Question #674144 on Yade changed:
https://answers.launchpad.net/yade/+question/674144
Jérôme Duriez posted a new comment:
Then, we would need to see a MWE [*] demonstrating your problem. (You
may also precise whether the initial capillaryBridge.py file was
"working" or not on your system)
[*] htt
Question #674144 on Yade changed:
https://answers.launchpad.net/yade/+question/674144
Status: Answered => Solved
Vinícius Godim confirmed that the question is solved:
I modified the capillaryBridge.py file in its directory and tried to run the
simulation, from which I got that error.
I trie
Question #674144 on Yade changed:
https://answers.launchpad.net/yade/+question/674144
Jérôme Duriez posted a new comment:
Hi,
Did you achieve getting a capillary force between 2 particles (i.e. did
you correctly "install" the capillary files ?) ? In the spirit of
examples/capillaryLaplaceYoung/ca
Question #674144 on Yade changed:
https://answers.launchpad.net/yade/+question/674144
Status: Open => Answered
Chareyre proposed the following answer:
I don't understand your question. Could you clarify?
Le mer. 19 sept. 2018 18:08, Vinícius Godim <
question674...@answers.launchpad.net> a éc
New question #674144 on Yade:
https://answers.launchpad.net/yade/+question/674144
The example capillaryLaplaceYoung has two particles interacting via capillary
force. But how about simulating a network of spheres? I tried
pred = pack.inSphere((0,0,0),1)
sp=pack.randomDensePack(pred,spheresInCell
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