Click Healing
in the Operations toolbar (Join-Healing sub-toolbar).
The Healing Definition dialog box appears.
Select the surfaces to be healed.
You can edit the list of
elements in the definition list:
-
by selecting elements in the geometry:
-
Standard selection (no button clicked):
when you click an unlisted element, it is added to the list
when you click a listed element, it is removed from the list
-
Add Mode:
when you click an unlisted element, it is added to the list
when you click a listed element, it remains in the list
-
Remove Mode:
when you click an unlisted element, the list is unchanged
when you click a listed element, it removed from the list
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by selecting an element in the list then using the
Clear Selection or Replace Selection
contextual menu items.
If you double-click Add Mode or Remove Mode,
the chosen mode is permanent, i.e. successively selecting elements
will add/remove them. However, if you click only once, only the
next selected element is added or removed.
You only have to click the button again, or click another one, to
deactivate the mode.
Define the distance below which elements are to be
healed, that is deformed so that there is no more gap, using Merging distance. Elements between which the gap is larger than the indicated value
are not processed.
In our example, we increase it to 1mm.
You can also set the Distance
objective, i.e. the maximum gap allowed between two healed
elements. By default it is set to 0.001 mm, and can be increased to
0.1 mm.
Change the continuity type to Tangent.
In that case, the Tangency angle field becomes active,
allowing you to key in the angle below which the tangency deviation
should be corrected.
The Tangency
objective is, similarly to the Distance objective,
the maximum allowed tangency deviation allowed between healed
elements. The default value is 0.5 degree, but can range anywhere
between 0.1 degree to 2 degrees.
Click Preview to visualize the
value between the input surfaces
and the result in the 3D geometry.
Click the Freeze tab.
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You can
then define the list of frozen elements, that is the elements that
should not be affected by the healing operation.
-
You cannot
freeze edges to be joined. If you want to do so, you first need to
freeze the faces.
-
You can
edit the list as described above for the list of elements to be healed.
Click the Sharpness tab.
Click the Visualization tab.
The
Visualization tab enables you to
better understand the discontinuities in the model and the results of the
healing action.
It lets you define the way the
messages are displayed on the healed element.
You can choose to see...
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All: all the messages, that is to say the
messages indicating where the discontinuity remains as well as those
indicating where the discontinuity type has changed (in point (><)
and tangency (^)).
-
Not
corrected: only the messages indicating where the discontinuity is
not
corrected and still remains.
-
None: none of the messages.
... as well as:
-
Display information interactively: only the pointers in
the geometry are displayed, above which the text appears when passing the
pointer
-
Display information sequentially: only one pointer and
text are displayed in the geometry, and you can sequentially move from
one pointer to another using the Previous/Next buttons
Click OK to create the healed surfaces.
The surface (identified as Heal.xxx) is added to the
specification tree.
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