The reverseCurve command reverses the direction of a curve or curve-on-surface. A string is returned containing the pathname of the newly reversed curve and the name of the resulting dependency node. The reversed curve has the same parameter range as the original curve.
Long name (short name) | Argument Types | Properties | |
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caching (cch) | bool | ||
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constructionHistory (ch) | bool | ||
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curveOnSurface (cos) | bool | ||
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name (n) | unicode | ||
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noChanges (nc) | bool | ||
nodeState (nds) | int | ||
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object (o) | bool | ||
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range (rn) | bool | ||
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replaceOriginal (rpo) | bool | ||
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Derived from mel command maya.cmds.reverseCurve
Example:
import pymel.core as pm
import maya.cmds as cmds
pm.reverseCurve( 'curve1', constructionHistory=True )
# Reverses curve1 with construction history on. The result will
# be a string array, where the first string is the name of the new
# reversed curve and the second string is the name of the new
# dependency node.
pm.reverseCurve( 'curve1', ch=False, replaceOriginal=True )
# Reverses curve1 without construction history, replacing the original.
# The result will be a string array, where the first string
# is the name of the curve (curve1). Because history is off,
# no dependency node will be created. The reversed curve will
# replace the original curve.
pm.reverseCurve( 'curve1', ch=True, rpo=True )
# Reverses curve1 with history, trying to replace the original.
# If curve1 was not a result of construction history, then this command
# will simply replace curve1 with the reversed curve. No dependency
# node will be created.
# If curve1 was a result of construction history, then this command
# will insert a reverse dependency node before the curve. eg.
# Before reverseCurve cmd: curve0 ---" closeCurve DN ---" curve1
# After cmd: curve0 ---" closeCurve DN ---" reverseCurve DN ---" curve1
# The result will be a string array , where the first string
# is the name of the curve (curve1) and the second name is the
# new dependency node.