
argument defines the angular opening (from 0 to 2*Pi). If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. Return the tag of the cylinder.
x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), dx
(double), dy
(double), dz
(double), r
(double), tag = -1
(integer), angle = 2*pi
(double)
-
integer
Python (boolean.py, cylinderFFD.py, gui.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addCone
Add a cone in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by the center (x
, y
, z
) of its first circular face, the 3 components of the vector (dx
, dy
, dz
) defining its axis and the two radii r1
and r2
of the faces (these radii can be zero). If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. angle
defines the optional angular opening (from 0 to 2*Pi). Return the tag of the cone.
gmsh/model/occ/addWedge
Add a right angular wedge in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by the right-angle point (x
, y
, z
) and the 3 extends along the x-, y- and z-axes (dx
, dy
, dz
). If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. The optional argument ltx
defines the top extent along the x-axis. If a vector zAxis
of size 3 is provided, use it to define the z-axis. Return the tag of the wedge.
x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), dx
(double), dy
(double), dz
(double), tag = -1
(integer), ltx = 0.
(double), zAxis = []
(vector of doubles)
-
integer
Python (prim_axis.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addTorus
Add a torus in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined by its center (x
, y
, z
) and its 2 radii r
and r2
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. The optional argument angle
defines the angular opening (from 0 to 2*Pi). If a vector zAxis
of size 3 is provided, use it to define the z-axis. Return the tag of the torus.
x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), r1
(double), r2
(double), tag = -1
(integer), angle = 2*pi
(double), zAxis = []
(vector of doubles)
-
integer
Python (prim_axis.py, step_header_data.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addThruSections
Add a volume (if the optional argument makeSolid
is set) or surfaces in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, defined through the open or closed wires wireTags
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically. The new entities are returned in outDimTags
as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If the optional argument makeRuled
is set, the surfaces created on the boundary are forced to be ruled surfaces. If maxDegree
is positive, set the maximal degree of resulting surface. The optional argument continuity
allows to specify the continuity of the resulting shape ("C0", "G1", "C1", "G2", "C2", "C3", "CN"). The optional argument parametrization
sets the parametrization type ("ChordLength", "Centripetal", "IsoParametric"). The optional argument smoothing
determines if smoothing is applied.
wireTags
(vector of integers), tag = -1
(integer), makeSolid = True
(boolean), makeRuled = False
(boolean), maxDegree = -1
(integer), continuity = ""
(string), parametrization = ""
(string), smoothing = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
gmsh/model/occ/addThickSolid
Add a hollowed volume in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, built from an initial volume volumeTag
and a set of faces from this volume excludeSurfaceTags
, which are to be removed. The remaining faces of the volume become the walls of the hollowed solid, with thickness offset
. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically.
gmsh/model/occ/extrude
Extrude the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, using a translation along (dx
, dy
, dz
). Return extruded entities in outDimTags
. If the numElements
vector is not empty, also extrude the mesh: the entries in numElements
give the number of elements in each layer. If the height
vector is not empty, it provides the (cumulative) height of the different layers, normalized to 1. If recombine
is set, recombine the mesh in the layers.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), dx
(double), dy
(double), dz
(double), numElements = []
(vector of integers), heights = []
(vector of doubles), recombine = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
Python (naca_boundary_layer_3d.py)
gmsh/model/occ/revolve
Extrude the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, using a rotation of angle
radians around the axis of revolution defined by the point (x
, y
, z
) and the direction (ax
, ay
, az
). Return extruded entities in outDimTags
. If the numElements
vector is not empty, also extrude the mesh: the entries in numElements
give the number of elements in each layer. If the height
vector is not empty, it provides the (cumulative) height of the different layers, normalized to 1. When the mesh is extruded the angle should be strictly smaller than 2*Pi. If recombine
is set, recombine the mesh in the layers.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), ax
(double), ay
(double), az
(double), angle
(double), numElements = []
(vector of integers), heights = []
(vector of doubles), recombine = False
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
Python (naca_boundary_layer_3d.py)
gmsh/model/occ/addPipe
Add a pipe in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, by extruding the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) along the wire wireTag
. The type of sweep can be specified with trihedron
(possible values: "DiscreteTrihedron", "CorrectedFrenet", "Fixed", "Frenet", "ConstantNormal", "Darboux", "GuideAC", "GuidePlan", "GuideACWithContact", "GuidePlanWithContact"). If trihedron
is not provided, "DiscreteTrihedron" is assumed. Return the pipe in outDimTags
.
gmsh/model/occ/fillet
Fillet the volumes volumeTags
on the curves curveTags
with radii radii
. The radii
vector can either contain a single radius, as many radii as curveTags
, or twice as many as curveTags
(in which case different radii are provided for the begin and end points of the curves). Return the filleted entities in outDimTags
as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. Remove the original volume if removeVolume
is set.
gmsh/model/occ/chamfer
Chamfer the volumes volumeTags
on the curves curveTags
with distances distances
measured on surfaces surfaceTags
. The distances
vector can either contain a single distance, as many distances as curveTags
and surfaceTags
, or twice as many as curveTags
and surfaceTags
(in which case the first in each pair is measured on the corresponding surface in surfaceTags
, the other on the other adjacent surface). Return the chamfered entities in outDimTags
. Remove the original volume if removeVolume
is set.
gmsh/model/occ/defeature
Defeature the volumes volumeTags
by removing the surfaces surfaceTags
. Return the defeatured entities in outDimTags
. Remove the original volume if removeVolume
is set.
gmsh/model/occ/fillet2D
Create a fillet edge between edges edgeTag1
and edgeTag2
with radius radius
. The modifed edges keep their tag. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically.
gmsh/model/occ/chamfer2D
Create a chamfer edge between edges edgeTag1
and edgeTag2
with distance1 distance1
and distance2 distance2
. The modifed edges keep their tag. If tag
is positive, set the tag explicitly; otherwise a new tag is selected automatically.
gmsh/model/occ/offsetCurve
Create an offset curve based on the curve loop curveLoopTag
with offset offset
. Return the offset curves in outDimTags
as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
gmsh/model/occ/getDistance
Find the minimal distance between shape with dim1
and tag1
and shape with dim2
and tag2
and the according coordinates. Return the distance in distance
and the coordinate of the points as x1
, y1
, z1
and x2
, y2
, z2
.
gmsh/model/occ/fuse
Compute the boolean union (the fusion) of the entities objectDimTags
and toolDimTags
(vectors of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. Return the resulting entities in outDimTags
. If tag
is positive, try to set the tag explicitly (only valid if the boolean operation results in a single entity). Remove the object if removeObject
is set. Remove the tool if removeTool
is set.
objectDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), toolDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), tag = -1
(integer), removeObject = True
(boolean), removeTool = True
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), outDimTagsMap
(vector of vectors of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (x5.cpp), Python (x5.py, boolean.py, gui.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/occ/intersect
Compute the boolean intersection (the common parts) of the entities objectDimTags
and toolDimTags
(vectors of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. Return the resulting entities in outDimTags
. If tag
is positive, try to set the tag explicitly (only valid if the boolean operation results in a single entity). Remove the object if removeObject
is set. Remove the tool if removeTool
is set.
objectDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), toolDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), tag = -1
(integer), removeObject = True
(boolean), removeTool = True
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), outDimTagsMap
(vector of vectors of pairs of integers)
-
Python (boolean.py, gui.py)
gmsh/model/occ/cut
Compute the boolean difference between the entities objectDimTags
and toolDimTags
(given as vectors of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. Return the resulting entities in outDimTags
. If tag
is positive, try to set the tag explicitly (only valid if the boolean operation results in a single entity). Remove the object if removeObject
is set. Remove the tool if removeTool
is set.
objectDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), toolDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), tag = -1
(integer), removeObject = True
(boolean), removeTool = True
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), outDimTagsMap
(vector of vectors of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (t16.cpp), Python (t16.py, boolean.py, extend_field.py, gui.py, spherical_surf.py)
gmsh/model/occ/fragment
Compute the boolean fragments (general fuse) resulting from the intersection of the entities objectDimTags
and toolDimTags
(given as vectors of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, making all interfaces conformal. When applied to entities of different dimensions, the lower dimensional entities will be automatically embedded in the higher dimensional entities if they are not on their boundary. Return the resulting entities in outDimTags
. If tag
is positive, try to set the tag explicitly (only valid if the boolean operation results in a single entity). Remove the object if removeObject
is set. Remove the tool if removeTool
is set.
objectDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), toolDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), tag = -1
(integer), removeObject = True
(boolean), removeTool = True
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), outDimTagsMap
(vector of vectors of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (t16.cpp, t18.cpp, t20.cpp, t21.cpp), Python (t16.py, t18.py, t20.py, t21.py, bspline_bezier_patches.py, ...)
gmsh/model/occ/translate
Translate the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation along (dx
, dy
, dz
).
gmsh/model/occ/rotate
Rotate the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation by angle
radians around the axis of revolution defined by the point (x
, y
, z
) and the direction (ax
, ay
, az
).
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), ax
(double), ay
(double), az
(double), angle
(double)
-
-
C++ (t19.cpp, t20.cpp), Python (t19.py, t20.py, naca_boundary_layer_2d.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, pipe.py)
gmsh/model/occ/dilate
Scale the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation by factors a
, b
and c
along the three coordinate axes; use (x
, y
, z
) as the center of the homothetic transformation.
gmsh/model/occ/mirror
Mirror the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with respect to the plane of equation a
* x + b
* y + c
* z + d
= 0.
gmsh/model/occ/symmetrize
Mirror the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, with respect to the plane of equation a
* x + b
* y + c
* z + d
= 0. (This is a deprecated synonym for mirror
.)
gmsh/model/occ/affineTransform
Apply a general affine transformation matrix affineTransform
(16 entries of a 4x4 matrix, by row; only the 12 first can be provided for convenience) to the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation.
gmsh/model/occ/copy
Copy the entities dimTags
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation; the new entities are returned in outDimTags
.
gmsh/model/occ/remove
Remove the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation, provided that they are not on the boundary of higher-dimensional entities. If recursive
is true, remove all the entities on their boundaries, down to dimension 0.
gmsh/model/occ/removeAllDuplicates
Remove all duplicate entities in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation (different entities at the same geometrical location) after intersecting (using boolean fragments) all highest dimensional entities.
-
-
-
Python (bspline_bezier_patches.py, hybrid_order.py, stl_to_mesh.py)
gmsh/model/occ/healShapes
Apply various healing procedures to the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs), or to all the entities in the model if dimTags
is empty, in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. Return the healed entities in outDimTags
.
dimTags = []
(vector of pairs of integers), tolerance = 1e-8
(double), fixDegenerated = True
(boolean), fixSmallEdges = True
(boolean), fixSmallFaces = True
(boolean), sewFaces = True
(boolean), makeSolids = True
(boolean)
outDimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
Python (bspline_bezier_patches.py, heal.py)
gmsh/model/occ/convertToNURBS
Convert the entities dimTags
to NURBS.
gmsh/model/occ/importShapes
Import BREP, STEP or IGES shapes from the file fileName
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. The imported entities are returned in outDimTags
, as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If the optional argument highestDimOnly
is set, only import the highest dimensional entities in the file. The optional argument format
can be used to force the format of the file (currently "brep", "step" or "iges").
gmsh/model/occ/importShapesNativePointer
Import an OpenCASCADE shape
by providing a pointer to a native OpenCASCADE TopoDS_Shape
object (passed as a pointer to void). The imported entities are returned in outDimTags
as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If the optional argument highestDimOnly
is set, only import the highest dimensional entities in shape
. In Python, this function can be used for integration with PythonOCC, in which the SwigPyObject pointer of TopoDS_Shape
must be passed as an int to shape
, i.e., shape = int(pythonocc_shape.this)
. Warning: this function is unsafe, as providing an invalid pointer will lead to undefined behavior.
gmsh/model/occ/getEntities
Get all the OpenCASCADE entities. If dim
is >= 0, return only the entities of the specified dimension (e.g. points if dim
== 0). The entities are returned as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs.
dim = -1
(integer)
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers)
-
C++ (t20.cpp), Python (t20.py, bspline_bezier_patches.py, naca_boundary_layer_3d.py, tube_boundary_layer.py)
gmsh/model/occ/getEntitiesInBoundingBox
Get the OpenCASCADE entities in the bounding box defined by the two points (xmin
, ymin
, zmin
) and (xmax
, ymax
, zmax
). If dim
is >= 0, return only the entities of the specified dimension (e.g. points if dim
== 0).
gmsh/model/occ/getBoundingBox
Get the bounding box (xmin
, ymin
, zmin
), (xmax
, ymax
, zmax
) of the OpenCASCADE entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/occ/getCurveLoops
Get the tags curveLoopTags
of the curve loops making up the surface of tag surfaceTag
, as well as the tags curveTags
of the curves making up each curve loop.
gmsh/model/occ/getSurfaceLoops
Get the tags surfaceLoopTags
of the surface loops making up the volume of tag volumeTag
, as well as the tags surfaceTags
of the surfaces making up each surface loop.
gmsh/model/occ/getMass
Get the mass of the OpenCASCADE entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
. If no density is attached to the entity (the default), the value corresponds respectively to the length, area and volume for dim
= 1, 2 and 3.
gmsh/model/occ/getCenterOfMass
Get the center of mass of the OpenCASCADE entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/occ/getMatrixOfInertia
Get the matrix of inertia (by row) of the OpenCASCADE entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/model/occ/getMaxTag
Get the maximum tag of entities of dimension dim
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation.
gmsh/model/occ/setMaxTag
Set the maximum tag maxTag
for entities of dimension dim
in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation.
gmsh/model/occ/synchronize
Synchronize the OpenCASCADE CAD representation with the current Gmsh model. This can be called at any time, but since it involves a non trivial amount of processing, the number of synchronization points should normally be minimized. Without synchronization the entities in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation are not available to any function outside of the OpenCASCADE CAD kernel functions.
Next: Namespace gmsh/view, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model/occ, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/model/occ/mesh
: OpenCASCADE CAD kernel meshing constraintsgmsh/model/occ/mesh/setSize
Set a mesh size constraint on the entities dimTags
(given as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs) in the OpenCASCADE CAD representation. Currently only entities of dimension 0 (points) are handled.
dimTags
(vector of pairs of integers), size
(double)
-
-
Python (naca_boundary_layer_3d.py)
Next: Namespace gmsh/view/option, Previous: Namespace gmsh/model/occ/mesh, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/view
: post-processing view functionsgmsh/view/add
Add a new post-processing view, with name name
. If tag
is positive use it (and remove the view with that tag if it already exists), otherwise associate a new tag. Return the view tag.
gmsh/view/remove
Remove the view with tag tag
.
gmsh/view/getIndex
Get the index of the view with tag tag
in the list of currently loaded views. This dynamic index (it can change when views are removed) is used to access view options.
tag
(integer)
-
integer
Python (adapt_mesh.py)
gmsh/view/getTags
Get the tags of all views.
gmsh/view/addModelData
Add model-based post-processing data to the view with tag tag
. modelName
identifies the model the data is attached to. dataType
specifies the type of data, currently either "NodeData", "ElementData" or "ElementNodeData". step
specifies the identifier (>= 0) of the data in a sequence. tags
gives the tags of the nodes or elements in the mesh to which the data is associated. data
is a vector of the same length as tags
: each entry is the vector of double precision numbers representing the data associated with the corresponding tag. The optional time
argument associate a time value with the data. numComponents
gives the number of data components (1 for scalar data, 3 for vector data, etc.) per entity; if negative, it is automatically inferred (when possible) from the input data. partition
allows one to specify data in several sub-sets.
tag
(integer), step
(integer), modelName
(string), dataType
(string), tags
(vector of sizes), data
(vector of vectors of doubles), time = 0.
(double), numComponents = -1
(integer), partition = 0
(integer)
-
-
Python (adapt_mesh.py, plugin.py, poisson.py, view.py)
gmsh/view/addHomogeneousModelData
Add homogeneous model-based post-processing data to the view with tag tag
. The arguments have the same meaning as in addModelData
, except that data
is supposed to be homogeneous and is thus flattened in a single vector. For data types that can lead to different data sizes per tag (like "ElementNodeData"), the data should be padded.
tag
(integer), step
(integer), modelName
(string), dataType
(string), tags
(vector of sizes), data
(vector of doubles), time = 0.
(double), numComponents = -1
(integer), partition = 0
(integer)
-
-
C++ (x4.cpp), Python (x4.py, copy_mesh.py, view_element_size.py, view_renumbering.py)
gmsh/view/getModelData
Get model-based post-processing data from the view with tag tag
at step step
. Return the data
associated to the nodes or the elements with tags tags
, as well as the dataType
and the number of components numComponents
.
tag
(integer), step
(integer)
dataType
(string), tags
(vector of sizes), data
(vector of vectors of doubles), time
(double), numComponents
(integer)
-
Python (get_data_perf.py, mesh_quality.py, plugin.py)
gmsh/view/getHomogeneousModelData
Get homogeneous model-based post-processing data from the view with tag tag
at step step
. The arguments have the same meaning as in getModelData
, except that data
is returned flattened in a single vector, with the appropriate padding if necessary.
tag
(integer), step
(integer)
dataType
(string), tags
(vector of sizes), data
(vector of doubles), time
(double), numComponents
(integer)
-
Python (get_data_perf.py)
gmsh/view/addListData
Add list-based post-processing data to the view with tag tag
. List-based datasets are independent from any model and any mesh. dataType
identifies the data by concatenating the field type ("S" for scalar, "V" for vector, "T" for tensor) and the element type ("P" for point, "L" for line, "T" for triangle, "S" for tetrahedron, "I" for prism, "H" for hexaHedron, "Y" for pyramid). For example dataType
should be "ST" for a scalar field on triangles. numEle
gives the number of elements in the data. data
contains the data for the numEle
elements, concatenated, with node coordinates followed by values per node, repeated for each step: [e1x1, ..., e1xn, e1y1, ..., e1yn, e1z1, ..., e1zn, e1v1..., e1vN, e2x1, ...].
tag
(integer), dataType
(string), numEle
(integer), data
(vector of doubles)
-
-
C++ (x3.cpp, x5.cpp), Python (x3.py, x5.py, normals.py, view_adaptive_to_mesh.py, view_combine.py, ...)
gmsh/view/getListData
Get list-based post-processing data from the view with tag tag
. Return the types dataTypes
, the number of elements numElements
for each data type and the data
for each data type. If returnAdaptive
is set, return the data obtained after adaptive refinement, if available.
gmsh/view/addListDataString
Add a string to a list-based post-processing view with tag tag
. If coord
contains 3 coordinates the string is positioned in the 3D model space ("3D string"); if it contains 2 coordinates it is positioned in the 2D graphics viewport ("2D string"). data
contains one or more (for multistep views) strings. style
contains key-value pairs of styling parameters, concatenated. Available keys are "Font" (possible values: "Times-Roman", "Times-Bold", "Times-Italic", "Times-BoldItalic", "Helvetica", "Helvetica-Bold", "Helvetica-Oblique", "Helvetica-BoldOblique", "Courier", "Courier-Bold", "Courier-Oblique", "Courier-BoldOblique", "Symbol", "ZapfDingbats", "Screen"), "FontSize" and "Align" (possible values: "Left" or "BottomLeft", "Center" or "BottomCenter", "Right" or "BottomRight", "TopLeft", "TopCenter", "TopRight", "CenterLeft", "CenterCenter", "CenterRight").
gmsh/view/getListDataStrings
Get list-based post-processing data strings (2D strings if dim
== 2, 3D strings if dim
= 3) from the view with tag tag
. Return the coordinates in coord
, the strings in data
and the styles in style
.
gmsh/view/setInterpolationMatrices
Set interpolation matrices for the element family type
("Line", "Triangle", "Quadrangle", "Tetrahedron", "Hexahedron", "Prism", "Pyramid") in the view tag
. The approximation of the values over an element is written as a linear combination of d
basis functions f_i(u, v, w) = sum_(j = 0, ..., d
- 1) coef
[i][j] u^exp
[j][0] v^exp
[j][1] w^exp
[j][2], i = 0, ..., d
-1, with u, v, w the coordinates in the reference element. The coef
matrix (of size d
x d
) and the exp
matrix (of size d
x 3) are stored as vectors, by row. If dGeo
is positive, use coefGeo
and expGeo
to define the interpolation of the x, y, z coordinates of the element in terms of the u, v, w coordinates, in exactly the same way. If d
< 0, remove the interpolation matrices.
tag
(integer), type
(string), d
(integer), coef
(vector of doubles), exp
(vector of doubles), dGeo = 0
(integer), coefGeo = []
(vector of doubles), expGeo = []
(vector of doubles)
-
-
C++ (x3.cpp), Python (x3.py, view_adaptive_to_mesh.py, view_list_isoparametric.py, view_list_subparametric.py, view_list_superparametric.py)
gmsh/view/addAlias
Add a post-processing view as an alias
of the reference view with tag refTag
. If copyOptions
is set, copy the options of the reference view. If tag
is positive use it (and remove the view with that tag if it already exists), otherwise associate a new tag. Return the view tag.
refTag
(integer), copyOptions = False
(boolean), tag = -1
(integer)
-
integer
Python (view_combine.py)
gmsh/view/combine
Combine elements (if what
== "elements") or steps (if what
== "steps") of all views (how
== "all"), all visible views (how
== "visible") or all views having the same name (how
== "name"). Remove original views if remove
is set.
what
(string), how
(string), remove = True
(boolean), copyOptions = True
(boolean)
-
-
Python (view_combine.py)
gmsh/view/probe
Probe the view tag
for its values
at point (x
, y
, z
). If no match is found, value
is returned empty. Return only the value at step step
is step
is positive. Return only values with numComp
if numComp
is positive. Return the gradient of the values
if gradient
is set. If distanceMax
is zero, only return a result if an exact match inside an element in the view is found; if distanceMax
is positive and an exact match is not found, return the value at the closest node if it is closer than distanceMax
; if distanceMax
is negative and an exact match is not found, always return the value at the closest node. The distance to the match is returned in distance
. Return the result from the element described by its coordinates if xElementCoord
, yElementCoord
and zElementCoord
are provided. If dim
is >= 0, return only matches from elements of the specified dimension.
tag
(integer), x
(double), y
(double), z
(double), step = -1
(integer), numComp = -1
(integer), gradient = False
(boolean), distanceMax = 0.
(double), xElemCoord = []
(vector of doubles), yElemCoord = []
(vector of doubles), zElemCoord = []
(vector of doubles), dim = -1
(integer)
values
(vector of doubles), distance
(double)
-
gmsh/view/write
Write the view to a file fileName
. The export format is determined by the file extension. Append to the file if append
is set.
gmsh/view/setVisibilityPerWindow
Set the global visibility of the view tag
per window to value
, where windowIndex
identifies the window in the window list.
Next: Namespace gmsh/plugin, Previous: Namespace gmsh/view, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/view/option
: view option handling functionsgmsh/view/option/setNumber
Set the numerical option name
to value value
for the view with tag tag
.
gmsh/view/option/getNumber
Get the value
of the numerical option name
for the view with tag tag
.
gmsh/view/option/setString
Set the string option name
to value value
for the view with tag tag
.
gmsh/view/option/getString
Get the value
of the string option name
for the view with tag tag
.
gmsh/view/option/setColor
Set the color option name
to the RGBA value (r
, g
, b
, a
) for the view with tag tag
, where where r
, g
, b
and a
should be integers between 0 and 255.
gmsh/view/option/getColor
Get the r
, g
, b
, a
value of the color option name
for the view with tag tag
.
gmsh/view/option/copy
Copy the options from the view with tag refTag
to the view with tag tag
.
Next: Namespace gmsh/graphics, Previous: Namespace gmsh/view/option, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/plugin
: plugin functionsgmsh/plugin/setNumber
Set the numerical option option
to the value value
for plugin name
. Plugins available in the official Gmsh release are listed in the "Gmsh plugins" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/plugin/setString
Set the string option option
to the value value
for plugin name
. Plugins available in the official Gmsh release are listed in the "Gmsh plugins" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
gmsh/plugin/run
Run the plugin name
. Return the tag of the created view (if any). Plugins available in the official Gmsh release are listed in the "Gmsh plugins" chapter of the Gmsh reference manual.
Next: Namespace gmsh/fltk, Previous: Namespace gmsh/plugin, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/graphics
: graphics functionsgmsh/graphics/draw
Draw all the OpenGL scenes.
Next: Namespace gmsh/parser, Previous: Namespace gmsh/graphics, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/fltk
: FLTK graphical user interface functionsgmsh/fltk/initialize
Create the FLTK graphical user interface. Can only be called in the main thread.
gmsh/fltk/finalize
Close the FLTK graphical user interface. Can only be called in the main thread.
gmsh/fltk/wait
Wait at most time
seconds for user interface events and return. If time
< 0, wait indefinitely. First automatically create the user interface if it has not yet been initialized. Can only be called in the main thread.
gmsh/fltk/update
Update the user interface (potentially creating new widgets and windows). First automatically create the user interface if it has not yet been initialized. Can only be called in the main thread: use awake("update")
to trigger an update of the user interface from another thread.
gmsh/fltk/awake
Awake the main user interface thread and process pending events, and optionally perform an action (currently the only action
allowed is "update").
action = ""
(string)
-
-
Python (custom_gui.py)
gmsh/fltk/lock
Block the current thread until it can safely modify the user interface.
-
-
-
Python (custom_gui.py)
gmsh/fltk/unlock
Release the lock that was set using lock.
-
-
-
Python (custom_gui.py)
gmsh/fltk/run
Run the event loop of the graphical user interface, i.e. repeatedly call wait()
. First automatically create the user interface if it has not yet been initialized. Can only be called in the main thread.
gmsh/fltk/isAvailable
Check if the user interface is available (e.g. to detect if it has been closed).
gmsh/fltk/selectEntities
Select entities in the user interface. Return the selected entities as a vector of (dim, tag) pairs. If dim
is >= 0, return only the entities of the specified dimension (e.g. points if dim
== 0).
gmsh/fltk/selectElements
Select elements in the user interface.
-
elementTags
(vector of sizes)
integer
Python (select_elements.py)
gmsh/fltk/selectViews
Select views in the user interface.
gmsh/fltk/splitCurrentWindow
Split the current window horizontally (if how
== "h") or vertically (if how
== "v"), using ratio ratio
. If how
== "u", restore a single window.
how = "v"
(string), ratio = 0.5
(double)
-
-
Python (split_window.py)
gmsh/fltk/setCurrentWindow
Set the current window by speficying its index (starting at 0) in the list of all windows. When new windows are created by splits, new windows are appended at the end of the list.
windowIndex = 0
(integer)
-
-
Python (split_window.py)
gmsh/fltk/setStatusMessage
Set a status message in the current window. If graphics
is set, display the message inside the graphic window instead of the status bar.
gmsh/fltk/showContextWindow
Show context window for the entity of dimension dim
and tag tag
.
gmsh/fltk/openTreeItem
Open the name
item in the menu tree.
gmsh/fltk/closeTreeItem
Close the name
item in the menu tree.
Next: Namespace gmsh/onelab, Previous: Namespace gmsh/fltk, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/parser
: parser functionsgmsh/parser/getNames
Get the names of the variables in the Gmsh parser matching the search
regular expression. If search
is empty, return all the names.
gmsh/parser/setNumber
Set the value of the number variable name
in the Gmsh parser. Create the variable if it does not exist; update the value if the variable exists.
gmsh/parser/setString
Set the value of the string variable name
in the Gmsh parser. Create the variable if it does not exist; update the value if the variable exists.
gmsh/parser/getNumber
Get the value of the number variable name
from the Gmsh parser. Return an empty vector if the variable does not exist.
gmsh/parser/getString
Get the value of the string variable name
from the Gmsh parser. Return an empty vector if the variable does not exist.
gmsh/parser/clear
Clear all the Gmsh parser variables, or remove a single variable if name
is given.
gmsh/parser/parse
Parse the file fileName
with the Gmsh parser.
Next: Namespace gmsh/logger, Previous: Namespace gmsh/parser, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/onelab
: ONELAB server functionsgmsh/onelab/set
Set one or more parameters in the ONELAB database, encoded in format
.
gmsh/onelab/get
Get all the parameters (or a single one if name
is specified) from the ONELAB database, encoded in format
.
name = ""
(string), format = "json"
(string)
data
(string)
-
Python (onelab_run_auto.py, onelab_test.py, prepro.py)
gmsh/onelab/getNames
Get the names of the parameters in the ONELAB database matching the search
regular expression. If search
is empty, return all the names.
gmsh/onelab/setNumber
Set the value of the number parameter name
in the ONELAB database. Create the parameter if it does not exist; update the value if the parameter exists.
name
(string), value
(vector of doubles)
-
-
Python (custom_gui.py, onelab_run.py, onelab_test.py)
gmsh/onelab/setString
Set the value of the string parameter name
in the ONELAB database. Create the parameter if it does not exist; update the value if the parameter exists.
gmsh/onelab/getNumber
Get the value of the number parameter name
from the ONELAB database. Return an empty vector if the parameter does not exist.
gmsh/onelab/getString
Get the value of the string parameter name
from the ONELAB database. Return an empty vector if the parameter does not exist.
gmsh/onelab/getChanged
Check if any parameters in the ONELAB database used by the client name
have been changed.
gmsh/onelab/setChanged
Set the changed flag to value value
for all the parameters in the ONELAB database used by the client name
.
gmsh/onelab/clear
Clear the ONELAB database, or remove a single parameter if name
is given.
name = ""
(string)
-
-
Python (onelab_test.py)
gmsh/onelab/run
Run a ONELAB client. If name
is provided, create a new ONELAB client with name name
and executes command
. If not, try to run a client that might be linked to the processed input files.
name = ""
(string), command = ""
(string)
-
-
Python (onelab_run.py, onelab_run_auto.py)
Previous: Namespace gmsh/onelab, Up: Gmsh application programming interface [Contents][Index]
gmsh/logger
: information logging functionsgmsh/logger/write
Write a message
. level
can be "info", "warning" or "error".
gmsh/logger/start
Start logging messages.
gmsh/logger/get
Get logged messages.
gmsh/logger/stop
Stop logging messages.
gmsh/logger/getWallTime
Return wall clock time (in s).
-
-
double
Python (import_perf.py)
gmsh/logger/getCpuTime
Return CPU time (in s).
gmsh/logger/getMemory
Return memory usage (in Mb).
gmsh/logger/getTotalMemory
Return total available memory (in Mb).
gmsh/logger/getLastError
Return last error message, if any.
Next: Gmsh mesh size fields, Previous: Gmsh application programming interface, Up: Top [Contents][Index]
This chapter lists all the Gmsh options. Options can be specified in
script files (see General scripting commands) or using the API
(see Namespace gmsh/option): see t3 for an example. They can
also be specified on the command line using the -setnumber
and
-setstring
switches: see Gmsh command-line interface. Many
options can also be changed interactively in the GUI (see Gmsh graphical user interface): to see which option corresponds to which
widget in the GUI, leave your mouse on the widget and a tooltip with the
option name will appear. Note that some options can affect the GUI in
real time: loading a script file that sets General.GraphicsWidth
for example (see General options) will change the width of the
graphic window at runtime.
Gmsh’s default behavior is to save some of these options in a per-user
“session resource” file (cf. “Saved in:
General.SessionFileName
” in the option descriptions below) every
time Gmsh is shut down. This permits for example to automatically
remember the size and location of the windows or which fonts to use. A
second set of options can be saved (automatically or manually with the
‘File->Save Options As Default’ menu) in a per-user “option” file
(cf. “Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
” in the descriptions
below), automatically loaded by Gmsh every time it starts up. Finally,
other options are only saved to disk manually, either by explicitly
saving an option file with ‘File->Export’, or when saving per-model
options with ‘File->Save Model Options’ (cf. “Saved in: -
” in
the lists below). Per-model options are saved in a file name matching
the model file, but with an extra .opt extension appended: the
option file will be automatically opened after Gmsh opens the model
file.
Gmsh will attempt to save and load the session and option files first in
the $GMSH_HOME
directory, then in $APPDATA
(on Windows) or
$HOME
(on other OSes), then in $TMP
, and finally in
$TEMP
, in that order. If none of these variables are defined,
Gmsh will try to save and load the files from the current working
directory.
To reset all options to their default values, either delete the
General.SessionFileName
and General.OptionsFileName
files
by hand, use ‘Help->Restore All Options to Default Settings’, or click
on ‘Restore all options to default settings’ button in the
‘Tools->Options->General->Advanced’ window.
• General options | ||
• Print options | ||
• Geometry options | ||
• Mesh options | ||
• Solver options | ||
• Post-processing options | ||
• Post-processing view options |
Next: Print options, Previous: Gmsh options, Up: Gmsh options [Contents][Index]
General.AxesFormatX
Number format for X-axis (in standard C form)
Default value: "%.3g"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesFormatY
Number format for Y-axis (in standard C form)
Default value: "%.3g"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesFormatZ
Number format for Z-axis (in standard C form)
Default value: "%.3g"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesLabelX
X-axis label
Default value: ""
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesLabelY
Y-axis label
Default value: ""
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesLabelZ
Z-axis label
Default value: ""
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImageFileName
Background image file in JPEG, PNG or PDF format
Default value: ""
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BuildInfo
Gmsh build information (read-only)
Default value: "Version: 4.13.1-git-196f8bf9f; License: GNU General Public License; Build OS: MacOSARM-sdk; Build date: 20240524; Build host: MacBook-Pro-M2.local; Build options: 64Bit ALGLIB[contrib] ANN[contrib] Bamg Blossom Cairo Cgns DIntegration Dlopen DomHex Eigen[contrib] Fltk GMP Gmm[contrib] Hxt Jpeg Kbipack MathEx[contrib] Med Mesh Metis[contrib] Mmg Mpeg Netgen Nii2mesh ONELAB ONELABMetamodel OpenCASCADE OpenCASCADE-CAF OpenGL OpenMP[Homebrew] OptHom Parser Plugins Png Post QuadMeshingTools QuadTri Solver TetGen/BR TinyXML2[contrib] TouchBar Untangle Voro++[contrib] WinslowUntangler Zlib; FLTK version: 1.4.0; OCC version: 7.8.1; MED version: 4.1.1; Packaged by: geuzaine; Web site: https://gmsh.info; Issue tracker: https://gitlab.onelab.info/gmsh/gmsh/issues"
Saved in: -
General.BuildOptions
Gmsh build options (read-only)
Default value: "64Bit ALGLIB[contrib] ANN[contrib] Bamg Blossom Cairo Cgns DIntegration Dlopen DomHex Eigen[contrib] Fltk GMP Gmm[contrib] Hxt Jpeg Kbipack MathEx[contrib] Med Mesh Metis[contrib] Mmg Mpeg Netgen Nii2mesh ONELAB ONELABMetamodel OpenCASCADE OpenCASCADE-CAF OpenGL OpenMP[Homebrew] OptHom Parser Plugins Png Post QuadMeshingTools QuadTri Solver TetGen/BR TinyXML2[contrib] TouchBar Untangle Voro++[contrib] WinslowUntangler Zlib"
Saved in: -
General.DefaultFileName
Default project file name
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Display
X server to use (only for Unix versions)
Default value: ""
Saved in: -
General.ErrorFileName
File into which the log is saved if a fatal error occurs
Default value: ".gmsh-errors"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ExecutableFileName
File name of the Gmsh executable (read-only)
Default value: ""
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FileName
Current project file name (read-only)
Default value: ""
Saved in: -
General.FltkTheme
FLTK user interface theme (try e.g. plastic or gtk+)
Default value: ""
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.GraphicsFont
Font used in the graphic window
Default value: "Helvetica"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.GraphicsFontEngine
Set graphics font engine (Native, StringTexture, Cairo)
Default value: "Native"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.GraphicsFontTitle
Font used in the graphic window for titles
Default value: "Helvetica"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.NumberFormat
Number format (in standard C form)
Default value: "%.3g"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.OptionsFileName
Option file created with ‘Tools->Options->Save’; automatically read on startup
Default value: ".gmsh-options"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile0
Most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile1
2nd most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile2
3rd most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile3
4th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile4
5th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile5
6th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile6
7th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile7
8th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile8
9th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.RecentFile9
10th most recent opened file
Default value: "untitled.geo"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.SessionFileName
Option file into which session specific information is saved; automatically read on startup
Default value: ".gmshrc"
Saved in: -
General.ScriptingLanguages
Language(s) in which scripting commands generated by the GUI are written
Default value: "geo"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.TextEditor
System command to launch a text editor
Default value: "open -t '%s'"
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.TmpFileName
Temporary file used by the geometry module
Default value: ".gmsh-tmp"
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.Version
Gmsh version (read-only)
Default value: "4.13.1-git-196f8bf9f"
Saved in: -
General.WatchFilePattern
Pattern of files to merge as they become available
Default value: ""
Saved in: -
General.AbortOnError
Abort on error? (0: no, 1: abort meshing, 2: throw an exception unless in interactive mode, 3: throw an exception always, 4: exit)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AlphaBlending
Enable alpha blending (transparency) in post-processing views
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Antialiasing
Use multisample antialiasing (will slow down rendering)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ArrowHeadRadius
Relative radius of arrow head
Default value: 0.12
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ArrowStemLength
Relative length of arrow stem
Default value: 0.56
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ArrowStemRadius
Relative radius of arrow stem
Default value: 0.02
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Axes
Axes (0: none, 1: simple axes, 2: box, 3: full grid, 4: open grid, 5: ruler)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMikado
Mikado axes style
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesAutoPosition
Position the axes automatically
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesForceValue
Force values on axes (otherwise use natural coordinates)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMaxX
Maximum X-axis coordinate
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMaxY
Maximum Y-axis coordinate
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMaxZ
Maximum Z-axis coordinate
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMinX
Minimum X-axis coordinate
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMinY
Minimum Y-axis coordinate
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesMinZ
Minimum Z-axis coordinate
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesTicsX
Number of tics on the X-axis
Default value: 5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesTicsY
Number of tics on the Y-axis
Default value: 5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesTicsZ
Number of tics on the Z-axis
Default value: 5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesValueMaxX
Maximum X-axis forced value
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesValueMaxY
Maximum Y-axis forced value
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesValueMaxZ
Maximum Z-axis forced value
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesValueMinX
Minimum X-axis forced value
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesValueMinY
Minimum Y-axis forced value
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.AxesValueMinZ
Minimum Z-axis forced value
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundGradient
Draw background gradient (0: none, 1: vertical, 2: horizontal, 3: radial)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImage3D
Create background image in the 3D model (units = model units) or as 2D background (units = pixels)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImagePage
Page to render in the background image (for multi-page PDFs)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImagePositionX
X position of background image (for 2D background: < 0: measure from right window edge; >= 1e5: centered)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImagePositionY
Y position of background image (for 2D background: < 0: measure from bottom window edge; >= 1e5: centered)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImageWidth
Width of background image (0: actual width if height = 0, natural scaling if not; -1: graphic window width)
Default value: -1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BackgroundImageHeight
Height of background image (0: actual height if width = 0, natural scaling if not; -1: graphic window height)
Default value: -1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.BoundingBoxSize
Overall bounding box size (read-only)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Camera
Enable camera view mode
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.CameraAperture
Camera aperture in degrees
Default value: 40
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.CameraEyeSeparationRatio
Eye separation ratio in % for stereo rendering
Default value: 1.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.CameraFocalLengthRatio
Camera Focal length ratio
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Clip0A
First coefficient in equation for clipping plane 0 (‘A’ in ‘AX+BY+CZ+D=0’)
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.Clip0B
Second coefficient in equation for clipping plane 0 (‘B’ in ‘AX+BY+CZ+D=0’)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip0C
Third coefficient in equation for clipping plane 0 (‘C’ in ‘AX+BY+CZ+D=0’)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip0D
Fourth coefficient in equation for clipping plane 0 (‘D’ in ‘AX+BY+CZ+D=0’)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip1A
First coefficient in equation for clipping plane 1
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip1B
Second coefficient in equation for clipping plane 1
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.Clip1C
Third coefficient in equation for clipping plane 1
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip1D
Fourth coefficient in equation for clipping plane 1
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip2A
First coefficient in equation for clipping plane 2
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip2B
Second coefficient in equation for clipping plane 2
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip2C
Third coefficient in equation for clipping plane 2
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.Clip2D
Fourth coefficient in equation for clipping plane 2
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip3A
First coefficient in equation for clipping plane 3
Default value: -1
Saved in: -
General.Clip3B
Second coefficient in equation for clipping plane 3
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip3C
Third coefficient in equation for clipping plane 3
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip3D
Fourth coefficient in equation for clipping plane 3
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.Clip4A
First coefficient in equation for clipping plane 4
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip4B
Second coefficient in equation for clipping plane 4
Default value: -1
Saved in: -
General.Clip4C
Third coefficient in equation for clipping plane 4
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip4D
Fourth coefficient in equation for clipping plane 4
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.Clip5A
First coefficient in equation for clipping plane 5
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip5B
Second coefficient in equation for clipping plane 5
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.Clip5C
Third coefficient in equation for clipping plane 5
Default value: -1
Saved in: -
General.Clip5D
Fourth coefficient in equation for clipping plane 5
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.ClipFactor
Near and far clipping plane distance factor (decrease value for better z-buffer resolution)
Default value: 5
Saved in: -
General.ClipOnlyDrawIntersectingVolume
Only draw layer of elements that intersect the clipping plane
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ClipOnlyVolume
Only clip volume elements
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ClipPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the clipping planes window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ClipPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the clipping planes window
Default value: 150
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ClipWholeElements
Clip whole elements
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ColorScheme
Default color scheme for graphics (0: light, 1: default, 2: grayscale, 3: dark)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ConfirmOverwrite
Ask confirmation before overwriting files?
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ContextPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the contextual windows
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ContextPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the contextual windows
Default value: 150
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.DetachedMenu
Should the menu window be detached from the graphic window?
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.DetachedProcess
On Windows, should processes created by Gmsh be detached?
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.DisplayBorderFactor
Border factor for model display (0: model fits window size exactly)
Default value: 0.2
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.DoubleBuffer
Use a double buffered graphic window (on Unix, should be set to 0 when working on a remote host without GLX)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.DrawBoundingBoxes
Draw bounding boxes
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ExpertMode
Enable expert mode (to disable all the messages meant for inexperienced users)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ExtraPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the generic extra window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ExtraPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the generic extra window
Default value: 350
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ExtraHeight
Height (in pixels) of the generic extra window
Default value: 100
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ExtraWidth
Width (in pixels) of the generic extra window
Default value: 100
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FastRedraw
Draw simplified model while rotating, panning and zooming
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.FieldPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the field window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FieldPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the field window
Default value: 550
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FieldHeight
Height (in pixels) of the field window
Default value: 320
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FieldWidth
Width (in pixels) of the field window
Default value: 420
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FileChooserPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the file chooser windows
Default value: 200
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FileChooserPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the file chooser windows
Default value: 200
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FltkColorScheme
FLTK user interface color theme (0: standard, 1:dark)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.FltkRefreshRate
FLTK user interface maximum refresh rate, per second (0: no limit)
Default value: 5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.FontSize
Size of the font in the user interface, in pixels (-1: automatic)
Default value: -1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.GraphicsFontSize
Size of the font in the graphic window, in pixels
Default value: 15
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.GraphicsFontSizeTitle
Size of the font in the graphic window for titles, in pixels
Default value: 18
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.GraphicsHeight
Height (in pixels) of the graphic window
Default value: 600
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.GraphicsPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the graphic window
Default value: 50
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.GraphicsPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the graphic window
Default value: 50
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.GraphicsWidth
Width (in pixels) of the graphic window
Default value: 800
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.HighOrderToolsPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the high-order tools window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.HighOrderToolsPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the high-order tools window
Default value: 150
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.HighResolutionGraphics
Use high-resolution OpenGL graphics (e.g. for Macs with retina displays)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.InitialModule
Module launched on startup (0: automatic, 1: geometry, 2: mesh, 3: solver, 4: post-processing)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.InputScrolling
Enable numerical input scrolling in user interface (moving the mouse to change numbers)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light0
Enable light source 0
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light0X
X position of light source 0
Default value: 0.65
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light0Y
Y position of light source 0
Default value: 0.65
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light0Z
Z position of light source 0
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light0W
Divisor of the X, Y and Z coordinates of light source 0 (W=0 means infinitely far source)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light1
Enable light source 1
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light1X
X position of light source 1
Default value: 0.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light1Y
Y position of light source 1
Default value: 0.3
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light1Z
Z position of light source 1
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light1W
Divisor of the X, Y and Z coordinates of light source 1 (W=0 means infinitely far source)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light2
Enable light source 2
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light2X
X position of light source 2
Default value: 0.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light2Y
Y position of light source 2
Default value: 0.3
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light2Z
Z position of light source 2
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light2W
Divisor of the X, Y and Z coordinates of light source 2 (W=0 means infinitely far source)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light3
Enable light source 3
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light3X
X position of light source 3
Default value: 0.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light3Y
Y position of light source 3
Default value: 0.3
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light3Z
Z position of light source 3
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light3W
Divisor of the X, Y and Z coordinates of light source 3 (W=0 means infinitely far source)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light4
Enable light source 4
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light4X
X position of light source 4
Default value: 0.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light4Y
Y position of light source 4
Default value: 0.3
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light4Z
Z position of light source 4
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light4W
Divisor of the X, Y and Z coordinates of light source 4 (W=0 means infinitely far source)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light5
Enable light source 5
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light5X
X position of light source 5
Default value: 0.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light5Y
Y position of light source 5
Default value: 0.3
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light5Z
Z position of light source 5
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Light5W
Divisor of the X, Y and Z coordinates of light source 5 (W=0 means infinitely far source)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.LineWidth
Display width of lines (in pixels)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ManipulatorPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the manipulator window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ManipulatorPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the manipulator window
Default value: 150
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.MaxX
Maximum model coordinate along the X-axis (read-only)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.MaxY
Maximum model coordinate along the Y-axis (read-only)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.MaxZ
Maximum model coordinate along the Z-axis (read-only)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.MenuWidth
Width (in pixels) of the menu tree
Default value: 200
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.MenuHeight
Height (in pixels) of the (detached) menu tree
Default value: 200
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.MenuPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the (detached) menu tree
Default value: 400
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.MenuPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the (detached) menu tree
Default value: 400
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.MessageFontSize
Size of the font in the message window, in pixels (-1: automatic)
Default value: -1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.MessageHeight
Height (in pixels) of the message console when it is visible (should be > 0)
Default value: 300
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.MinX
Minimum model coordinate along the X-axis (read-only)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.MinY
Minimum model coordinate along the Y-axis (read-only)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.MinZ
Minimum model coordinate along the Z-axis (read-only)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.MouseHoverMeshes
Enable mouse hover on meshes
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.MouseSelection
Enable mouse selection
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.MouseInvertZoom
Invert mouse wheel zoom direction
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.NativeFileChooser
Use the native file chooser?
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.NonModalWindows
Force all control windows to be on top of the graphic window ("non-modal")
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.NoPopup
Disable interactive dialog windows in scripts (and use default values instead)
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.NumThreads
Maximum number of threads used by Gmsh when compiled with OpenMP support (0: use system default, i.e. OMP_NUM_THREADS)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.OptionsPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the option window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.OptionsPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the option window
Default value: 150
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.Orthographic
Orthographic projection mode (0: perspective projection)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.PluginPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the plugin window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.PluginPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the plugin window
Default value: 550
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.PluginHeight
Height (in pixels) of the plugin window
Default value: 320
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.PluginWidth
Width (in pixels) of the plugin window
Default value: 420
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.PointSize
Display size of points (in pixels)
Default value: 3
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.PolygonOffsetAlwaysOn
Always apply polygon offset, instead of trying to detect when it is required
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.PolygonOffsetFactor
Polygon offset factor (offset = factor * DZ + r * units)
Default value: 0.5
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.PolygonOffsetUnits
Polygon offset units (offset = factor * DZ + r * units)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ProgressMeterStep
Increment (in percent) of the progress meter bar
Default value: 10
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.QuadricSubdivisions
Number of subdivisions used to draw points or lines as spheres or cylinders
Default value: 6
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.RotationX
First Euler angle (used if Trackball=0)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.RotationY
Second Euler angle (used if Trackball=0)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.RotationZ
Third Euler angle (used if Trackball=0)
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.RotationCenterGravity
Rotate around the (pseudo) center of mass instead of (RotationCenterX, RotationCenterY, RotationCenterZ)
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.RotationCenterX
X coordinate of the center of rotation
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.RotationCenterY
Y coordinate of the center of rotation
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.RotationCenterZ
Z coordinate of the center of rotation
Default value: 0
Saved in: -
General.SaveOptions
Automatically save current options in General.OptionsFileName (1) or per model (2)when the graphical user interface is closed?
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.SaveSession
Automatically save session specific information in General.SessionFileName when the graphical user interface is closed?
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.ScaleX
X-axis scale factor
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.ScaleY
Y-axis scale factor
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.ScaleZ
Z-axis scale factor
Default value: 1
Saved in: -
General.Shininess
Material shininess
Default value: 0.4
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ShininessExponent
Material shininess exponent (between 0 and 128)
Default value: 40
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ShowModuleMenu
Show the standard Gmsh menu in the tree
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ShowOptionsOnStartup
Show option window on startup
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.ShowMessagesOnStartup
Show message window on startup
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.SmallAxes
Display the small axes
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.SmallAxesPositionX
X position (in pixels) of small axes (< 0: measure from right window edge; >= 1e5: centered)
Default value: -60
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.SmallAxesPositionY
Y position (in pixels) of small axes (< 0: measure from bottom window edge; >= 1e5: centered)
Default value: -40
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.SmallAxesSize
Size (in pixels) of small axes
Default value: 30
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.StatisticsPositionX
Horizontal position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the statistic window
Default value: 650
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.StatisticsPositionY
Vertical position (in pixels) of the upper left corner of the statistic window
Default value: 150
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.Stereo
Use stereo rendering
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.SystemMenuBar
Use the system menu bar on macOS?
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.SessionFileName
General.Terminal
Should information be printed on the terminal (if available)?
Default value: 0
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Tooltips
Show tooltips in the user interface
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.Trackball
Use trackball rotation mode
Default value: 1
Saved in: General.OptionsFileName
General.TrackballHyperbolicSheet
Use hyperbolic sheet away from trackball center for z-rotations
Default value: 1
Saved in: