Categories
RSS Feed
Search NewtonExcelBach
Archives
Top Posts
- 3DFrame Ver 1.03 and Frame4 Ver 3.07
- Using LINEST for non-linear curve fitting
- About Newton Excel Bach
- XLDennis, the MSDN Library, and VBA rant
- Filling Blanks with Go To-Special (and local help rant)
- Writing Arrays to the worksheet - VBA function
- Downloads
- Daily Download 4: Continuous Beam Analysis
- Continuous Beam Spreadsheet - with Units
- Linking Excel to C
Recent Comments
py_xlCBA – Sup… on py_xlCBA update 
dougaj4 on Downloads 
Z on Downloads py_xlCBA update | Ne… on Calling PyCBA from Excel 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
khoitsma on Continuous beam animations wit… 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
Z on Reinforced concrete elastic an… 
dougaj4 on Downloads 
dougaj4 on Installing Adobe Reader non-DC… 
dougaj4 on Reinforced concrete elastic an…
Tag Archives: py_Fatigue3600
py_RC Elastic 1.04 and fatigue to AS 3600
The py_RC Elastic spreadsheet (last discussed here) has been updated with a new function py_Fatigue3600, providing design for fatigue to the latest AS 3600 concrete structures code. The new spreadsheet and associated Python code can be downloaded from: py_RC Elastic.zip … Continue reading
Posted in Concrete, Excel, Link to Python, Newton, PyXLL, UDFs
Tagged AS 3600, AS 5100.5, Design for Fatigue, Excel, Python, PyXLL, py_Fatigue, py_Fatigue3600, py_RC Design Functions, Reinforced Concrete, UDFs
1 Comment