Joel, Yes, TRNSYS can be called from a command line. In case it is useful in your work, TRNSYS has already been linked to GenOpt (a generic optimization tool developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Labs) both directly (http://sel.me.wisc.edu/trnsys/demos/index.html#GenoptType56) and through a commercially available interface called TRNOpt (http://www.trnsys.com/ - click on "TESS Component Libraries" and scroll down to "Optimization Components." Best, David Joel Gabas wrote:
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