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@article{QIAN2010A, author = {Qian, Zhenyu Cheryl and Chen, Yingjie Victor and Woodbury, Robert F.}, title = {Design Patterns to Support Collaborative Parametric Design}, journal = {International Journal of Design Sciences and Technology}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {57-75}, year = {2010} }
@inproceedings{WOODBURY07J, address = {Halifax (Nova Scotia)}, author = {Robert Woodbury and Axel Kilian and Robert Aish}, booktitle = {Expanding Bodies: Art {\textbullet} Cities {\textbullet} Environment: Proceedings of the 27th Annual Conference of the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture}, key = {Woodbury}, month = {1-7 October}, pages = {222-229}, title = {Some Patterns for Parametric Modeling}, publisher = {Riverside Architectural Press and Tuns Press}, year = 2007 }
@inproceedings{WOODBURY07N, address = {Halifax (Nova Scotia)}, author = {Zhenyu Qian and Yingjie Chen and Robert Woodbury}, booktitle = {Expanding Bodies: Art {\textbullet} Cities {\textbullet} Environment: Proceedings of the 27th Annual Conference of the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture}, key = {Qian}, month = {1-7 October}, pages = {230-241}, title = {Participant Observation can Discover Design Patterns in Parametric Modeling}, publisher = {Riverside Architectural Press and Tuns Press}, year = 2007 }
@book{WOODBURY09A, author = {Robert Woodbury}, title = {Elements of Parametric Design}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, year = 2010, isbn = {0-415-77986-3}, key = {Woodbury}, note = {With contributions from Brady Peters, Onur Y\"uce G\"un and Mehdi Sheikholeslami}, annote = {{\bfseries Abstract:} \emph{Design is change. Parametric modeling represents change. It is an old idea, indeed one of the very first ideas in computer-aided design. In his 1963 PhD thesis, Ivan Sutherland was right in putting parametric change at the centre of the Sketchpad system. His invention of a representation that could adapt to changing context both created and foresaw one of the chief features of the computer aided design (CAD) systems to come. The devices of the day prevented Sutherland from fully expressing what he might well have seen, that parametric representations could deeply change design work itself. I believe that, today, the key to both using and making these systems lies in another, older idea. People do design. Planning and implementing change in the world around u one of the key things that make us human. Language is what we say; design and making is what we do. Computers are simply a new medium for this ancient enterprise. True, they are the first truly active medium. They are general symbol processors, almost limitless in the kind of tool that they can present. With much craft and care, we can program them to do much of what we call design. But not all. Designers continue to amaze us in with new function and form. Sometimes new work embodies wisdom, a precious commodity in a finite world. To the human enterprise of design, parametric systems bring fresh and needed new capabilities in adapting to context and contingency and exploring the possibilities inherent in an idea. What is the new knowledge and skill designers need to master the parametric? How can we learn and use it? That is what this book is about. It aims to help designers realize the potential of the parameter in their work. It does so by combining basic ideas of parametric systems themselves with equally basic ideas from both geometry and computer programming.}} }
@misc{WOODBURY11A, key = {Davis}, author = {Daniel Davis}, title = {Elements of Parametric Design -- Woodbury}, year = 2011, note = {Accessed at\\ http://www.nzarchitecture.com/blog/index.php/2010/09/11/elements-of-parametric-design-woodbury/\\ on 2 January 2012} }
@misc{WOODBURY11B, key = {Belcher}, author = {Danny Belcher}, title = {Woodbury's Elements of Parametric Design}, year = 2011, note = {Accessed at\\ http://lmnts.lmnarchitects.com/reviews/bookreviews/woodburys-elements-of-parametric-design/ \\ on 2 January 2012} }
@misc{WOODBURY11C, key = {Kron}, author = {Zach Kron}, title = {Parametric Design Patterns}, year = 2011, note = {Accessed at\\ http://buildz.blogspot.com/2010/12/parametric-design-patterns.html on 2 January 2012} }
@misc{WOODBURY11D, key = {Wang}, author = {Tsung-Hsien Wang}, title = {Design Patterns for Parametric Modeling in Grasshopper}, year = 2011, note = {\\Accessed at http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/org/tsunghsw-design on 2 January 2012} }
@book{WOODBURY12A, author = {Robert Woodbury}, title = {Elements of Parametric Design}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, year = 2010, key = {Woodbury}, note = {With contributions from Brady Peters, Onur Y\"uce G\"un and Mehdi Sheikholeslami. Forthcoming Chinese translation} }
@incollection{WOODBURY2012C, author = {Robert Woodbury}, booktitle = {Inside Smartgeometry}, editor = {Brady Peters and Terri Peters}, title = {Design Flow and Tool Flux}, publisher = {John Wiley \& Sons}, year = 2013, key = {Woodbury}, pages = {102-111}, abstract = {Tools exist to improve work. They embody mostly simple and often singular ideas: a wrench is a lever arm with the centre of a bolt as its fulcrum; a knife is a sharp edge with a safe handle; an arc-welder channels electrical current through a point of contact. People refine tools, typically by holding the central idea constant and making it work better in a specific context. Thus wrenches become socket sets; we have knives just for sushi and tig welders enable extremely fine work in specialty metals. A tool's central seed idea remains constant and the number of seed ideas is much smaller than the number of tools available. Computer tools are no different--they embody a few good ideas. Here I argue for seven central ideas that form the flux towards better design design media: dataflow programming; ubiquitous scripting; the web of abstraction; symbol amplifiers; the web of mathematics; human-in-the-loop data import and export; and the loop of bits to atoms and atoms to bits. I conclude with and argument for the explicit representation of alternatives, idea that is becoming important but has not yet matured in design media.}, isbn = {978-1-118-52246-2} }
@inproceedings{WOODBURY2014D, author = {Robert Woodbury}, title = {How Designers Use Parameters}, key = {Woodbury}, booktitle = {Theories of the Digital in Architecture}, year = 2014, editor = {Rivka Oxman and Robert Oxman}, publisher = {Routledge}, pages = {153-170}, isbn = {978-0-415-46923-4}, abstract = {This chapter sketches how parametric design work changes what designers do and what they must think about while they are doing it. The treatment is mainly descriptive. It derives from the properties of parametric systems themselves; from my own knowledge of computation and design; but mostly from working, over several years, with designers using and learning parametric systems.} }
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