Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
Select Git revision
  • 0c958f7a04fc3667642a8764d7327287a1549eb9
  • master default
  • cgnsUnstructured
  • partitioning
  • poppler
  • HighOrderBLCurving
  • gmsh_3_0_4
  • gmsh_3_0_3
  • gmsh_3_0_2
  • gmsh_3_0_1
  • gmsh_3_0_0
  • gmsh_2_16_0
  • gmsh_2_15_0
  • gmsh_2_14_1
  • gmsh_2_14_0
  • gmsh_2_13_2
  • gmsh_2_13_1
  • gmsh_2_12_0
  • gmsh_2_11_0
  • gmsh_2_10_1
  • gmsh_2_10_0
  • gmsh_2_9_3
  • gmsh_2_9_2
  • gmsh_2_9_1
  • gmsh_2_9_0
  • gmsh_2_8_6
26 results

gmshFace.cpp

Blame
  • Forked from gmsh / gmsh
    Source project has a limited visibility.
    gmsh.html 11.88 KiB
    <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
    <HTML>
    
    <HEAD>
    
    <TITLE>Gmsh: a three-dimensional finite element mesh generator with
    built-in pre- and post-processing facilities</TITLE>
    
    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> 
    
    <meta name="keywords" content="free mesh generator, free finite element
    software, mesh generation, mesh refinement, free, delaunay triangulation,
    automatic, maillages automatiques, mailleur, modelisation, opengl,
    maillages 3D, 3D meshes, 3-D meshes, maillages 3-D, voronoi,
    adaptation de maillages, mesh adaptation, modeling">
    
    <META name="Autor-Handle" content="Christophe.Geuzaine@advalvas.be">
    
    <LINK href="/general.css" rel="stylesheet">
    
    </HEAD>
    
    <BODY>
    
    <h1 align="center">Gmsh: a three-dimensional finite element mesh
    generator with built-in pre- and post-processing facilities</h1>
    <p>
    <h3 align="center">Christophe Geuzaine and Jean-François Remacle</h3>
    <p>
    <h3 align=center>Version <a href="doc/VERSIONS">1.28</a>, 5 November 2001</h3>
    <p>
    
    <h2>Description</h2>
    
    Gmsh is an automatic three-dimensional finite element mesh generator,
    primarily Delaunay, with built-in pre- and post-processing
    facilities. Its primal goal is to provide a simple meshing tool for
    academic test cases with parametric input and up to date visualization
    capabilities. One of the strengths of Gmsh is its ability to respect a
    characteristic length field for the generation of adapted meshes on
    lines, surfaces and volumes. These adapted meshes can be mixed with
    simple structured (transfinite, elliptic, etc.)  meshes in order to
    augment the flexibility.
    
    Gmsh is structured around four modules: <a
    href="#geometry">geometry</a>, <a href="#mesh">mesh</a>, <a
    href="#solver">solver</a> and <a
    href="#post-processing">post-processing</a>. The specification of any
    input to these modules is done either interactively, or in text data
    files (interactive specifications generate language bits in the input
    file, and vice versa). The accessibility of most features in the ASCII
    text file makes it possible to automate all treatments (loops, tests
    and external access methods permit advanced scripting capabilities). A
    brief description of the four modules is given hereafter.
    
    <h3><a name="geometry"></a>Geometry: geometrical entity definition</h3>
    
    Geometries are created in a bottom-up flow by successively defining
    points, oriented curves (segments, circles, ellipses, splines, etc.),
    oriented surfaces (plane surfaces, ruled surfaces, etc.) and
    volumes. Compound groups of geometrical entities can be defined, based
    on these elementary parametrized geometric entities. Data can be
    defined either interactively thanks to the menu system, or directly in
    the ASCII input files.  The scripting possibilities (with loops,
    tests, arrays of variables, etc.) allow fully parametrized definitions
    of all geometrical entities.
    
    <h3><a name="mesh"></a>Mesh: finite element mesh generation</h3>
    
    A finite element mesh is a tessellation of a given subset of
    R<sup>3</sup> by elementary geometrical elements of various shapes (in
    this case lines, triangles, quadrangles, tetrahedra, prisms and
    hexahedra), 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. All the
    finite element meshes produced by Gmsh as unstructured, even if they
    were generated in a structured way. This implies that the elementary
    geometrical elements are defined only by an ordered list of their
    vertices (which allows the orientation of all their lower order
    geometrical entities) but no predefined relation is assumed between
    any two elementary elements.
    <p>
    The mesh generation is performed in the same order as the geometry
    creation: 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. This automatically assures the continuity of the
    mesh when, for example, two surfaces share a common curve. Every
    meshing step is constrained by the characteristic length field, which
    can be uniform, specified by characteristic length associated to
    elementary geometrical entities, or associated to another mesh (the
    background mesh).
    <p>
    For each meshing step (i.e. the discretization of lines, surfaces and
    volumes), all structured mesh directives are executed first, and serve
    as additional constraints for the unstructured parts. The implemented
    Delaunay algorithm is subdivided in the following five steps for
    surface/volume discretization:
    <p>
    <ol>
    <li>trivial meshing of a box including the convex polygon/polyhedron
    defined by the boundary nodes resulting from the discretization of the
    curves/surfaces;
    
    <li>creation of the initial mesh by insertion of all the nodes on the
    curves/surfaces thanks to the Bowyer algorithm;
    
    <li>boundary restoration to force all the edges/faces of the
    curves/surfaces to be present in the initial mesh;
    
    <li>suppression of all the unwanted triangles/tetrahedra (in
    particular those containing the nodes of the initial box);
    
    <li>insertion of new nodes by the Bowyer algorithm until the
    characteristic size of each simplex is lower or equal to the
    characteristic length field evaluated at the center of its
    circumscribed circle/sphere.
    </ol>
    
    <h3><a name="solver"></a>Solver: external solver interface</h3>
    
    External solvers can be interfaced with Gmsh through a socket
    mechanism, which permits to easily launch computations either locally
    or on remote computers, and to collect and exploit the simulation
    results within Gmsh.  The only solver currently interfaced is <A
    HREF="/getdp/">GetDP</A>.
    
    <h3><a name="post-processing"></a>Post-processing: scalar and vector field visualization</h3>
    
    Multiple post-processing scalar or vector maps can be loaded and
    manipulated (globally or individually) along with the geometry and the
    mesh. Scalar fields are represented by iso-value curves/surfaces or
    color maps and vector fields by three-dimensional arrows or
    displacement maps. Post-processing functions include arbitrary section
    computation, offset, elevation, boundary extraction, color map and
    range modification, animation, <a href="/gl2ps/">vector graphic
    output</a>, etc. All post-processing options can be accessed either
    interactively or through the input ASCII text files. Scripting permits
    to automate all the post-processing operations (e.g. for the creation
    of complex animations).
    
    
    <h2>Documentation</h2>
    
    <ul>
      <li><A href="/gmsh/doc/tutorial.html">Online tutorial</A>
          (Please <b>read</b> this tutorial before sending any question to the mailing list!)
      <li><a href="/gmsh/doc/FAQ">Frequently asked questions (FAQ)</a>
      <li><A href="/gmsh/doc/VERSIONS">Version history</A>
      <li><A href="/gmsh/doc/FORMATS">Mesh and post-processing file formats</A>
      <li><a href="/gmsh/doc/KEYWORDS">List of reserved keywords</a>
      <li><a href="/gmsh/doc/README.txt">For Windows versions only</a>
    <!--
      <li><a href="/gmsh/doc/BUGS">List of open bugs</a>
      <li><a href="/gmsh/doc/CONTRIBUTORS">List of contributors</a>
    -->
    </ul>
    
    <FORM METHOD=GET ACTION="http://www.geuz.org/search/search-geuz.cgi">
    <INPUT SIZE=30 NAME="q" VALUE="">&nbsp;
    <INPUT TYPE="submit" VALUE="Search!">
    <INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN NAME="ul" VALUE="/gmsh/">
    </FORM>
    
    <h2>Mailing lists</h2>
    
    <ul>
      <li><a href="/mailman/listinfo/gmsh/">gmsh</a> is the public mailing
         list for Gmsh users. You should send all questions, bug reports,
         requests or pleas for changes related to Gmsh to this list. The
         list is archived <a href="/pipermail/gmsh/">here</a>
    
      <li><a href="/mailman/listinfo/gmsh-announce/">gmsh-announce</a> is
         a moderated (i.e. "read-only") list for announcements about
         significant Gmsh events. You should subscribe to this list to get
         information about software releases, important bug fixes and
         other Gmsh-specific news. The list is archived <a
         href="/pipermail/gmsh-announce/">here</a>.
    </ul>
    
    <h2>Download</h2>
    
    Executable versions of Gmsh are available for Windows and for most of
    the classical UNIX platforms. These versions are free, and are all
    dynamically linked with OpenGL<a href="#opengl-footnote"
    name="opengl-footmark"><sup>1</sup></a>. The only thing required if
    you use Gmsh is to mention it in your work. The tutorial and demo
    files are included in the archives.
    <ul>
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-Windows.zip">Windows zip archive (95/98/NT)</A>
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-2.i386.rpm">Linux RPM (Red Hat 6.2 and compatible, i386, glibc 2.1)</A> 
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-Linux.tgz">Linux tarball (i386, glibc 2.1)</A> 
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-OSF1.tgz">Compaq Tru64 tarball (OSF 4.0)</A> 
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-SunOS.tgz">Sun tarball (SunOS 5.5)</A> 
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-AIX.tgz">IBM tarball (AIX)</A> 
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-IRIX.tgz">SGI IRIX tarball (IRIX 6.5)</A> 
    <li><A href="/gmsh/bin/gmsh-1.28-HP-UX.tgz">HP tarball (HPUX 10.20)</A>
    </ul>
    
    <p>
    <a name="opengl-footnote"></a><a
    href="#opengl-footmark"><sup>1</sup></a>For Unix versions only: you
    should have the OpenGL libraries installed on your system, and in the
    path of the library loader. A free replacement for OpenGL can be found
    at <A
    href="http://mesa3d.sourceforge.net">http://mesa3d.sourceforge.net</A>
    (a Linux RPM is directly available <A
    href="/gmsh/thirdparty/Mesa-3.2-2.i386.rpm">here</A>).  Remember that
    you may have to reconfigure the loader (ldconfig under Linux) or
    modify the LD_LIBRARY_PATH (or SHLIB_PATH on HP) environment variable
    in order for Gmsh to find the libraries.
    
    
    <h2>Credits</h2>
    
    Gmsh is developed by <A
    HREF="mailto:Remacle@scorec.rpi.edu">Jean-François Remacle</A>
    (currently with the <a href="http://www.rpi.edu">Rensselaer
    Polytechnic Institute</a>) and <A
    HREF="mailto:Christophe.Geuzaine@ulg.ac.be">Christophe Geuzaine</A>
    (currently with the <a href="http://www.ulg.ac.be">University of
    Liège</a>).  Please use <A
    HREF="mailto:gmsh@geuz.org">gmsh@geuz.org</A> instead of our personal
    e-mails to send questions or bug reports.
    
    
    <h2>Gallery</h2>
    
    Some pictures made with Gmsh:
    <ul>
    <li>Part of a shoulder bone
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/shoulder1.gif">pict1</a>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/shoulder2.gif">pict2</a>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/shoulder3.gif">pict3</a>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/shoulder4.gif">pict4</a>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/shoulder5.gif">pict5</a>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/shoulder6.gif">pict6</a>
        (J. Fatemi).
    <li>Parts of a magnetron: <A href="/gmsh/gallery/magnetron1.gif">pict1</a>,
         <A href="/gmsh/gallery/magnetron2.gif">pict2</a>,
         <A href="/gmsh/gallery/magnetron3.gif">pict3</a>,
         <A href="/gmsh/gallery/magnetron4.gif">pict4</a>
         (P. Lefèvre).
    <li>A 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/breaker.gif">circuit breaker</A>
        (S. K. Choi).
    <li>A mechanical part in the demo files: 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/piece1.gif">pict1</A>, 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/piece2.gif">pict2</A>, 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/piece3.gif">pict3</A>.
    <li>The log-periodic <A href="/gmsh/gallery/antenna.gif">antenna</A> in the demo files.
    <li>An <A href="/gmsh/gallery/machine.gif">electrical machine</A> (J. Gyselinck).
    <li>A <A href="/gmsh/gallery/tresse1.gif">bread</A> (D. Colignon).
    <li>Mach number on a F16 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/f16-1.gif">pict1</A>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/f16-2.gif">pict2</A>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/f16-3.gif">pict3</A>,
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/f16-5.gif">pict4</A> (P. Geuzaine).
    <li>An example of on-screen information display: 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/infodisplay1.gif">pict1</A>, 
        <A href="/gmsh/gallery/infodisplay2.gif">pict2</A>.
    <li>A smooth 2D <A href="/gmsh/gallery/blob.gif">colormap</A> and 
        a 3D <A href="/gmsh/gallery/density.mov">quicktime movie</A>.
    <li>Some didactic animations about computational electromagnetics at 
        <A href="http://elap.montefiore.ulg.ac.be/elm/demos_en.html">ELAP</A>.
    </ul>
    
    
    <h2>Links</h2>
    
    Check out <A HREF="/getdp/">GetDP</A>, a scientific computation
    software for the numerical solution of integro-differential equations,
    using finite element and integral type methods.
    
    <p>
    Back to <a href="/">geuz.org</a>
    
    </BODY>
    </HTML>