Many GroIMP projects use external data such as csv or xls files by linking these files in RGG code. This will (with the right path) work on the API in the same way. Except if the GroIMP and the API are executed on another device.
In that case, the data must be included in the gsz-file, the following tutorial describes this process for a simple example.
The goal of this example is to add points stored in a CSV format to a GroIMP model to be visualized as a cloud of points.
1. create a csv file(eins.csv) with three columns, similar to something like this:
2.05,0.83,2.60 -3.79,-3.67,-1.53 0.17,-0.85,3.59 3.76,3.75,3.89 -3.64,-4.51,1.36 3.49,1.30,-4.27
2. Open GroIMP with the GUI
3. Create a new RGG project
4. add the CSV file to the file explorer by selecting 'Object/new/add file' in the file explorer. In the opened dialog set 'Files of Type' to All Files and select your csv file. Then select add the file. The file should now be in the file explorer.
To now read this added CSV file a new library function was added to GroIMP:
InputStream inp = getInputStreamFromProject("eins.csv")
This function works with every file added to the project(shown in the file explorer) independent if GroIMP can handle them or not. The created input stream can now be as usual. For example to read it in a stream and add the lines as points:
import java.io.InputStream; import java.io.BufferedReader; import java.io.InputStreamReader; protected void init()[ Axiom==>Floor; ] public void draw () { //get the data from the file and create the stream and the reader InputStream inp = getInputStreamFromProject("eins.csv"); InputStreamReader inpr = new InputStreamReader(inp); BufferedReader bf = new BufferedReader(inpr); int i=0; [ Floor ==> Node() //loop over the lines of the file for(String line; (line = bf.readLine()) != null; )( { //parse the line and add the points String[] lp = line.split(","); float x = Float.parseFloat(lp[0]); float y = Float.parseFloat(lp[1]); float z = Float.parseFloat(lp[2]); i++; } [Point(x,y,z)] //having less children per node is always a good idea if(i>100)( Node() {i=0;} ) ); ] //close the stream and the readers bf.close(); inpr.close(); inp.close(); }
After saving this project and opening it with the API it is possible to read the CSV file with the getFile call and also to update the content with the update file call.
Using the Python library this would look like this:
from GroPy import GroPy # define the connection to the running groimp API link = GroPy.GroLink("http://localhost:58081/api/") # read the gsz project as binary and send it to the API to open a workbench wb1 = link.openWB(content=open("yourFile.gsz",'rb').read()).run().read() # read the current content of the csv file print(wb1.getFile("eins.csv").run().read().decode("utf-8")) # write new content in the csv file wb1.updateFile("eins.csv",bytes("""0.0 2.0 0.1 1.0 1.98 2.0 2.0 1.86 1.1 3.0 1.16 2.1 4.0 1.04 0.4 5.0 0.0 2.1 6.0 0.0 0.1 7.0 0.0 1.1 """,'utf-8')).run() #... keep doing your stuff