I was using the Divide tool on an irregularly shaped polygon. I would use equal area and one at a time would divide the feature. Then I would divide the remainder again. After about 4 times, the tool doesn't seem to want to divide anymore even though there is still plenty to split off. I get an error that says Divide Features failed, but with no explanation at all. I couldn't care less what the direction is, I just want to divide the polygon. On a related note, I often have the same issue when using the Split tool. What i really need is a way to divide a polygon into multiple parts and be able to list what the size should be for each. Is there such a tool?

Seriously, no response at all? Doesn't anyone have an idea of how I can divide a polygon besides this tool that does not work? I need the ability to divide a polygon into unequal parts based on a proportion that I've already calculated? It appears this tool would work just fine if I wanted the parts to all be equal. Let me give some background. I am planning a storm water fee study where the more impervious area a property has, the higher the fee will be. I am trying to determine the share of impervious area that should be attributed to each address in multi-tenant buildings like a shopping center. It doesn't seem fair to assign a 2000 sq feet space the same amount of impervious area as a 62,000 sq feet space in the same shopping center. Has anyone else done a similar project?


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Hi Josh. Same problem for me, but even Subdivide Polygon failed, most likely because my polygon boundaries are organic and very erratic. My SOLUTION was to Simplify Polygons first, then the Subdivide worked, and with a little trial-and-error on the "simplification tolerance" and the Divide "direction edge", i was able to Divide as well.

Hi Everyone,

How I can divide surface by spacing for two direction of surface, in grasshopper I see component divide surface but it only use for number of point along two directions.

Thanks All


I work on images presenting porosities and I would like to divide an image into several zones to analyze them separately. Is it possible on Fiji to create a network of rectangles which will allow to divide one picture?

image1596798 1.16 MB

I saw that is possible to consolidate several images into the only one and I found the tool "Montage to stack " but theses tools do not seem to be really adapted to what I look for.

I am new to working in Alteryx, and I having an issue figuring out this problem. I want to create a new column, with the results being the values of another column being divided by a fixed value. For example, take this illustration. I would want to create a "Column C" where every Column B value is divided by A2. For excel, it would simply be "=B2/$A$2," but I don't know how to reflect the "dollar sign effect" into my Alteryx formula tool. It simply divided the two columns all the way down, so only my top result is correct, and all the rest are incorrect.

The drill site is at an ice divide (which is analogous to a watershed divide), where the ice is flowing out to the sea in opposing directions. The selected drill site is characterized by a combination of moderate ice accumulation rate, thick ice, and other characteristics that preserve detailed information on past environmental conditions during the last 68,000 years.

Greenlining interviewed California residents in Oakland and Fresno who had limited or no access to the internet to get a better picture of what life is like in the digital divide. In order to allow interviewees to speak freely and maintain privacy, we used pseudonyms if requested.

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Look in the spectre netlist (input.scs) for the MOS device M4. Find out what the "model" name of the transistor is. Most likely this model is actually a subckt defined within the model files incuded via Setup->Model Libraries so look through those files to find the definition of the subckt. Within that there's probably an instance called r1 which is a bsource, and that has some kind of expression which has a divide by zero in it for some reason - maybe inspecting it will reveal why.

30 is starting to get up there. I wouldn't wan't to click 29 times on a line to get the # of nodes needed. And power dupe is equally as clicky.

So, in this case I'd do things a little differently.

(And, since the original question on how to divide an existing line expanded to include solutions of creating new objects....)

No, seriously: Just make a vertical line at the STARTING point of your line and make X+1 copies of it. Move the last element over, so it intersects with the END point of your line. Now just use the "Distribute horizontally" command on all the new vertical lines and your line is intersected by evenly spaced lines ...now just select them all and use DIVIDE... done!


Oh, wait... we are in Affinity Designer where this simple operation will NOT result in a divided line but in all the lines disappearing!!!

Background:  The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has dramatically stressed the health care system and has provoked changes in population use of digital technologies. Digital divide is any uneven distribution in Information and Communications Technologies between people.

Discussion:  The most impacting factors on digital divide in our population are the social support networks and the experience with the technology: the presence of a digital native caregiver. The COVID-19 pandemic is unmasking an emerging form of technology-related social inequalities: political and community interventions are needed to support the most socially vulnerable population and prevent social health inequalities.

Agency officials said programmatic differences, including some set by statute, limit their ability to align programs. For example, programs may have differing definitions of eligible areas, populations, and broadband speeds. In 2018, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) led an interagency group that reviewed differing program definitions. However, NTIA did not identify which statutory provisions limit alignment nor recommend any changes. NTIA is responsible for coordinating telecommunications matters across the executive branch and at the end of 2020 gained additional responsibilities for improving broadband coordination. Improved alignment is needed to help address fragmentation and overlap. Without legislative proposals for Congress to consider, agencies may continue to face limitations in aligning programs to close the digital divide.

A new study suggests that cells preparing to divide can reverse this process and return to a resting state, challenging long-held beliefs about cell division. If interrupted early in their preparation to divide, cells were able to halt the division process, known as mitosis. The finding, led by researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, and reported July 5, 2023, in Nature, could point toward more effective treatments to interrupt the process by which cancer cells divide quickly and spread.

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