Hello, iam here again. Thanks a lot for your videos. These are powerfull for me. We're trying to do a simple details with my 4 years daughter. She was happy when she had done her first cube. And for me it is the best worth like father.
Aw that's so precious thanks for sharing that. If she likes programming too then maybe take a look at 'Scratch'. There are other visual programming tools out there too that are better than typing to start with. Bless you!
Watching the playlist and I've learned some things. Thank you. I'm wondering though....you use H and V constraints often. Is there a reason you do not use Parallel and Perpendicular constraints instead?
Hey, thanks for reaching out. I could half the number of clicks by using the perpendicular constraint instead of H and V. I guess I prefer using H and V as it makes it more apparent for me when I look at the sketch, but at the expense of efficiency. I'm still learning to use it but I guess being more efficient is always higher level.
@@blueskyprojects3898 OK, cool. I was just wondering because I was thinking that H and V would be more 'universally constraining' - that that line would always be constrained to be vertical or horizontal, regardless of how the part was manipulated in the future. but in later videos I see the part imported and rotated so I was wrong about that. Thanks again.
@@uberintj Ah I see your point. So by using perpendicular constraints it makes the sketch more 'intelligent' (if you know what I mean)? Appreciate your feedback and you've given really good ones too. I'll apply it in the next video.
I found a way: 1. copy objects 2. select paste transformed 3. a special menu opens 4. tick want you to want to: rotate 180 degrees and tick mirror object. 4. press to achieve a transformed paste. It works, please share this with other users too. :-)
@@Tommi_P_Laiho Hey - that's great and useful for simplifying a symmetric work-plane into smaller components. Here's another example; let's say your work-plane has C2 symmetry, you could draw half of it like you said, copy it, paste transformed but then click the 'flip' tickbox in the properties panel to paste the mirror image. I've not tried it for C3 or higher odd number symmetry though
Hello, iam here again.
Thanks a lot for your videos.
These are powerfull for me. We're trying to do a simple details with my 4 years daughter.
She was happy when she had done her first cube. And for me it is the best worth like father.
Aw that's so precious thanks for sharing that. If she likes programming too then maybe take a look at 'Scratch'. There are other visual programming tools out there too that are better than typing to start with. Bless you!
Watching the playlist and I've learned some things. Thank you. I'm wondering though....you use H and V constraints often. Is there a reason you do not use Parallel and Perpendicular constraints instead?
Hey, thanks for reaching out. I could half the number of clicks by using the perpendicular constraint instead of H and V. I guess I prefer using H and V as it makes it more apparent for me when I look at the sketch, but at the expense of efficiency. I'm still learning to use it but I guess being more efficient is always higher level.
@@blueskyprojects3898 OK, cool. I was just wondering because I was thinking that H and V would be more 'universally constraining' - that that line would always be constrained to be vertical or horizontal, regardless of how the part was manipulated in the future. but in later videos I see the part imported and rotated so I was wrong about that. Thanks again.
@@uberintj Ah I see your point. So by using perpendicular constraints it makes the sketch more 'intelligent' (if you know what I mean)? Appreciate your feedback and you've given really good ones too. I'll apply it in the next video.
you are the best
Thanks so much - there's room for improvement but I hope the videos help in some way
Is SolveSpace a profesional tool?
Is there a mirror command when we are making 2D blueprints with SolveSpace?
I found a way: 1. copy objects 2. select paste transformed 3. a special menu opens 4. tick want you to want to: rotate 180 degrees and tick mirror object. 4. press to achieve a transformed paste. It works, please share this with other users too. :-)
@@Tommi_P_Laiho Hey - that's great and useful for simplifying a symmetric work-plane into smaller components. Here's another example; let's say your work-plane has C2 symmetry, you could draw half of it like you said, copy it, paste transformed but then click the 'flip' tickbox in the properties panel to paste the mirror image. I've not tried it for C3 or higher odd number symmetry though