PIX4Dmatic, the next-generation photogrammetry software, is designed to work with the latest generation of drones and transform your large number of images into accurate point clouds, DSMs and orthomosaics over 40% faster than ever before.Įasily export your digital maps and models to industry-compatible formats for further analysis or reporting I’ll have a good read of the Mozilla page, however.The leading photogrammetry software for professional drone mappingĪ unique environment connecting your original images to each point of the 3D reconstruction to visually verify and improve the accuracy of your project. You see the other person who’s replied - josephxbrick - clearly is into this way deeper than I am, and is using functional methods I could use, if only I knew they were available, and what the syntax was - but if Axure detail the exact capability anywhere, I’ve missed it. ![]() I found the Mozilla page myself, incidentally, but as you noted, it doesn’t have the particular (Time) function on it. I can’t be the only one - and I’m guessing, like most people who use Axure in a more advanced way, I’m quite capable of dealing with various forms of syntax, so long as I have a reference to explain them - and this is what I can’t find anywhere! I have a general frustration with not being able to find a reference for all this stuff however, because while this may solve one problem, there’s bound to be another just around the corner somewhere. ![]() I may try another browser and see what happens, but we’re sort of locked to IE, alas, at least locally. I’ve just done it again and I’m getting 17 now, which makes not much sense unless if it’s because it’s not yet 10am and when I tried last time it was after 10. Hi Jane - thanks for replying - that’s interesting, because I clearly get something that’s not 11 - although I can count quite well and that’s how many I should get. I’m not stupid, I’m just missing some information. ![]() I’m not after a solution to the particular problem above as such, I’m after a reference where I can read up and work out what, conceptually, I don’t know. ![]() I’ve looked at any number of threads in this forum - and they have a lot of useful tips for how to solve exact problems which people are having - and I’ve looked through the Axure site and nowhere can I find a simple explanation of the syntax for these functions, armed with which I may actually be able to do things I want to do instead of spending hours haunting this place trying to work it out and grinding my teeth in frustration when I can’t understand what’s in front of me. (Time.length) returns 18 but when I just do (Time) I’m returned something like HH:MM:SS AM - which to me counts as 11, and so if I want to extract specific bits of (Time) I can only do it by flogging someone else’s work which I don’t really understand, as using simple substring character position counting returns me not what I’m expecting - so clearly there’s something I don’t understand about (Time) and its length and how to work on it. Is there, somewhere out there, a page/reference where I can understand the exact syntax used for the various time, date, hour, month, day variables used in Axure? I’m using them in prototypes all the time, but only from stealing working strings from other prototypes I didn’t build, and some of the calculations just defy my comprehension.įor instance (Time) and substrings.
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