Abstract The calculation of the stresses and failure modes in thin-walled structural members is a complex procedure. Structural designers will often need help in analysing these types of structures. A vehicle for providing this help is the computer program developed for the microcomputer. In this paper, a computer procedure is described for the cross-section analysis and elastic buckling analysis of thin-walled structural members. The cross-section analysis calculates the section properties, warping displacements, and the longitudinal and shear stresses for thin-walled open and closed cross-sections of any shape. The longitudinal stresses are used to perform an elastic finite strip buckling analysis of thin-walled structural members. The analysis can be done for a number of different buckle half-wavelengths of the member and the load factor and buckled shape are output for each length. The analysis is performed by the user-friendly computer program THIN-WALL, which is also described in the paper.
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