<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">Hi,</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">I would like to add another use for multiple outputs : </font>
<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">3. a reader wich can read files with a variable number of geometries.</font>
<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">There are then multiple outputs, but they are not subsets of a whole, </font>
<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">and should be shown as seperate objects.</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">Will ParaView support this kind of reader?</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">Thanks,</font>
<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">Stephane</font>
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<br><font size=2 face="Courier New">>I think there are 2 major uses of multiple outputs:<br>
>1. Fixed number of outputs, each output with a specific purpose. For<br>
>example, a filter that clips a dataset producing inside as 1 output<br>
>and outside as another. This is best implemented as a multiple output<br>
>filter.<br>
>2. Variable number of outputs, each of a subset of a whole. This is<br>
>what multi-group (multi-block or AMR) is designed for. This is best<br>
>implemented as a 1 output reader/filter that produces multi-group.<br>
><br>
>ParaVIew supports 2. It does not support 1 well.<br>
><br>
>-berk<br>
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