Thanks that seems to work.

On Apr 20, 2:32 am, Andrew Heumann <[email protected]> wrote:
> I think if you connect each set to a "graft" parameter, each will have
> the data structure of
>
> Structure(Paths=231)
> Path{0;0} (N=1)
> Path{0:1} (N=1)
> etc.
>
> and you can merge the two resulting lists by plugging them both into
> your loft component, or into a single crv parameter, if you want to
> double check the data structure with a tree viewer. (Hold down shift
> to connect multiple data sources to the same input).
>
> On Apr 19, 5:15 pm, jonk <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I have 2 sets of curves each containing 231 curve; one coming from a
> > vb.net component and the other from an offset component. If you look
> > at the parameter viewer for these sets you see for each a tree with
> > one branch and 231 leaves:
> > Structure (Paths=1)
> > Path{0} (N=231)
> > Right now I am using another vb.net component to loft each pair. It
> > works fine but I am thinking that there should be a way to do this
> > using the new tree data structures. I imagine what I need is to create
> > a tree with 231 branches each having 2 leaves:
> > Structure(Paths=231)
> > Path{0;0} (N=2)
> > Path{0:1} (N=2)
> > and so on...
> > Anyone have any ideas how to do this?
>
> > Also I recall in a previous post that David Rutten said that they were
> > going to port all of the Rhinoscript functions to the SDK this would
> > greatly simplify the vb.net script for lofting. Has anyone tried using
> > grasshopper with Rhino5?
>
> > Thanks.
> > Jon

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