Command Help

evaluate-current-wireframe

 

Command Name

Menu

Quick Key

Link to Command Table

evaluate-current-wireframe

Command line only

-

Click here

Description

Evaluate the current wireframe above and/or below the current specified limit.

How to Use

  1. Ensure wireframe data is loaded into memory and is Verified.

  2. Run the command.

  3. Specify if the wireframe you wish to evaluate is a DTM or if it is closed. Note the same wireframe files can contain more than one closed wireframe model and more than one DTM. Evaluations in this case should be done by specifying a wireframe filter.

  4. If the wireframe is a DTM you are asked if you wish to evaluate above or below the DTM. You are then asked to enter an elevation to define the limit of evaluation. If evaluating above the DTM the default elevation is the maximum Z coordinate in the wireframe. If evaluating below the DTM the default elevation is the minimum Z coordinate in the wireframe.
  5. Assign a Mining Block ID to the wireframe so it can be given a reference in the results file. If the evaluation is accepted the triangles in the wireframe files will be given this BLOCKID value. If a Block ID already exists, it will appear here.
  6. Set a Default Density value: this will be used if a Density field does not exist in the input model, or it exists and absent values are found. By default, this is 1.

    note.gif (1017 bytes) The Default Density setting persists between the static evaluation commands, but can be adjusted in any of them, if appropriate.
  7. Results are reported using the Evaluation Results panel.

  8. You can (optionally) Save your results to a Datamine-format results file and/or Excel format.
  9. Wireframe triangles are updated with the BLOCKID value. All previous references to the BLOCKID in the results file is erased.

note.gif (1017 bytes)

It is necessary to write the wireframe to file at some stage before exiting your application in order to store this BLOCKID value in the current wireframe files. This is most easily done using the write-wf-data command.

A comparison of the total volume of the cells within the wireframe and the volume of the wireframe is made. If the difference between these two figures is more than 2 percent of the volume of the cells a warning is given. An example of when this would occur is if all or part of the wireframe is outside the limits of the cell model.

If any cell contains an absent density value the default density is used. This default value is defined when the cell model file is opened.

If absent grade values are found, then they are replaced by the average value for the grade and a message is displayed in the Output window.