Planarsrf Not Working
Explanation of common capping failures and suggestions for fixing them A common question on the Rhino newsgroup is “Why didn't my solid extrusion get closed?” or “Why can't I cap this object?” In the case of the Extrude command, Rhino currently doesn't give any error messages or explanations of why the command didn't work as expected. It just fails silently, leaving the inexperienced user to wonder what they did wrong. In the case of the Cap command, you get a message unable to cap that object, which isn't very helpful to diagnose the problem.
Hopefully the explanations and procedures on this page will help Extrusions that won't cap. Select the curve and look in PropertiesDetails (or use the command What). It should tell you if it's closed. There are many methods to close an open curve, depending on what the problem is First, you need to find the open spot: The commands CrvStart or CrvEnd will place a point at the start or end of the curve, which is where the opening will be found.
You may then turn on points and try moving one endpoint on top of the other with point snap or otherwise edit the object to close it. A parallel to an extrusion not capping is an existing open polysurface that you think should cap but doesn't.
In that case, the opening to be capped should be considered in the same way as the curve that you wanted to extrude in the first example. That is, the loop that defines it is either open or not planar. It may be open if the polysurface isn't fully joined.
A compatible HDCP display is also needed for this. Radeon x300 se 128mb hypermemory secondary driver for mac. HDCP is mandatory for the output of certain audio formats, placing additional constraints on the multimedia setup.
Planarsrf Not Working
You can turn on naked edges to see if there are other naked edges besides the open edges to be capped. Or, the opening you think is planar actually isn't. Both of these cases will require a little more extensive repairs than a simple curve.