splitting a shape into triangles

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Nasser Ramsis
Nasser Ramsis el 21 de Dic. de 2016
Comentada: José-Luis el 21 de Dic. de 2016
Hello,
I'm writing a code to optimize some dimensions for a wing i'm designing. As part of the code i need to split up a 2D airfoil into triangles. I used a Delaunay triangulation and all the points are connected to 1 point. This is the code segment so far:
chord = 0.25;
nacanum = 12;
t = nacanum/100;
x=0:0.01:chord;
distratio = x/chord;
yt = 5*t*(0.2969*sqrt(distratio)-0.126*distratio-0.3516*distratio.^2+0.2843*distratio.^3-0.1015*distratio.^4);
at=delaunayTriangulation(x',yt');
tr=delaunay(x,yt);
triplot(at,x,yt);
triplot(tr,x,yt);
using delaunay and delaunay triangulation seem to plot the same figure but they appear somewhat different in the workspace can anyone explain what the difference is?
Also, all the points are connected to an origin point (1)
how can i change that? as in I want it to create the triangles side by side sharing only 1 or 2 points as opposed to all the triangles sharing an origin point. ( i hope that makes sense)
Thanks in advance
  3 comentarios
Nasser Ramsis
Nasser Ramsis el 21 de Dic. de 2016
I realized the delaunay functions just number the points and connect them (i think). so i wrote this segment to create the same numbering but it wont plot.
for i=1:1:length(x)
for j= 1:1:3
tr(i,j)= i-1;
end
end
for i=1:1:length(x)
tr(i,3)=i;
end
José-Luis
José-Luis el 21 de Dic. de 2016
I don't understand. What are you trying to accomplish here? Did you try what KSSV suggests?

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KSSV
KSSV el 21 de Dic. de 2016
There is no difference between the two, they differ only in the way how the output is. Both of them creates nodal connectivity matrices and coordinates similar. In order to mesh your wing I suggest you to go through the following file exchange, which gives extra ordinary unstructured meshing.

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