A tailored graphical user interface (GUI) for finite element analysis, fully integrated into Microsoft Windows 3.1, has been developed. The current application is the simulation of flat sheet extrusion of thermoplastics, but many of the features would be common to a wide range of finite element analyses. Microsoft’s C/C++ Professional Development System 7.0, including the Software Development Kit 3.1(SDK), has been used as the programming tool for the GUI. The interface is based on the Common User Access Advanced Interface Design Guide,which is part of the IBM Systems Application Architecture Library, and The Windows Interface: An Application Design Guide, which is part of the SDK. A memory handling technique is proposed to break the imposed 64 KB data segmentation. Connected finite element calculation routines are written in Fortran and compiled by the Salford FTN77/x86 32‐bit compiler. The protected mode interface of the Fortran compiler allows direct access by the GUI, and allows the computation to run as a 32‐bit background application, without memory limitations, in the multitasking environment. Finite element routines are supported by pre‐ and post‐processors comprising mesh generation, post‐processing for derived results, and graphical displays. A convenient contouring algorithm is proposed to generate contoured plots of nodal quantities in the form of iso‐lines or iso‐fields.
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1 January 1995
Technical Paper|
January 01 1995
Finite element analysis on PCs with an ms—windows graphical user interface Available to Purchase
R. Sander;
R. Sander
Computer Aided Process Engineering Group, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Wales, Singleton Park, Swansea SA2 8PP, UK
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J.F.T. Pittman
J.F.T. Pittman
Computer Aided Process Engineering Group, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Wales, Singleton Park, Swansea SA2 8PP,UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7077
Print ISSN: 0264-4401
© MCB UP Limited
1995
Engineering Computations (1995) 12 (1): 35–60.
Citation
Sander R, Pittman J (1995), "Finite element analysis on PCs with an ms—windows graphical user interface". Engineering Computations, Vol. 12 No. 1 pp. 35–60, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02644409510799460
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