CurrentDensityReceiverCyl Class

class plask.flow.CurrentDensityReceiverCyl

Receiver of the current density in Cylindrical geometry (kA/cm²).

You may connect a provider to this receiver using either the connect method or an assignment operator. Then, you can read the provided value by calling this receiver with arguments identical as the ones of the corresponding provider CurrentDensityProviderCyl.

Example

Connect the receiver to a provider from some other solver:

>>> solver.inCurrentDensity = other_solver.outCurrentDensity

See also

Provider of current density: plask.flow.CurrentDensityProviderCyl

Data filter for current density: plask.flow.CurrentDensityFilterCyl

Methods

__call__(mesh[, interpolation])

Get value from the connected provider

add_watch(callable)

Connect callable to watch receiver changes.

attach(source)

Attach some provider or constant value to the receiver.

reset()

Disconnect any provider of value from the receiver.

Descriptions

Method Details

CurrentDensityReceiverCyl.__call__(mesh, interpolation='DEFAULT')

Get value from the connected provider

CurrentDensityReceiverCyl.add_watch(callable)

Connect callable to watch receiver changes.

The callable will be called each time the value received by this receiver changes.

The callable should accept two arguments: the first one will be the receiver and the second one gives information what is changed.

CurrentDensityReceiverCyl.attach(source)

Attach some provider or constant value to the receiver.

Parameters:

source – source provider or value.

Example

>>> solver.inCurrentDensity.attach(300.)
>>> solver.inCurrentDensity(any_mesh)[0]
300.
>>> solver.inCurrentDensity(any_mesh)[-1]
300.
>>> solver.inCurrentDensity.attach(other_solver.outCurrentDensity)

Note

You may achieve the same effect by using the asignmnent operator if you put an existing provider at the right side of this operator:

>>> solver.inCurrentDensity = other_solver.outCurrentDensity
CurrentDensityReceiverCyl.reset()

Disconnect any provider of value from the receiver.