Difference between revisions of "Reference:Ovus"
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<li>The minor radius of the lemon is twice the largest radius</li> | <li>The minor radius of the lemon is twice the largest radius</li> | ||
<li>The <code>distance</code> <em>must</em> be greater than or equal to <em>Bottom_radius</em></li> | <li>The <code>distance</code> <em>must</em> be greater than or equal to <em>Bottom_radius</em></li> | ||
| − | <li>The <code>radius</code> <em>must</em> be greater than or equal to half the sum of <em>Bottom_radius</em>, <em>Top_radius</em> and < | + | <li>The <code>radius</code> <em>must</em> be greater than or equal to half the sum of <em>Bottom_radius</em>, <em>Top_radius</em> and <em>Vertical_distance</em></li> |
</ul> | </ul> | ||
</td> | </td> | ||
Revision as of 15:46, 15 July 2017
An ovus is a shape that looks like an egg. A Change in version 3.8 has extended the syntax of the ovus object by adding radius, distance and precision controls.
The syntax is as follows:
ovus {
Bottom_radius, Top_radius [radius Inner_radius] [distance Vertical_distance] [precision Root_tolerance]
[OBJECT_MODIFIERS...]
}
Where Bottom_radius is a float value giving the radius of the bottom sphere and Top_radius is a float specifying the radius of the top sphere. The top and bottom spheres are connected together with a suitably truncated lemon, or self intersection of a torus, that is automatically computed so as to provide the needed continuity to the shape. The distance is a float value that represents the length between the center of the two spheres, defaulting to Bottom_radius. The radius float value represents the inner circle of the connecting torus and it's default is twice the greater of either Top_radius or Bottom_radius. The precision float value is the tolerance used for the root solving of the connecting torus. If additional accuracy is required you can now add the sturm object modifier.
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An ovus 2D section |
The ovus and it's constituent 3D shapes |
Note: According to the ratio of the radius, the pointy part is the smallest radius, but is not always on top!
Evolution of ratio from 0 to 1.95 in 0.15 steps. |
Note: See the following MathWorld references for more information about the math behind how the ovus object is constructed.


