GrasshopperAsyncComponent

Twitter Follow Discourse users Slack Invite website

Less Janky Grasshopper Components

See the companion blog post about the rationale behind this approach. This repo demonstrates how to create an eager and responsive async component that does not block the Grasshopper UI thread while doing heavy work in the background, reports on progress and - theoretically - makes your life easier.

We're not so sure about the last part! We've put this repo out in the hope that others will find something useful inside - even just inspiration for the approach.

uselesscycles

Looks nice, doesn't it? Notice that the solution runs "eagerly" - every time the input changes, the the computation restarts and cancels any previous tasks that are still running. Once everything is done calculating, the results are set. And the best parts:

  • Grasshopper and Rhino are still responsive!
  • There's progress reporting! (personally I hate waiting for Gh to unfreeze...).

Approach

Provides an abstract GH_AsyncComponent which you can inherit from to scaffold your own async component. There's more info in the blogpost on how to go about it.

Even better, there's a sample component that shows how an implementation could look like!

Current limitations

Main current limitation is around data matching. Solved! See this PR. Components inheriting from the GH_AsyncComponent class can now nicely handle multiple runs and any kind of data matching:

oneproblemsolved

Nevertheless, the old caveat applies: this is most efficient if you can batch together as many iterations as possible.

Given the fact that the responsibility to check for task cancellation is up to the developer, this approach won't be too well suited for components calling code from other libraries that you don't, or can't, manage.

There's more anyways - make sure to check the issues out!

Debugging

Quite easy:

  • Clone this repository and open up the solution in Visual Studio.
  • Once you've built it, add the bin folder to the Grasshopper Developer Settings (type GrasshopperDeveloperSettings in the Rhino command line) and open up Grasshopper.
  • You should see a new component popping up under "Samples > Async" in the ribbon.
  • A simple

Contributing

Before embarking on submitting a patch, please make sure you read:

License

Unless otherwise described, the code in this repository is licensed under the Apache-2.0 license.

S
Description
Jankless Grasshopper Components
Readme 256 KiB
Languages
C# 100%