plot_frame_responses_animation¶
- opstool.vis.plotly.plot_frame_responses_animation(odb_tag=1, ele_tags=None, resp_type='sectionForces', resp_dof='MZ', scale=1.0, show_values=False, framerate=None, line_width=1.5, show_outline=False)[source]¶
Animate the responses of frame elements.
Parameters¶
- odb_tag: Union[int, str], default: 1
Tag of output databases (ODB) to be visualized.
- ele_tags: Union[int, list], default: None
The tags of frame elements to be visualized. If None, all frame elements are selected.
- resp_type: str, default: “sectionforces”
Response type, optional, one of [“localForces”, “basicForces”, “basicDeformations”, “plasticDeformation”, “sectionForces”, “sectionDeformations”].
- resp_dof: str, default: “MZ”
Component type corrsponding to the resp_type.
For localForces: [“FX”, “FY”, “FZ”, “MX”, “MY”, “MZ”]
For basicForces: [“N”, “MZ”, “MY”, “T”]
For basicDeformations: [“N”, “MZ”, “MY”, “T”]
For plasticDeformation: [“N”, “MZ”, “MY”, “T”]
For sectionForces: [“N”, “MZ”, “VY”, “MY”, “VZ”, “T”]
For sectionDeformations: [“N”, “MZ”, “VY”, “MY”, “VZ”, “T”]
Note
For sectionForces and sectionDeformations, not all sections include the shear dof VY and VZ. For instance, in the most commonly used 3D fiber cross-sections, only the axial force N, bending moments MZ and MY, and torsion T are available.
- scale: float, default: 1.0
Scale the size of the response graph.
Note
You can adjust the scale to make the response graph more visible. A negative number will reverse the direction.
- show_values: bool, default: True
Whether to display the response value.
- framerate: int, default: None
Framerate for the display, i.e., the number of frames per second.
- line_width: float, default: 1.5.
Line width of the response graph.
- show_outline: bool, default: False
Whether to display the outline of the model.
Returns¶
- fig: plotly.graph_objects.Figure
You can use fig.show() to display, You can also use fig.write_html(“path/to/file.html”) to save as an HTML file, see Interactive HTML Export in Python