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Elements

Tag and Publish Alpha Build and Test on PR NuGet

Projects

Name Description
Elements The core elements library containg the Element type, the geometry kernel, and all other core building element types.
Elements.Benchmarks Benchmarks and tracing for Elements.
Elements.CodeGeneration Methods for converting JSON schema of Element types to C#.
Elements.Components Component creation for Elements.
Elements.Playground A live code-editing application for generating elements in the browser.
Elements.Serialization.DXF Methods for serializing a Model to and from DXF.
Elements.Serialization.IFC Methods for serializing a Model to IFC.

Latest Updates

For the latest updates see the CHANGELOG.

Getting Started

In a .net core project:

> dotnet add package Hypar.Elements

In Visual Studio:

PM> Install-Package Hypar.Elements

Documentation

Find the documentation here.

Examples

The best examples are those provided in the tests, where we demonstrate usage of almost every function in the library.

What

Elements is a cross-platform library for creating building elements. Elements is for architects, engineers, and other building professionals who want to write code that generates buildings.

When we started Hypar we needed a library that would generate building elements and run at the core of each function on the platform. Because we don't like rebuilding the wheel, we looked around for existing libraries that fulfilled the following requirements:

  • The library must be small and fast.
  • The library must run in micro-services on Linux.
  • The library must have great visual documentation. If we're going to pass this library on as a recommendation to developers on Hypar, we want great docs.
  • The library must be free of dependencies on host applications like Rhino or Revit.
  • The library must be free of dependencies on proprietary geometry kernels.
  • The library must be able to serialize data to formats that are useful to architects, engineers, contractors, and people building real-time visualization applications for AEC, like JSON, IFC,and glTF.
  • The library must be written in a language that supports developer productivity through things like type safety.
  • The library should support code re-use in other popular AEC applications like Dynamo, Grasshopper, Revit, and Unity.
  • Serialization and deserialization of types that extend Element should be possible provided that those types are made up of primitives defined in this library.

We couldn't find anything quite right. So we started building this.

Design Principles

  • An Element is a uniquely identifiable piece of a building system.
  • Elements can contain references to other elements. Consider a Truss which is made of individual structural framing elements.
  • Elements can be instanced. The original element is considered the "base definition". An element instance contains a reference to the base element, a transform, and a name.
  • Elements is a C# library presently, but we expect that Element types will be used in other languages in the future. Therefore, we shouldn't rely on capabilities of C#, like attributes, to convey meaning of the types or their properties.
  • The core Element types will be defined in exactly the same way that third-party types will be defined.
  • It is possible that over time these types (ex: Beam, Column, Wall, etc.) are removed from the library and only made available as schemas from which user elements can be derived.

Why Not Use IFC?

In IFC, Revit, and other "BIM" applications, the building element ontology is fixed. If you want to introduce a new element which is key to your work process, you need to find the most closely matching category and put your element there. In Revit you might use the "Generic" category. In IFC you might use the IFCBuildingElementProxy type. This makes it very difficult for the recipient of a model to reason about the model semantically. Elements enables the user to create "first class" element types in the system. If you want to create a Curtain Wall Bracket, you simply create a class CurtainWallBracket : Element and users can search for your element by its defined type.

Geometry

Elements contains a very simple hybrid BREP/CSG geometry kernel, and a small set of geometric types like vectors, lines, arcs, and polygons. Elements uses a right-handed coordinate system with +Z "up". Elements is unitless except as indicated when calling a geometric method. For example, arcs requires angles in degrees.

The geometry kernel that we've created for Elements is a very simple BREP kernel which does "flat stuff with holes in it" really well. We think Nurbs are sexy, and we'll definitely support more curvy stuff in the future, it's just that the effort required to support arbitrarily complex geometry for micro-services running in the cloud is not small. Professional geometry kernels, like the kind found in mechanical modeling applications, are also usually large, expensive, and not open source. They introduce cost and complexity, and restrict the open nature of code that you write with Elements.

Precision

Geometry operations in Elements use Vector3.Epsilon=1e-05 to compare values that should be considered equal. This is important as geometric operations using floating point numbers are imprecise. In addition, .NET will return different values for these operations on different systems. We have seen intersection tests that pass on a mac and fail on linux. Please use the provided methods like double.IsAlmostEqualTo(...), Vector3.IsZero(), and Vector3.IsAlmostEqualTo(...) which account for precision.

Build

You'll only need to do this if you want to contribute to the library, otherwise you can use the NuGet package that is published regularly.

dotnet build

Test

dotnet test

Benchmark

See Benchmark Documentation.

Documentation

When adding sample code you need to add a special block of text to the class or method where you want the code to appear. The value of name at the end of the URI will be matched with open and close tags in the test file. See Joist.cs and StructuralFramingTests.cs for an sample.

        /// <example>
        /// [!code-csharp[Main](../../Elements/test/StructuralFramingTests.cs?name=example)]
        /// </example>

You may add up to one sample glb file per class, and when you name it the name must match the namespace, and class you are trying to demonstrate with _ instead of .. For example Elements.Spatial.Grid2d sample glb is named Elements_Spatial_Grid2d.

Building the Documentation

cd doc
docfx -f --serve

Updating the Changelog

We use CHANGELOG.md to provide a list of changes to Elements. The easiest way to compile this log for new releases is to look at the commits that occurred between changes. This can be done as follows: git log --pretty=oneline v0.3.6...v0.3.7, where the tags are changed appropriately.

Testing with Notebooks

Elements can be tested in a Polyglot Notebook.

To test against a released Elements package, add the following to the top of your notebook.

#r "nuget:Hypar.Elements, *-*"

To test against a local build of Elements, add the following to the top of your notebook.

#r "/Users/iankeough/dev/Hypar/Elements/Elements/src/bin/Debug/netstandard2.0/Hypar.Elements.dll"
#r "nuget:glTF2Loader, 1.1.3-alpha"
#r "nuget:Unofficial.LibTessDotNet, 2.0.0"

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