![]() The time file associated with each loaded data file is, by default, derived from the index in the sequence.If you need more control over the sequences then use a PVD file, as described in the next subsection. Depending on how you structure your file names this might or might not be what you want. ) ParaView still assumes the files form a sequence. Even though the example above uses steps that are larger than 1 (i.e.The sequence detection in the Open File dialog is automatic, but you can still load a single time step if needed: simply unfold the group and select the specific file you want to load.Initially, only the first time step is loaded, but if you change the time the corresponding data file will be loaded (if not already loaded). The current animation time is controlled from the tool bar at the top: If you click OK with the group selected a single reader will be added to the pipeline, that will process the sequence of files on demand. You can unfold the group by using the little triangle, to check if ParaView detects the sequence correctly: menu option and check if ParaView recognizes the sequence as a Group : ![]() ) then loading these as a time-varying dataset is easy. If you have sequentially numbered files in a format that ParaView can read (e.g. So depending on what actions you perform you might end up with all data steps loaded in memory at the same time. The animation support is fairly rudimentary and also doesn't optimize memory usage. ParaView supports working with time-varying data, by allowing multiple sequential data files to be loaded as a single input stream, together with control over the current time.
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