English

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Noun

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mesher (plural meshers)

  1. That which creates a mesh.
    • 1963, Richard F. Thomas, The Rath Mesher: A 7090 Program for Preparing Input Data for Heat Conduction Codes, page 6:
      The mesher creates a two-dimensional mesh, which can then be regenerated in the third dimension to create, for example, a cylindrical or conical three-dimensional system.
    • 1993 May 5, John Brauer, What Every Engineer Should Know about Finite Element Analysis, Second Edition,, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 277:
      Mesh generators fall into two basic categories : mapped meshers and fully automatic meshers (see Figure 8.1 for sample meshes created from each type). Mapped meshers have been available in various forms for many years.
    • 1998 June 23, P. Ladeveze, J.T. Oden, Advances in Adaptive Computational Methods in Mechanics, Elsevier, →ISBN, page 449:
      ASSISTANCE IN PILOTING 3D MESHERS To automate the building of the three-dimensional mesh with respect to the size map, two piloting procedures have been developed: • The first and simpler method consists of generating a mesh whose []
    • 2014 March 25, Jane C. Rothrock, Alexander's Care of the Patient in Surgery - E-Book, Elsevier Health Sciences, →ISBN, page 828:
      Skin Meshers. Several types of skin meshers are available, each designed to produce multiple uniform slits in a skin graft, approximately 0.05 inch apart. These multiple apertures in the graft can then expand, permitting the skin graft []
    • 2019 December 21, Moisés Torres, Jaime Klapp, Supercomputing: 10th International Conference on Supercomputing in Mexico, ISUM 2019, Monterrey, Mexico, March 25–29, 2019, Revised Selected Papers, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 327:
      Since it is the extreme case in our dataset and there are FEM-analysis results previously reported using other meshers, in the following sections we focus on the capsid. We explain some generalities of the viral capsid and the []