discretize.CurvilinearMesh.faces#
- property CurvilinearMesh.faces#
Gridded face locations.
This property returns a numpy array of shape (n_faces, dim) containing gridded locations for all faces in the mesh.
For structued meshes, the first row corresponds to the bottom-front-leftmost x-face. The output array returns the x-faces, then the y-faces, then the z-faces; i.e. mesh.faces is equivalent to np.r_[mesh.faces_x, mesh.faces_y, mesh.face_z] . For each face type, the locations are ordered along the x, then y, then z directions.
- Returns:
- (
n_faces
,dim
)numpy.ndarray
of
float
Gridded face locations
- (
Examples
Here, we provide an example of a minimally staggered curvilinear mesh. In this case, the x and y-faces have normal vectors that are primarily along the x and y-directions, respectively.
>>> from discretize import CurvilinearMesh >>> from discretize.utils import example_curvilinear_grid, mkvc >>> from matplotlib import pyplot as plt
>>> x, y = example_curvilinear_grid([10, 10], "rotate") >>> mesh1 = CurvilinearMesh([x, y]) >>> faces = mesh1.faces >>> x_faces = faces[:mesh1.n_faces_x] >>> y_faces = faces[mesh1.n_faces_x:]
>>> fig1 = plt.figure(figsize=(5, 5)) >>> ax1 = fig1.add_subplot(111) >>> mesh1.plot_grid(ax=ax1) >>> ax1.scatter(x_faces[:, 0], x_faces[:, 1], 30, 'r') >>> ax1.scatter(y_faces[:, 0], y_faces[:, 1], 30, 'g') >>> ax1.legend(['Mesh', 'X-faces', 'Y-faces'], fontsize=16) >>> plt.show()
(
Source code
,png
,pdf
)Here, we provide an example of a highly irregular curvilinear mesh. In this case, the y-faces are not defined by normal vectors along a particular direction.
>>> x, y = example_curvilinear_grid([10, 10], "sphere") >>> mesh2 = CurvilinearMesh([x, y]) >>> faces = mesh2.faces >>> x_faces = faces[:mesh2.n_faces_x] >>> y_faces = faces[mesh2.n_faces_x:]
>>> fig2 = plt.figure(figsize=(5, 5)) >>> ax2 = fig2.add_subplot(111) >>> mesh2.plot_grid(ax=ax2) >>> ax2.scatter(x_faces[:, 0], x_faces[:, 1], 30, 'r') >>> ax2.scatter(y_faces[:, 0], y_faces[:, 1], 30, 'g') >>> ax2.legend(['Mesh', 'X-faces', 'Y-faces'], fontsize=16) >>> plt.show()