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Wrong side of bed today?

As a matter of fact I even put my finger up to the screen to verify that the edges were not in any way wobbling. The subtracted shape is a gyroid, which in no way has natural axes, so I beg your forgiveness for still not understanding the question.




I think you are referring to first video on home page while other two are talking about first video on examples page. That example has CSG operations on solids that share the vertical axis so the resulting shape should not wobble.


Yes, wrong side of the bed, I usually sleep on the left, but I definitely was on the right side that day, not that it's pertinent.

I meant what I said, that it appeared that you hadn't bothered to read the page, or to fully read the comment. Your question is talking about a sphere (which can, btw, be rotated "off axis"), while the original comment was indicating one of the subtracted spheres from the page. Any of those subtracted spheres could be rotated off axis. So either you were ignoring a pertinent part of the original comment, or hadn't bothered to look at the subjects that comment was directed towards (either of these scenarios would violate HN guidelines).

Off-axis rotation could mean many things in the context of the original comment, as is pointed out by other responses to your first comment. While it's true that a gyroid has no planar natural axes (by design), a gyroid can have many natural axes, depending on the space it is modelled in and the criteria for axis selection. For example, an axis can be found in the radial symmetry about the center of mass of a gyroid, in an infinite number of planes.

A sphere can also be rotated off axis. If the axis of rotation is not projected across the center of mass of the sphere (rotation would be different than the infinite number of natural axes going through center of mass) is one way. Another way would be if the axis of rotation tended toward one of the COM natural axes at both ends, but was non-linear. Another off axis rotation would be if the axis of rotation was the natural axis, but was not co-planar with the rotation of the viewing axis, which would make it appear to wobble.


There's definitely a wobble in the first example, no need for the attitude.


>Apparently you didn't bother to fully read their comment, or even look at the page.

Was there a need for this attitude (which, by the way, violates HN guidelines)?

I was looking, not unreasonably, at the linked page. I see that indeed the first example on the "Examples" page exhibits this wobble - thanks to user jmiskovic who was actually helpful.


I'll direct you to my second response to you, where I point out why it appeared from what you wrote that you either hadn't read the original comment fully, or had not examined the subject of that comment. I believe pointing this out was not a violation of HN guidelines, while your negative attitude in multiple comments since then is most definitely in violation.

As far as being helpful, I don't think your first comment falls into that category either.


write a song about it




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