It seems to import the table as a block, is there a way to just import the table as 2 groups of objects, one would be the outline of the table, the other would be the text as a separate group of objects ?
Currently it’s not possible, and I would have do do many changes in the code. It is is a simple operation, you might as well try to do a small rhino macro, something like this:
_Explode
_Selcrv
_Group
May I know why you want the grid lines and the texts to be separated? It does not seem beneficial to me for most uses.
In my tables I have text and dimensions, when revisions happen I usually have to amend the text and dimensions in the tables, yes I may use a small macro, many thanks for the Table plugin
Ok I get it. The previous releases came with an editor, so it was easier to change values, and it could even keep a link with a csv file to reload the data.
I haven’t kept the editor in TableV2 Beta because I didn’t have the time, I’ll consider this next time.
Thanks for your feedback.
Can I change the type/letter height in which the table is importet to Rhino 5?
Right now the Import is boud to the letter height 10.
I would like to have smg between 2.5 and 3.5.
Is there already a newer version?
Thank you very much for your work.
I tried to use the Grasshopper-Plugins (GhExcel, LunchBox, Bumblebee) in Rhino 5
with Excel 2010, but neither of them worked.
Has anyone found a solution to the first question asked above about changing the letter height? It seems as though the .csv import defaulted to the last text height that was used while the .xlsx import defaults to 10 unit length height text.
I’ll also note that I learned that it would not draw the table while the excel file was open.
Hi everybody.
This table plugin will be updated with more features and fixes (including table creation/modification from rhino), and sold in our soon to be rhino plugin store.
The current version will be kept as a freeware with limited support.
I’ll keep you informed when we are ready.
Best regards
Dynamic table objects have existed in SolidWorks and similar since times immemorial.
Why such a simple and useful concept (rows and columns, duh…) has not been implemented in Rhino would be a good question to (kindly of course) ask McNeelies.
Just for the sake of bookkeeping, I didn’t immediately find a reference to a specific item in the tracking system for this one and so I linked discussion threads and other tracking items to this one: RH-35934.
-wim
Good afternoon,
Our new table plugin for rhino is available here: https://www.tomkod.com/product/tables/
The release candidate is free, while it will be 60€/year when we launch a final version.
Hi, we will release soon a feature to do a BoM for naval structure projects, but it might be usable for land projects.
What kind of BoM would you expect in Rhino? We read Volumic, surfacic, lineic or ponctual masses from the layers names, then we create a weight report and a bill of materials.