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findPlaneCrossing

findPlaneCrossing

Description

Establishes a plane in your scene and finds all keys for selected objects that cross that plane

The findPlaneCrossing command is useful for identifying keys that pass through a user-identifiable plane, such as a floor or wall.

The first argument establishes a point on the plane, (i.e. "0 0 50" is a point at 50 millimeters in positive Z).

The second argument is a vector that describes the normal of the plane. For example, "0 0 1" describes a vector with no X or Y direction and a Z component of 1, in other words pointing straight down the world +Z axis. The second argument defines both the orientation and the up side of the plane.

Functional area

Data retrieval

Command syntax

Syntax

findPlaneCrossing xPoint yPoint zPoint xDirection yDirection zDirection

Arguments

The command requires two arguments to describe the plane: an origin of the plane described in Cartesian terms, and a unit direction vector that defines both the orientation and normal of the plane.

NameTypeRequiredComments
vector

A direction vector xDirection yDirection zDirection
z

Location along Global z (float)
y

Location along Global y (float)
x

Location along Global x (float)

Flags

None

Return value

void

Examples

select LTOE RTOE; 
findPlaneCrossing 0 0 50 0 0 1;
// In this example, findPlaneCrossing selects all keys
// found on the toe markers LTOE and RTOE that penetrate the
// "floor" of the scene, here defined as being all points for
// which the Z component is 50 millimeters. The directional
// arguments 0 0 1 define the vector of the normal for the 
// plane, in this case the normal of the plane is aligned with
// world Z, pointing straight "up". If you switch the Z 
// component of the direction argument from 1 to -1, the 
// command will find all keys that are above the floor. 
// This example assumes a Z-up environment.

Additional information

Related commands


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