Evaluate a solution in the arbitrary point in the domain

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Alec Kalinin

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Aug 25, 2012, 11:45:51 AM8/25/12
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Dear SfePy users,

Is it possible to evaluate a solution not only in the FEM mesh node, but in any arbitrary point in the domain with the given (x, y, z) coordinates?

For example, consider Dirichlet problem for Poisson equation. We apply essential boundary conditions on the surface nodes and after the problem has been solved we have the solution vector, i.e. vector of values in the FEM mesh nodes. But I want to know the solution in point v(x, y, z) that is not FEM mesh node. What is the best way to obtain solution in this point v?

Sincerely,
Alec Kalinin


Robert Cimrman

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Aug 25, 2012, 4:47:50 PM8/25/12
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Hi Alec,

On 08/25/2012 05:45 PM, Alec Kalinin wrote:
> Dear SfePy users,
>
> Is it possible to evaluate a solution not only in the FEM mesh node, but in
> any arbitrary point in the domain with the given (x, y, z) coordinates?

Yes, it is possible. Either, you could use a probe as described in the
Primer [1] - the available probes are described in [2]. Or, you could
directly evaluate a variable in given points - this is a bit low-level
operation, but I could provide you instructions, if the probes are not
enough for you.

Cheers,
r.

> For example, consider Dirichlet problem for Poisson equation. We apply
> essential boundary conditions on the surface nodes and after the problem
> has been solved we have the solution vector, i.e. vector of values in the
> FEM mesh nodes. But I want to know the solution in point v(x, y, z) that is
> not FEM mesh node. What is the best way to obtain solution in this point v?
>
> Sincerely,
> Alec Kalinin

[1] doc-devel/examples/linear_elasticity/linear_elastic_tractions.html
[2] http://sfepy.org/doc-devel/src/sfepy/fem/probes.html

Alec Kalinin

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Aug 26, 2012, 6:32:49 AM8/26/12
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Hi Robert,

Did you mean "linear_elastic_probes.html" instead of "linear_elastic_tractions.html" example? I found the "linear_elastic_probes.html" very useful example for my purposes to probe a solution in the given (x, y, z) points. Also the documentation "src/sfepy/fem/probes.html" gives all necessary information to help me implement what I want to do. Thank you!

But, despite this, could you tell me more about low-level way to evaluate a variable in the given (x, y, z) point?

Sincerely,
Alexander

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 26, 2012, 4:55:49 PM8/26/12
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On 08/26/2012 12:32 PM, Alec Kalinin wrote:
> Hi Robert,
>
> Did you mean "linear_elastic_probes.html" instead of
> "linear_elastic_tractions.html" example? I found the
> "linear_elastic_probes.html" very useful example for my purposes to probe a
> solution in the given (x, y, z) points. Also the documentation
> "src/sfepy/fem/probes.html" gives all necessary information to help me
> implement what I want to do. Thank you!

Sorry, I cut&pasted a wrong url, the correct one is [1]. But you found
another one that solves the problem.

> But, despite this, could you tell me more about low-level way to evaluate a
> variable in the given (x, y, z) point?

It's exactly how the probes do that: the key function is
variable.evaluate_at() [2], where variable is an unknown or parameter
variable. It takes just one compulsory parameter - the coordinates of
points in which you wish to evaluate the variable. You can get the
variables of a problem by problem.get_variables(), where problem is the
second argument of the post_process_hook function.

Best regards,
r.

[1] http://sfepy.org/doc-devel/primer.html#probing
[2] http://sfepy.org/doc-devel/src/sfepy/fem/variables.html,
http://sfepy.org/doc-devel/src/sfepy/fem/fields.html

Alec Kalinin

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Aug 27, 2012, 5:16:20 AM8/27/12
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Thank you, Robert.

Alec Kalinin.

David Libault

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Aug 29, 2012, 8:05:35 AM8/29/12
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Hi Robert,

From the poisson.py I would like to probe the flux of grad(T) over a surface (Gamma_Left or Gamma_right), but I am not sure which term to use...

I would use it in electrostatics (temperature is replaced by voltage), to compute the resistance of the volume imposing a voltage of 1 across two surfaces with dirichlet conditions and computing the electrical current. For a ohmic conductor, j = \sigma E = - \sigma grad(V), \sigma being the conductivity. j being the current density, the current intensity thru a surface is the flux of j thru that surface. For the case of homogenous \sigma, the term asked for above would do...

David.

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 29, 2012, 9:38:21 AM8/29/12
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Hi David,

On 08/29/2012 02:05 PM, David Libault wrote:
> Hi Robert,
>
> From the poisson.py I would like to probe the flux of grad(T) over a
> surface (Gamma_Left or Gamma_right), but I am not sure which term to use...

IMHO it's the same term as in my answer to Alec (thread "Question on the
``examples/diffusion/poisson.py''") - look at the post_process() function - the
term is d_surface_flux.

> I would use it in electrostatics (temperature is replaced by voltage), to
> compute the resistance of the volume imposing a voltage of 1 across two
> surfaces with dirichlet conditions and computing the electrical current.
> For a ohmic conductor, j = \sigma E = - \sigma grad(V), \sigma being the
> conductivity. j being the current density, the current intensity thru a
> surface is the flux of j thru that surface. For the case of homogenous
> \sigma, the term asked for above would do...

OK, let us know if d_surface_flux works for you - it can take a general
permeability tensor.

r.

David Libault

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Aug 29, 2012, 9:48:38 AM8/29/12
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Hi Robert,

Ok, sorry, I was confused by the naming : for "d_surface_flux" I was expecting a vector field as the parameter, not a scalar over which the gradient is computed before taking the actual flux. But the documentation is correct.

David.

David Libault

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Aug 29, 2012, 11:21:26 AM8/29/12
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Hi Robert,

Enclosed are a mesh file and a problem file for the 2D electrostatic problem without volume charge of a square of 1x1 on which 1 V is applied on 2 opposite sides (Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right), and the default 0 Von Neumann boundary conditions on the 2 other sides.

The Electric field is evaluated as the gradient of V, and looks good (Ex is small, and Ey = 1 over the entire domain).

Flux 1 and Flux 2 evaluate the flux intensity of current with conductivity sigma=1 across Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right. They should have opposite sign and absolute value of 1.

It looks that the d_surface_flux is computed on each element of the surface so the returned value is an array, but the values in the array are all 1... Shouldn't they be 1/(element surface) so that the sum of the array gives the total flux over the all Gamma_Left or Gamma_Right surface ?


David.
essai_2D.mesh
poisson_electrostatic.py

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 29, 2012, 11:59:31 AM8/29/12
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Hi David,

On 08/29/2012 05:21 PM, David Libault wrote:
> Hi Robert,
>
> Enclosed are a mesh file and a problem file for the 2D electrostatic
> problem without volume charge of a square of 1x1 on which 1 V is applied on
> 2 opposite sides (Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right), and the default 0 Von
> Neumann boundary conditions on the 2 other sides.
>
> The Electric field is evaluated as the gradient of V, and looks good (Ex is
> small, and Ey = 1 over the entire domain).

Yes, it looks good.

> Flux 1 and Flux 2 evaluate the flux intensity of current with conductivity
> sigma=1 across Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right. They should have opposite sign
> and absolute value of 1.
>
> It looks that the d_surface_flux is computed on each element of the surface
> so the returned value is an array, but the values in the array are all 1...
> Shouldn't they be 1/(element surface) so that the sum of the array gives
> the total flux over the all Gamma_Left or Gamma_Right surface ?

There is a glitch in using integrals I noticed when preparing the example for
Alec: once you use an integral for a volume integration (volume term), you
should not use it for a surface term. If you do that, you should get an error -
and indeed, there is:

fmf_mulAB_nn(): ERR_BadMatch: (2 2 1) == (3 2 2) * (2 2 1)

printed just before your flux output. This should lead to raising an exception,
but for some reason it does not, the exception is raised only when I step over
the relevant code piece with a debugger. If I just run the code, it silently
continues, and leads to wrong results you got. So this is definitely a bug, but
I am not sure why it behaves this way. It used to work.

So to fix you problem: replace
flux1 = pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.i1.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v)', mode='el_avg')

with

flux1 = pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v)', mode='el_avg')

and do the same with flux2. The number is the quadrature order... Then you
should get the "correct" fluxes. If fact, there is another problem - 'el_avg'
mode divides the resulting integrated value in an element by the
volume/area/length of that element. That's why you get 1 or -1, and the sums 9
and -9, as there are 9 edges on each of Gamma_Left, Gamma_Right.

So it seems another evaluation mode is needed (let's say called 'el') - one
that just integrates a value over an element, without computing the average by
dividing by volume. Do you agree?

r.

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 29, 2012, 12:07:31 PM8/29/12
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On 08/29/2012 05:59 PM, Robert Cimrman wrote:
> Hi David,
>
> On 08/29/2012 05:21 PM, David Libault wrote:
>> Hi Robert,
>>
>> Enclosed are a mesh file and a problem file for the 2D electrostatic
>> problem without volume charge of a square of 1x1 on which 1 V is applied on
>> 2 opposite sides (Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right), and the default 0 Von
>> Neumann boundary conditions on the 2 other sides.
>>
>> The Electric field is evaluated as the gradient of V, and looks good (Ex is
>> small, and Ey = 1 over the entire domain).
>
> Yes, it looks good.
>
>> Flux 1 and Flux 2 evaluate the flux intensity of current with conductivity
>> sigma=1 across Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right. They should have opposite sign
>> and absolute value of 1.
>>
>> It looks that the d_surface_flux is computed on each element of the surface
>> so the returned value is an array, but the values in the array are all 1...
>> Shouldn't they be 1/(element surface) so that the sum of the array gives
>> the total flux over the all Gamma_Left or Gamma_Right surface ?
>
> There is a glitch in using integrals I noticed when preparing the example for
> Alec: once you use an integral for a volume integration (volume term), you
> should not use it for a surface term. If you do that, you should get an error -
> and indeed, there is:
>
> fmf_mulAB_nn(): ERR_BadMatch: (2 2 1) == (3 2 2) * (2 2 1)

Ha, you actually did not get this error, right? What's your platform and Python
version?

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 29, 2012, 12:25:01 PM8/29/12
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re-hi!

I have added the 'el' evaluation mode to d_surface_flux term, and it seems to
work - get the latest sources from [1], and use

flux1 = pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.i1.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v)', mode='el')

If that's ok, I will push it into the main repository.

Thanks,
r.
[1] git clone git://github.com/rc/sfepy.git

David Libault

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Aug 30, 2012, 4:01:54 AM8/30/12
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Hi Robert,

No I did not get this error, and I was going to tell you...
My platform is Mac OSX + MacPorts. I use MacPorts python 2.7 and sfepy installed manually from git.

David Libault

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Aug 30, 2012, 4:32:23 AM8/30/12
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re-hi !

I have cloned the rc/sfepy.git installed it, modified the problem file as advised, and it works : I get a current intensity of 1 and -1 on Gamma_Left and Gamma_Right which is what I expected.

Great job !

From a user point of view, the 'el' or 'el_avg' syntax, is confusing... I am also confused by the term documentation :  the term is described as an integral over a domain, but the computation is actually done over individual elements. An array is returned and we can't get the element each value of the array relates to... d_surface_flux.i1.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v) should return a scalar, and if we want the value over a specific element just define a domain that contains it and use d_surfacer_flux over it.

Again, that is a user point of view : I have no idea what the implementation issues are behind, nor issues related to other FE problems !



David.

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 30, 2012, 4:41:53 AM8/30/12
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Hi David,

thanks for the info. Anyway, I would recommend you not to use a single named
integral for both the volume and surface integration, as I have written below,
at least for the moment.

r.

David Libault

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Aug 30, 2012, 4:54:29 AM8/30/12
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Ok, I tried using .2 instead of .i1 and it also works.

David.

2012/8/30 Robert Cimrman <cimr...@ntc.zcu.cz>:
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Robert Cimrman

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Aug 30, 2012, 4:54:43 AM8/30/12
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On 08/30/2012 10:32 AM, David Libault wrote:
> re-hi !
>
> I have cloned the rc/sfepy.git installed it, modified the problem file as
> advised, and it works : I get a current intensity of 1 and -1 on Gamma_Left
> and Gamma_Right which is what I expected.
>
> Great job !

Hth!

> From a user point of view, the 'el' or 'el_avg' syntax, is confusing... I
> am also confused by the term documentation : the term is described as an
> integral over a domain, but the computation is actually done over
> individual elements. An array is returned and we can't get the element each
> value of the array relates to... d_surface_flux.i1.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma,
> v) should return a scalar, and if we want the value over a specific element
> just define a domain that contains it and use d_surfacer_flux over it.

It's good to hear a feedback, thanks!

The reason for 'el_avg' is mainly to be able to visualize data defined inside
elements using Mayavi, so you get a value for each element in a region. The
same with 'el'. So now you can add it to the 'out' dict, and see how each
border element contributes to the total flux.

If you just want a value of the integral, do:

pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Right(coef.sigma, v)', mode='eval')

- this returns a single value (and 'eval' mode is the default - you can omit
the mode argument).

Also, you can get to the elements/edges/faces etc. the values belong to, as you
have the ProblemDefinition instance available - try

print pb.domain.regions['Gamma_Left']
# Edge ids.
print pb.domain.regions['Gamma_Left'].edges
# Edge nodes.
print pb.domain.ed.facets[pb.domain.regions['Gamma_Left'].edges[0]]
# (group, element, local edge number).
print pb.domain.ed.indices[pb.domain.regions['Gamma_Left'].edges[0]]

etc.

> Again, that is a user point of view : I have no idea what the
> implementation issues are behind, nor issues related to other FE problems !

It's just more general in this way - you can get what you request for. The main
problem I see is that it is not properly documented in the tutorial/users'
guide. My bad...

r.

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 30, 2012, 4:56:43 AM8/30/12
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On 08/30/2012 10:54 AM, David Libault wrote:
> Ok, I tried using .2 instead of .i1 and it also works.

One more thing: try adding:

debug_flags = '-DDEBUG_FMF'

into site_cfg.py in the sfepy directory. Then IMHO you should get the error
with .i1, is that so?

r.

David Libault

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Aug 30, 2012, 5:08:52 AM8/30/12
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Robert,

Understood. I was not using the correct "mode" for what I was expecting.
Now the user interface looks nice.

David.

2012/8/30 Robert Cimrman <cimr...@ntc.zcu.cz>:

Robert Cimrman

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Aug 30, 2012, 6:03:51 AM8/30/12
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On 08/30/2012 11:08 AM, David Libault wrote:
> Robert,
>
> Understood. I was not using the correct "mode" for what I was expecting.
> Now the user interface looks nice.
>
> David.

Nevertheless, it should be documented (-> Issue 196).

So this is my current testing function, that shows how to save the fluxes (they
are displayed over the triangles that contain the boundary edges...):

def post_process(out, pb, state, extend=False):
from sfepy.base.base import Struct
from sfepy.fem import extend_cell_data

electric_field = pb.evaluate('ev_grad.i1.Omega( v )', mode='el_avg')
out['electric_field'] = Struct(name='Electric field', mode='cell',
data=electric_field, dofs=None)

flux1 = pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v)',
mode='el')
print flux1
print flux1.sum()
flux1 = extend_cell_data(flux1, pb.domain, 'Gamma_Left', val=0.0,
is_surface=True)
out['flux1'] = Struct(name='output_data', mode='cell',
data=flux1, dofs=None)
flux2 = pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Right(coef.sigma, v)',
mode='el')
print flux2
print flux2.sum()
flux2 = extend_cell_data(flux2, pb.domain, 'Gamma_Right', val=0.0,
is_surface=True)
out['flux2'] = Struct(name='output_data', mode='cell',
data=flux2, dofs=None)

print pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Right(coef.sigma, v)')
return out

r.

David Libault

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Apr 2, 2014, 1:09:41 PM4/2/14
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Robert,

I have rerun the "old" electro static poisson problem again with mac OsX port of sfepy, and the flux evaluation doesn't seem to work...

sfepy: left over: ['verbose', '__builtins__', '__file__', '__name__', 'nm', '_filename', '__package__', 'post_process', '__doc__']

sfepy: reading mesh [line2, tri3, quad4, tetra4, hexa8] (essai_2D.mesh)...

sfepy: ...done in 0.00 s

sfepy: creating regions...

sfepy:   warning: region Gamma_Right of cell kind has empty group indices!

sfepy:     Gamma_Right

sfepy:     Omega

sfepy:   warning: region Gamma_Left of cell kind has empty group indices!

sfepy:     Gamma_Left

sfepy: ...done in 0.01 s

sfepy: equation "Voltage":

sfepy: dw_laplace.i1.Omega( coef.val, s, v ) = 0

sfepy: setting up dof connectivities...

sfepy: ...done in 0.00 s

sfepy: using solvers:

                ts: no ts

               nls: newton

                ls: ls

sfepy: updating variables...

sfepy: ...done

sfepy: matrix shape: (144, 144)

sfepy: assembling matrix graph...

sfepy: ...done in 0.00 s

sfepy: matrix structural nonzeros: 922 (4.45e-02% fill)

sfepy: updating materials...

sfepy:     coef

sfepy: ...done in 0.00 s

sfepy: nls: iter: 0, residual: 0.000000e+00 (rel: 0.000000e+00)

sfepy: equation "tmp":

sfepy: -ev_grad.2.Omega( v )

sfepy: updating materials...

sfepy: ...done in 0.00 s

sfepy: equation "tmp":

sfepy: d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v)

sfepy: updating materials...

sfepy:     coef

Traceback (most recent call last):

  File "/opt/local/bin/simple.py-2.7", line 155, in <module>

    main()

  File "/opt/local/bin/simple.py-2.7", line 152, in main

    app()

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/applications/application.py", line 29, in call_basic

    return self.call(**kwargs)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/applications/pde_solver_app.py", line 213, in call

    nls_status=nls_status)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/solvers/ts_solvers.py", line 37, in __call__

    file_per_var=None)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/problemDef.py", line 715, in save_state

    out = post_process_hook(out, self, state, extend=extend)

  File "poisson_electrostatic.py", line 157, in post_process

    flux1 = pb.evaluate('d_surface_flux.2.Gamma_Left(coef.sigma, v)', mode='el')

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/problemDef.py", line 1179, in evaluate

    verbose=verbose, **kwargs)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/problemDef.py", line 1130, in create_evaluable

    verbose=verbose)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/equations.py", line 322, in time_update_materials

    verbose=verbose)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/materials.py", line 70, in time_update

    mat.time_update(ts, equations, mode=mode, problem=problem)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/materials.py", line 345, in time_update

    self.update_data(key, ts, equations, term, problem=problem)

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/materials.py", line 247, in update_data

    coors = qps.get_merged_values()

  File "/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/site-packages/sfepy/fem/mappings.py", line 26, in get_merged_values

    qps = nm.concatenate([self.values[ig] for ig in self.igs], axis=0)

ValueError: need at least one array to concatenate


simple.py-2.7 --version returns simple.py-2.7 2013.4 on my system which should integrate the modifications you made two years ago.

Is your "testing function, that shows how to save the fluxes" still working ?

(I had to change 'nodes' to 'vertices' and 'elements' to 'cells' to have it work again)

Best regards,

David.

Robert Cimrman

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Apr 2, 2014, 4:34:19 PM4/2/14
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Hi David,

On 04/02/2014 07:09 PM, David Libault wrote:
> Robert,
>
> I have rerun the "old" electro static poisson problem again with mac OsX
> port of sfepy, and the flux evaluation doesn't seem to work...
>

<snip>

> sfepy: reading mesh [line2, tri3, quad4, tetra4, hexa8] (essai_2D.mesh)...
Two things are needed to make it work:

- set the kind of boundary regions to 'facet':

region_03 = {
'name' : 'Gamma_Left',
'select' : 'vertices of group 1',
'kind' : 'facet',
}

region_4 = {
'name' : 'Gamma_Right',
'select' : 'vertices of group 2',
'kind' : 'facet',
}

- get the latest git sources, as I have just fixed a bug in extend_cell_data()
that occurred only for is_surface=True.

Then I can run your old script - let me know it the above works for you.

Best regards.
r.

David Libault

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Apr 2, 2014, 5:39:49 PM4/2/14
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Hi Robert,

Thank you for your kind answer.
Added 'facet' to the regions did fix the error problem, but the values of the fluxes are not as expected :

flux1.sum() :  -0.817686412623

flux2.sum() :  0.904600038826


It should be -1 and 1...

flux1 has 8 "terms" and flux2 has 9 "terms"... 


Is it a problem in the mesh ? Or is it a "side effet" of to the "extend_cell_data()" issue ?

What values do you get ?


Best regards,


David.





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Robert Cimrman

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Apr 2, 2014, 5:51:06 PM4/2/14
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On 04/02/2014 11:39 PM, David Libault wrote:
> Hi Robert,
>
> Thank you for your kind answer.
> Added 'facet' to the regions did fix the error problem, but the values of
> the fluxes are not as expected :
>
> flux1.sum() : -0.817686412623
>
> flux2.sum() : 0.904600038826
>
>
> It should be -1 and 1...
>
> flux1 has 8 "terms" and flux2 has 9 "terms"...
>
>
> Is it a problem in the mesh ? Or is it a "side effet" of to the
> "extend_cell_data()" issue ?
>
> What values do you get ?
>

-1 for Gamma_Left, 1 for Gamma_Right - with the essai_2D.mesh

r.

David Libault

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Apr 2, 2014, 10:37:01 PM4/2/14
to sfepy...@googlegroups.com
Yeap. That is a problem on my mesh... Sorry.
So yes, it is working with the mesh sent to this list together with the problem file.
I am not using the extend_cell_data() for the moment.

Thanks,

David.




r.

Robert Cimrman

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Apr 3, 2014, 3:27:35 AM4/3/14
to sfepy...@googlegroups.com
On 04/03/2014 04:37 AM, David Libault wrote:
> Yeap. That is a problem on my mesh... Sorry.
> So yes, it is working with the mesh sent to this list together with the
> problem file.
> I am not using the extend_cell_data() for the moment.
>
> Thanks,
>
> David.

Hth!

r.
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