Ah, now I understand. This should be fixed. Try using a nightly binary. To download one, look at this page:
http://paraview.org/Wiki/ParaView/Superbuild and look for instruction on how to download generated binaries. -berk On Mon, Oct 22, 2012 at 9:56 AM, Umut Tabak <umut.ta...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 10/22/2012 03:46 PM, Berk Geveci wrote: >> >> ParaView will tetrahedralize higher order elements for certain >> algorithms. For the most part, this should be hidden. What particular >> algorithm are you seeing this with? > > Hi, > > This is a mesh that I export from the commercial finite element code ANSYS. > I am not sure how to answer this question. > > But I also could not understand the point of your question since the cell > representation should be easy to understand by the software. It should only > draw elements around the main nodes that represent the element, so for this > case, the 10-nodes that belong to the element should form the element. Why > do you relate this to a meshing algorithm? I am not expert on mesh > generation of course ;-) > > There are two 10 node tetrahedral elements interfaced in my code for ANSYS > elements. Namely, > > SOLID92 and SOLID187 > > which are both 2nd order 10 node tetra elements. > > If I follow this thread > > http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.science.paraview.user/10670 > > which seems to solve the problem. And I can see the normal 2nd order > elements without divided into extra cells. > > BR, > Umut _______________________________________________ Powered by www.kitware.com Visit other Kitware open-source projects at http://www.kitware.com/opensource/opensource.html Please keep messages on-topic and check the ParaView Wiki at: http://paraview.org/Wiki/ParaView Follow this link to subscribe/unsubscribe: http://www.paraview.org/mailman/listinfo/paraview