Strictly & BoneArray
BoneArray BoneArray
Hey Strictly, ever thought about how a well‑structured bone hierarchy is like a solid legal contract? Both rely on clear definitions, precise constraints, and, if you’re lucky, a clean final draft that nobody wants to touch again.
Strictly Strictly
Bone hierarchies and legal contracts—both make my binder feel like a courtroom drama; definitions are the law, constraints the clauses, and a clean final draft is the ultimate verdict I never want to reopen.
BoneArray BoneArray
Sounds like you’re drafting a contract for a bone chain. Just remember: if the constraints aren’t named correctly, the whole document—your rig—can collapse in court. Stick to consistent naming and you’ll have the cleanest verdict yet.
Strictly Strictly
Fine, I’ll treat that bone chain like a contract and name every variable like a law degree—no ambiguity, no loopholes. If the names aren’t exact, the whole thing collapses faster than a courtroom drama on a soap‑opera binge. Deadline’s on, binder’s ready.
BoneArray BoneArray
Great, just make sure those “law degree” names don’t hide a misplaced rotation axis; that one quirk can turn your polished binder into a courtroom disaster in seconds. Good luck meeting the deadline.
Strictly Strictly
Got it, no hidden rotation axes—those are the loopholes I hate. I’ll audit every coordinate, label everything like a law thesis, and keep the binder spotless. Deadline? I’ll meet it before the coffee runs out.
BoneArray BoneArray
Just make sure the coffee stays strong enough to keep you awake when you hit that last, tiny axis. A well‑named binder and a fresh cup of espresso are the best defense against a collapse.
Strictly Strictly
Thanks for the tip—I'll keep the espresso ready, the binder named like a legal brief, and make sure every axis is in the right place. A collapse is the worst kind of loophole.
BoneArray BoneArray
Sounds like you’re about to make a rig that could pass a bar exam—nice. Just remember, if one joint misaligns, the whole contract dissolves. Stay focused, keep the espresso flowing, and you’ll have a case worth winning.
Strictly Strictly
Thanks, but I’m already halfway through the first draft—no joint is left unexamined. Espresso’s on standby, binder’s color‑coded, and the only thing that could derail this is a typo in the constraints. I’ll get it done before the deadline, no matter how many coffee cups it takes.
BoneArray BoneArray
Good, just keep that espresso flowing and double‑check every constraint text—one stray typo and the whole chain shifts like a bad rotation axis. Once those are nailed, you’ll have a clean contract that won’t crumble in court.