compas

Core packages of the COMPAS framework.

The COMPAS framework

build GitHub - License PyPI - Python Version PyPI - Latest Release Conda (channel only) Conda - Platform DOI Twitter Follow

The COMPAS framework is an open-source, Python-based framework for computational research and collaboration in architecture, engineering, digital fabrication and construction.

The framework consists of a general-purpose core library, written in pure Python, and a growing collection of extensions that provide easy access to peer-reviewed research, state-of-the-art external libraries such as CGAL, libigl and Triangle, and tools with specialized functionality for AEFC applications such as Abaqus, ANSYS, SOFISTIK, ROS, etc.

COMPAS has dedicated packages for working with Rhino, Grasshopper, and Blender, but it can be used in any environment that supports Python scripting. It is available on PyPI and conda-forge and can be easily installed using popular package managers on multiple platforms.

Installation

The recommended way to install COMPAS is to use Anaconda/conda:

conda config --add channels conda-forge
conda install COMPAS

For other installation options, see https://compas.dev/compas/latest/installation.html

First Steps

Questions and feedback

The COMPAS framework has a forum: https://forum.compas-framework.org/ for questions and discussions.

Issue tracker

If you find a bug, please help us solve it by filing a report.

Contributing

If you want to contribute, check out the contribution guidelines.

Changelog

See changes between releases on the changelog.

License

The main library of COMPAS is released under the MIT license.

Credits

COMPAS is developed by a small team of core developers (compas-dev) and with the support of contributers from the open source community. See the list of authors for a complete overview...

This content is a preview from an external site.
 

Presented by Gonzalo during the session on Open Source Robotic Fabrication

This is fundamentally a very accessible tool to anyone with a bit of Python experience. It should be quite fun to get this to work in Blender.

For a really fun challenge, help Gonzalo and students to make algorithmic light art. Define some fancy paths for his robots-with-lasers. (Details to follow)

Event finished

30.10.2021 18:00

Edited content

29.10.2021 21:42 ~ loleg

Event started

29.10.2021 18:00

Repository updated

29.10.2021 13:58 ~ loleg

Challenge posted

29.10.2021 13:58 ~ loleg
 
Contributed 2 years ago by gonzalocasas for HACKnight 2021
All attendees, sponsors, partners, volunteers and staff at our hackathon are required to agree with the Hack Code of Conduct. Organisers will enforce this code throughout the event. We expect cooperation from all participants to ensure a safe environment for everybody.

Creative Commons LicenceThe contents of this website, unless otherwise stated, are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

HACKnight 2021