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The "Duh!" thread (aka the Doh! thread)

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  • P Offline
    pilou
    last edited by 12 Jul 2012, 14:57

    πŸ’š

    	100001
    	11000
    	1110
    	100011
    	1100
    	10001
    	100100
    	11110
    

    Frenchy Pilou
    Is beautiful that please without concept!
    My Little site :)

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    • T Offline
      thomthom
      last edited by 2 Aug 2012, 07:36

      @unknownuser said:

      Found a cool one today.

      Copy a line over and type 6" to set the distance. Then type *10 to array it 10 times.

      What I already knew was that you can type *8 or *4 or whatever to adjust the number of arrayed items.

      However I just found out that if you type 3" or 10" it will keep your array but adjust the spacing. Pretty sweet!

      -Brodie

      Duh!

      That is sweet!

      The manual doesn't even mention this!
      http://support.google.com/sketchup/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=94863

      Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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      • H Offline
        Heaps
        last edited by 2 Aug 2012, 11:35

        It even works with circular arrays - just type in the angle in degrees

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        • B Offline
          brodie
          last edited by 2 Aug 2012, 12:30

          Found a cool one today.

          Copy a line over and type 6" to set the distance. Then type *10 to array it 10 times.

          What I already knew was that you can type *8 or *4 or whatever to adjust the number of arrayed items.

          However I just found out that if you then type 3" or 10" it will keep your array but adjust the spacing. Pretty sweet!

          -Brodie

          steelblue http://www.steelbluellc.com

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          • B Offline
            broomstick
            last edited by 4 Aug 2012, 12:48

            @unknownuser said:

            Found a cool one today.

            Copy a line over and type 6" to set the distance. Then type *10 to array it 10 times.

            What I already knew was that you can type *8 or *4 or whatever to adjust the number of arrayed items.

            However I just found out that if you then type 3" or 10" it will keep your array but adjust the spacing. Pretty sweet!

            -Brodie

            This, sir, just made my day!

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            • B Offline
              Bob James
              last edited by 4 Aug 2012, 17:22

              +1

              i7-4930K 3.4Ghz, 2x GTX780 6GB, 32GB DDR3-1600 ECC, OCZ Vertex 4 500GB, WD Black 3TB, 32TB NAS, 4x 27" Monitors, SpaceMouse Pro, X-keys XK-60

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              • J Offline
                jgb
                last edited by 4 Aug 2012, 20:13

                @unknownuser said:

                Found a cool one today. πŸ˜’

                Copy a line over and type 6" to set the distance. Then type *10 to array it 10 times.

                What I already knew was that you can type *8 or *4 or whatever to adjust the number of arrayed items.

                However I just found out that if you then type 3" or 10" it will keep your array but adjust the spacing. Pretty sweet!

                -Brodie

                I just wish you found this last week, when I needed it. πŸ˜†


                jgb

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                • D Offline
                  d12dozr
                  last edited by 5 Aug 2012, 05:55

                  @unknownuser said:

                  Found a cool one today.

                  Copy a line over and type 6" to set the distance. Then type *10 to array it 10 times.

                  What I already knew was that you can type *8 or *4 or whatever to adjust the number of arrayed items.

                  However I just found out that if you then type 3" or 10" it will keep your array but adjust the spacing. Pretty sweet!

                  -Brodie

                  I learned that just a couple months ago from Dave R at a local meetup πŸ‘

                  3D Printing with SketchUp Book
                  http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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                  • aarondietzenA Offline
                    aarondietzen
                    last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 19:40

                    Shift + Eraser to smooth...

                    I know that this has always been there, but I just discovered it recently (Duh!) thanks to another thread here... I cannot tell you how many times I have tweaked, and redone a push/pull or follow me command just to minimize the number of lines on a solid!

                    Ah... feels good to share my stupidity!

                    "Imagination is more important than knowledge..."
                    - Albert Einstein

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                    • massimoM Offline
                      massimo Moderator
                      last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 20:19

                      Ctrl+ eraser is to smooth. Shift+eraser is to hide. πŸ˜‰

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                      • aarondietzenA Offline
                        aarondietzen
                        last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 20:22

                        @massimo said:

                        Ctrl+ eraser is to smooth. Shift+eraser is to hide. πŸ˜‰

                        Stupidity x2! πŸ˜†

                        "Imagination is more important than knowledge..."
                        - Albert Einstein

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                        • T Offline
                          thomthom
                          last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 20:23

                          Ctrl+Erase = Soft+Smooth
                          Shift+Erase = Hide
                          Ctrl+Shift+Erase = Un-soft+Smooth (But not Unhide!)

                          Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                          List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                          • TIGT Offline
                            TIG Moderator
                            last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 20:38

                            @thomthom said:

                            Ctrl+Erase = Soft+Smooth
                            Shift+Erase = Hide
                            Ctrl+Shift+Erase = Un-soft+Smooth (But not Unhide!)
                            Use 'Entity Info' to manipulate selected edges' hidden/soft/smooth status OR alternatively use the context-menu 'Unhide' [or 'Hide']...

                            TIG

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                            • aarondietzenA Offline
                              aarondietzen
                              last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 21:56

                              @tig said:

                              @thomthom said:

                              Ctrl+Erase = Soft+Smooth
                              Shift+Erase = Hide
                              Ctrl+Shift+Erase = Un-soft+Smooth (But not Unhide!)
                              Use 'Entity Info' to manipulate selected edges' hidden/soft/smooth status OR alternatively use the context-menu 'Unhide' [or 'Hide']...

                              "Learn something new everyday!"

                              In this case... several new things.

                              "Imagination is more important than knowledge..."
                              - Albert Einstein

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                              • P Offline
                                pilou
                                last edited by 14 Aug 2012, 22:54

                                @unknownuser said:

                                However I just found out that if you type 3" or 10" it will keep your array but adjust the spacing. Pretty sweet!

                                -Brodie

                                Duh!

                                That is sweet!

                                The manual doesn't even mention this!
                                http://support.google.com/sketchup/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=94863

                                Seems that is more missing here πŸ˜‰
                                http://support.google.com/sketchup/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=94867&topic=2458142&ctx=topic

                                Frenchy Pilou
                                Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                My Little site :)

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                                • emerald15E Offline
                                  emerald15
                                  last edited by 15 Aug 2012, 13:52

                                  @heaps said:

                                  It even works with circular arrays - just type in the angle in degrees

                                  You've lost me now...I usually type in x(number) not *(number). But how do I get back to degrees... how does one type 'degrees'! ACAD is 'dd%d' but what is SU?

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                                  • TIGT Offline
                                    TIG Moderator
                                    last edited by 15 Aug 2012, 14:00

                                    Typing an 'x' or '*' is the same - so you can type x2, *2 , 2x etc for 'times'.
                                    To 'divide' the copies use /2...
                                    You never need to use a 'degree' symbol with Rotate, any typed in +ve or -ve numbers that don't contain an x, * or / are taken as degrees anyway... In Move [and tools like Line] it's taken as 'current units', unless you add a units suffix, so typing 1000 while using mm Moves the object 1000mm, but to move it a specific distance in feet+inches can be done even while the model's current-units is mm - e.g. typing 3'4" will Move that exact amount [1016mm] etc...

                                    Incidentally, if you want to type 'special characters' in Sketchup Text - like degrees [Β°] - there are OS specific key-strokes, on a PC it's Alt0176, on a MAC I think it's OptionShift8. There are lots, so if you use some regularly have a crib sheet handy...

                                    TIG

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                                    • J Offline
                                      jgb
                                      last edited by 15 Aug 2012, 14:51

                                      This is also a question, based on the above.

                                      Using SCALE, you can just type a percentage value in the VCB. This is handy to set a specific scale factor like 92%. It is also handy to set a scale factor that is between SCALE's preset snap tolerance of .1% so just type 90.15 in the VCB where SCALE snaps only to 90.1% or 90.2% and you need the precision.

                                      OK, my question, How do I set scale to a dimensional value?
                                      ie: my object is 12 inches, and I want it to be 13 inches, without doing the percentage math. AND I am holding the CTRL and SHIFT keys down to scale all and from the center. When I release the mouse button to type, my position is lost.


                                      jgb

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                                      • T Offline
                                        thomthom
                                        last edited by 15 Aug 2012, 14:59

                                        @jgb said:

                                        OK, my question, How do I set scale to a dimensional value?
                                        ie: my object is 12 inches, and I want it to be 13 inches, without doing the percentage math. AND I am holding the CTRL and SHIFT keys down to scale all and from the center. When I release the mouse button to type, my position is lost.

                                        Just scale roughly first - then use the VCB to adjust with accuracy afterwards - typing in the length.

                                        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                                        • P Offline
                                          pilou
                                          last edited by 15 Aug 2012, 15:04

                                          Just draw a 13 inch segment from a vertex from your object and Scale your object by the line! πŸ˜‰

                                          Alas this just work only with "cubic" objects! πŸ€“
                                          If you have inclined faces you must don't use the native Scale tool!!!

                                          Frenchy Pilou
                                          Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                          My Little site :)

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