Dear Ruijun,
In COMSOL you can find the location of an object, or more specifically of a point as follows:
- Go to geometry
- change the entity selection to point
- select one point (only) of which you want to have the location
- go to the geometry tab in the ribbon, and choose "measure" (at the end of the ribbon)
- In the messages window you will get the x, y and z coordinate of that point
I attached a screenshot which shows where to find the buttons.
You second question on the assembly can be solved by splitting the object. In COMSOL we have objects, and these can be points, lines, surfaces and volumes. Even groups of these can be 1 object. If you want to do a move operation, you can do that on an object only, therefore you need to split an object before you can move only a part of it. The steps to take are:
- add a split operation (from conversions)
- select the assembly and built.
- This will split the assembly to separate objects for each volume, and allows move operations on separate volumes.
If you want to combine separate object to one object again, you can use the union operator.
I hope this answers your question.
Best regards,
Frank
In COMSOL you can find the location of an object, or more specifically of a point as follows:
- Go to geometry
- change the entity selection to point
- select one point (only) of which you want to have the location
- go to the geometry tab in the ribbon, and choose "measure" (at the end of the ribbon)
- In the messages window you will get the x, y and z coordinate of that point
I attached a screenshot which shows where to find the buttons.
You second question on the assembly can be solved by splitting the object. In COMSOL we have objects, and these can be points, lines, surfaces and volumes. Even groups of these can be 1 object. If you want to do a move operation, you can do that on an object only, therefore you need to split an object before you can move only a part of it. The steps to take are:
- add a split operation (from conversions)
- select the assembly and built.
- This will split the assembly to separate objects for each volume, and allows move operations on separate volumes.
If you want to combine separate object to one object again, you can use the union operator.
I hope this answers your question.
Best regards,
Frank