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Answered by
rquey
Jun 6, 2024
Replies: 1 comment
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Not that I can think of. I would work directly with the tessellation, ignore/remove all top grains and work on the properties of the surface formed by the bottom grains. You can do it in Neper itself or in an external program. EDIT: you can also remove the top cells using |
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rquey
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Not that I can think of. I would work directly with the tessellation, ignore/remove all top grains and work on the properties of the surface formed by the bottom grains. You can do it in Neper itself or in an external program.
EDIT: you can also remove the top cells using
-transform rmcell
and work from there.(needs version >= 4.9.1-2)