I’m not sure what you mean by "fylm The School Teacher 1975 mtrjm awn layn - fydyw lfth" — it looks like a mix of transliteration or garbled words. I can still help, but I’ll pick a reasonable interpretation and produce a substantial digest. I’ll assume you mean the 1975 Italian film "The Schoolteacher" (original title: "La supplente" / "L'insegnante") or one of the 1970s Italian "Insegnante" series (commonly translated as The Schoolteacher), and that you want a thoughtful, well-written analysis/digest in natural tone.
I’m not sure what you mean by "fylm The School Teacher 1975 mtrjm awn layn - fydyw lfth" — it looks like a mix of transliteration or garbled words. I can still help, but I’ll pick a reasonable interpretation and produce a substantial digest. I’ll assume you mean the 1975 Italian film "The Schoolteacher" (original title: "La supplente" / "L'insegnante") or one of the 1970s Italian "Insegnante" series (commonly translated as The Schoolteacher), and that you want a thoughtful, well-written analysis/digest in natural tone.
A simpler alternative to C++ programming: use the Python language to exploit the capabilities of Chrono.
PyChrono is the Python wrapper of the Chrono simulation library. It is cross-platform, open source, and distributed as pre-compiled binaries using Anaconda. Using Chrono in Python is as easy as installing the Anaconda PyChrono package and typing import pychrono in your preferred Python IDE.
You can use PyChrono together with many other Python libraries: plot using MayaVi, postprocess with NumPy, train AI neural networks with TensorFlow, etc.