Hi all, Quick question: Has anyone tried to check the location of a particular element in the mesh? A log file reports the maximum (?) CFL and the corresponding element as: "CFL: 0.0337915 (in elmt 94488)"? Is there a quick way to locate "elmt 94488"? Cheers, Vishal
HI Vishal, I thought we might have a routine for this but could not find one. I thought it might be part of the range option but it does not seem to be the case. You can edit the composites so it only contains the element you wish to view and then use FieldConvert to make an output of the mesh. Cheres, Spencer
On 6 Dec 2018, at 01:22, Vishal Saini <vishal.saini.nitj@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,
Quick question: Has anyone tried to check the location of a particular element in the mesh? A log file reports the maximum (?) CFL and the corresponding element as: "CFL: 0.0337915 (in elmt 94488)"? Is there a quick way to locate "elmt 94488"?
Cheers, Vishal _______________________________________________ Nektar-users mailing list Nektar-users@imperial.ac.uk https://mailman.ic.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/nektar-users
Spencer Sherwin FREng, FRAeS Head, Aerodynamics, Director of Research Computing Service, Professor of Computational Fluid Mechanics, Department of Aeronautics, s.sherwin@imperial.ac.uk South Kensington Campus, Phone: +44 (0)20 7594 5052 Imperial College London, Fax: +44 (0)20 7594 1974 London, SW7 2AZ, UK http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/s.sherwin/
******************* This email originates from outside Imperial. Do not click on links and attachments unless you recognise the sender. If you trust the sender, add them to your safe senders list https://spam.ic.ac.uk/SpamConsole/Senders.aspx to disable email stamping for this address. ******************* Hi all, If anyone is interested, I have found a way using Gmsh software GUI. You enter the element number and it shows the element in the bounding box of the domain. Full procedure can be found here: http://onelab.info/pipermail/gmsh/2003/000891.html BR, Vishal --- *Vishal SAINI* On Sun, Dec 9, 2018 at 5:49 PM Sherwin, Spencer J <s.sherwin@imperial.ac.uk> wrote:
HI Vishal,
I thought we might have a routine for this but could not find one. I thought it might be part of the range option but it does not seem to be the case.
You can edit the composites so it only contains the element you wish to view and then use FieldConvert to make an output of the mesh.
Cheres, Spencer
On 6 Dec 2018, at 01:22, Vishal Saini <vishal.saini.nitj@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,
Quick question: Has anyone tried to check the location of a particular element in the mesh? A log file reports the maximum (?) CFL and the corresponding element as: "CFL: 0.0337915 (in elmt 94488)"? Is there a quick way to locate "elmt 94488"?
Cheers, Vishal _______________________________________________ Nektar-users mailing list Nektar-users@imperial.ac.uk https://mailman.ic.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/nektar-users
Spencer Sherwin FREng, FRAeS Head, Aerodynamics, Director of Research Computing Service, Professor of Computational Fluid Mechanics, Department of Aeronautics, s.sherwin@imperial.ac.uk South Kensington Campus, Phone: +44 (0)20 7594 5052 Imperial College London, Fax: +44 (0)20 7594 1974 London, SW7 2AZ, UK http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/s.sherwin/
participants (2)
- 
                
                Sherwin, Spencer J
- 
                
                Vishal Saini