[Plugin] Perpendicular Face Tools (UPDATED 26-03-09)
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chris,
there seems to be some incompatibility with SU8 as the toolbar does not appear and I cannot find PFT in your folder in the plugins menu, even though all the files are in the plugins folder.
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Edson, I have these tools on my Mac with SU8 Pro and they work fine. Have you ticked the box for Perpendicular Face tools in Preferences>Extensions?
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@dave r said:
Edson, I have these tools on my Mac with SU8 Pro and they work fine. Have you ticked the box for Perpendicular Face tools in Preferences>Extensions?
nope. I looked for it in View>Tool Palettes and it was not there. but doing what you suggested did the trick. thanks for reminding me of that.
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It's easy to forget having to tick the boxes. More so these days because you don't have to do it for every toolbar and for those you do, it's only done once until you install the next version of SU. Glad that fixed it.
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Glad you got it fixed Edson - Thanks Dave!
Chris
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Sketchup crushing very often, when use Ctrl+Z after this tools
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Hmm, that is not good. I'll look into it. Thanks for the notice, I'll let you know if I find anything,
Chris
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What a cracking tool Chris your comitment never stops amazing me Phil
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Would anyone kindly help me install this in Linux?
I'm running Linux Mint 10 on an HP 8510W with
Intel Core 2 Duo T7500 Processor (Santa Rosa, 2.2GHz, 4MB L2 Cache, 800MHz FSB)
256MB NVIDIA Quadro FX 570M Workstation GPU
15.4” WSXGAI installed Sketchup 7.0 with Wine installer. It's working quite well for me so far.
I have found this ruby-script instruction on a page dedicated to Sketchup Linux users...
@unknownuser said:
bug 16511, fixed as of wine-1.1.11: To use the Ruby scripts (sketchup.google.com/download/rubyscripts.html) you'll need to convert them from DOS format to Unix format. (e.g. sudo apt-get install tofromdos; dos2unix -f parametric.rb windows.rb)
... but am pretty new to linux and not certain how to proceed.
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hmmm, I don't know. I am not a Linux person. Someone around here should be able to help I think thought.
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Hello Chris.
I second every accolade in this thread. What a great tool! I read and read tutorials until I was quite certain not to embarrass myself before asking how to accomplish this. It's such a fundamental need that I was certain that I was overlooking the obvious somewhere. When I was directed to your plugin I was pretty astonished that Sketchup does not do this natively somehow. Thank you VERY much for your work.
I asked some time back about why subsequent versions of Sketchup don't incorporate more of the most useful tools developed by users. I recall that it was said to be a 'good question'. Do you happen to know? It's not as if it would add too significantly to the size of the download.
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@frascati said:
I asked some time back about why subsequent versions of Sketchup don't incorporate more of the most useful tools developed by users. I recall that it was said to be a 'good question'. Do you happen to know? It's not as if it would add too significantly to the size of the download.
As a user I prefer to be able to choose myself - the plugins I find useful isn't the same as the next person.
As a developer - SketchUp plugins often go through frequent updates, so any bundled plugin would be out of date by the time it ships.On the other hand - it'd be great if we could have a plugin repository where we could search, install, uninstall plugins from within SketchUp.
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Finally solved this, hope this helps if any other Linux users stop by here. Rather than repeat a lot I'll refer to the thread....
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=90&t=69740@unknownuser said:
On the other hand - it'd be great if we could have a plugin repository where we could search, install, uninstall plugins from within SketchUp.
That would be VERY nice.
This is one thing that I'm really pleased with so far with this "fat" (by linux standards) Linux distro called Mint. There is a wealth of such repositories within the installation for navigating and installing with a minimum of fuss many many utilities. Usually when a Linux tool is discovered on the web I just have to open the "package manager" in Mint and type the name of it into search and it's already there. I just click to download and automatically install it and start using it.
This plugin for Sketchup has been the first real baffler for me, but it turned out to be a pretty simple fix after all. I'm finding that that's usually the case with Mint. Half a dozen hard-core linux people will give you daunting command line instructions but eventually someone will come along to tell you that the solution is actually only two clicks away.
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Just discovered your plugin and it's great! Thank you. I'm having issue with it drawing circles with a radius less than 1". Is a 1" radius the limit on size?
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I probably did not make it smart enough to do decimals. And if I did, it probably only accepts a period as a decimal placemark - which is the US standard. So if you are typing 0,5 - you might try 0.5 - and I would recommend trying it with the 0 in front, and also without the 0. I really don't know how smart the script is going to be with that. I can dig into and look at it if you would like.
Chris
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@chris fullmer said:
I probably did not make it smart enough to do decimals. And if I did, it probably only accepts a period as a decimal placemark - which is the US standard. So if you are typing 0,5 - you might try 0.5 - and I would recommend trying it with the 0 in front, and also without the 0. I really don't know how smart the script is going to be with that. I can dig into and look at it if you would like.
Chris
How are you processing the input. if you use String.to_l then it should make use of the user's locale setting.
Example:
I got comma as decimal separator, model units set to mm;
` "10,5".to_l0.413385826771654`
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Hi Chris,
whats about an 'put objects perpendicular to' option? Lets say, to put the nearest face of a group/component instance on another face, (having two parallel faces)
application: moving a cabinet to a wall
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That would be an interesting plugin. I'm not sure it doesn't exist already though. Seems like there might be some script out there for moving like that. I'm not sure what it would be called though.
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Indeed, Didier Bur wrote a similar tool: Align2D. But you have to set 8 points to process objects. Best used to position/put objects on unusual angled planes. Another tool of the same author is 'Drop' but it drops only vertically.
A dedicated tool to place/arrange furniture would save a lot of time.
The slide direction could result of the relationship between group-wallface and the bounding box face determine the border line between object-wall. No dialog/input box is needed for this to work.
Another candy to add could be to rotate objects automatically, so that the front face of a cabinet, points always forward of the wall. -
Hello, I tried this tool today.
It works fine but I got issue with circle:
It doesn't draw radius under 25,4mm
If I set radius to 100mm it draw 76,2mm radius
???
Is there a way, code to have a component instead of a group?
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