![]() ![]() Loading OpenFOAM data could be distilled down to two lines of code: import tecplot as tp Prompt: “Write a PyTecplot script to load OpenFOAM data” PyTecplot requires a Tecplot 360 license with our TecPLUS maintenance plan. ![]() MacOS Apple Silicon: /Applications/Tecplot 360 EX /bin/tec360-env ‐‐ python3-intel64 myscript.py MacOS Intel: /Applications/Tecplot 360 EX /bin/tec360-env ‐‐ python myscript.py Linux: /path/to/tecplot/bin/tec360-env ‐‐ python myscript.py Apple Silicon macOS machines (M1/M2 chip) will need to use the Intel version of Python, which should be installed by default. On Linux or macOS, make sure to start Python using the ‘tec360-env’ script to ensure Python can find the Tecplot 360 libraries. Print(“360 version:”, tp.sdk_version_info) Print(“PyTecplot version:”, tp.version_info) A good test script to run is: import tecplot as tp PyTecplot relies on an install of Tecplot 360 and the invocation of a PyTecplot command will trigger the loading of the 360 libraries on which PyTecplot depends. Just importing the module will indicate a successful installation, but you need to actually invoke a PyTecplot command to ensure you can run a script. PyTecplot might work with Python 3.6, but we no longer test against it. PyTecplot has a hard requirement of Python 3.7 or later (if you’re running ‘connected’ to the 360 GUI). PyTecplot is officially supported on the latest version of Python and the two previous. ![]()
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