Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
2 years ago
20 févr. 2023, 07:59 UTC−5
Updated:
2 years ago
20 févr. 2023, 10:56 UTC−5
There are several possibilities.
One, very lightweight method, is shown in the attached screenshot: Use a Copy node referencing a random function.
A more sophisticated variant, using a model method, is described in this blog post:
https://www.comsol.com/blogs/how-to-create-a-randomized-geometry-using-model-methods/
An important thing to consider, is whether it is a problem or not if the generated objects overlap.
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Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL
There are several possibilities.
One, very lightweight method, is shown in the attached screenshot: Use a *Copy* node referencing a random function.
A more sophisticated variant, using a model method, is described in this blog post:
An important thing to consider, is whether it is a problem or not if the generated objects overlap.
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
2 years ago
20 févr. 2023, 08:41 UTC−5
There are several possibilities.
One, very lightweight method, is shown in the attached screenshot: Use a Copy node referencing a random function.
A more sophisticated variant, using a model method, is described in this blog post:
An important thing to consider, is whether it is a problem or not if the generated objects overlap.
thank you!
>There are several possibilities.
>
>One, very lightweight method, is shown in the attached screenshot: Use a *Copy* node referencing a random function.
>
>A more sophisticated variant, using a model method, is described in this blog post:
>
>
>
>An important thing to consider, is whether it is a problem or not if the generated objects overlap.
thank you!