Text text text!
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i second that most emphatically!
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I've made the point about imported DWG text on a few occasions to Google, it's a glaring omission at the moment. A separate window in CAD has to be opened to read the text and you have to keep referring back and forward. This also brings with it a margin for error in a drawing where you misread the text in relation to a spot height or site feature when you click back on to the Sketchup file. Hopefully Google will address this.
Kenny
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It is a cry in the desert.
"I would put ALL the developers onto it and leave the airy-fairy stuff for now."
Me too.Hi Brad, hi Craig, hi Google people in here
cant you do something about it? -
- Using 3D text with no depth would give you that ability. I could see a script, that was called say "Text-Tag", that would let you add a text-tag to a model that became a component using 3D text; it would also have an attribute that tells us it's a text-tag and the second part of the text-tag script then lets you [right-click]edit any text-tag so you can renew its text etc and it'll then replace the old text-tag component with the new info...
- It would be [relatively] easy to read the text part from a DXF and then make some SUp text at the same location - complex thinking on how to get the size/font to correspond etc but NOT impossible... DWG files are more complex to read directly...
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TIG,
There's a basic problem with 3D text: since it is rendered as ordinary 3D geometry it has an outline--and a thick one--which is whatever the Profile edge attribute is set to. Unfortunately, scalable fonts are designed to be rendered net; that is, fill but no outline. The result is that SU renders 3D text characters distorted: strokes are too thick; cutouts get filled in; characters bleed together, etc. The effect is less noticeable at large point sizes, where the outlines account for a much smaller percentage of stroke width, but at small sizes, like the size of note text, the characters look fuzzy and ill-proportioned at best and barely legible at worst.
You can hide the edges, but that's a pretty kludgey and time-consuming workaround. The best workaround I've found is to intersect (integrate) the edges with a rectangular face, paint the face with an invisible color, hide the edges of the rectangle, and smooth the edges of the characters. That leaves you with your block of text on an invisible plane, which you can position and orient as you please.
There are still other problems with 3D text, though--most notably, the leading (line spacing) is too tight for most purposes, and there's no kerning. True, you can fiddle with the geometry, but that becomes rather laborious.
Voder Vocoder
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Lets not get side-tracked here or make this more complicated than necessary . . . . there's absolutely nothing wrong with the basic 'vector' text in Sketchup . . . I just wish it had the same options as the dimension text already has. Specifically, the option to have it aligned/glued to a surface and not to always 'float about' aligned to the viewport.
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@voder vocoder said:
...There's a basic problem with 3D text: since it is rendered as ordinary 3D geometry it has an outline--and a thick one--which is whatever the Profile edge attribute is set to. Unfortunately, scalable fonts are designed to be rendered net; that is, fill but no outline. The result is that SU renders 3D text characters distorted: strokes are too thick; cutouts get filled in; characters bleed together, etc. The effect is less noticeable at large point sizes, where the outlines account for a much smaller percentage of stroke width, but at small sizes, like the size of note text, the characters look fuzzy and ill-proportioned at best and barely legible at worst.
You can hide the edges, but that's a pretty kludgey and time-consuming workaround. The best workaround I've found is to intersect (integrate) the edges with a rectangular face, paint the face with an invisible color, hide the edges of the rectangle, and smooth the edges of the characters. That leaves you with your block of text on an invisible plane, which you can position and orient as you please.
There are still other problems with 3D text, though--most notably, the leading (line spacing) is too tight for most purposes, and there's no kerning. True, you can fiddle with the geometry, but that becomes rather laborious.
Voder VocoderIF you were automating 3D-text as text-tags then it'd be [relatively] easy to hide all edges in the text-tag component and make the faces 'black'... Kerning etc is more painful...
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See: http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/viewtopic.php?p=14125#p14125
for a script to do what we've discussed...
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thats pretty brilliant TIG! Thanks a lot.
How can I get the text created using the script to export to dwg? The 'normal' Sketchup text seems to export to dwg by converting itself to faces. -
@stuartb said:
that's pretty brilliant TIG! Thanks a lot.
How can I get the text created using the script to export to dwg? The 'normal' Sketchup text seems to export to dwg by converting itself to faces.You can't... BUT I could make an addition to the script to export the TextTags as a dxf file for the TextTags only [model-TaGTags.dwk]. It'd be done by manipulating the components' attributes to get the text, font, size etc and then make a 'real' text bit when opened into ACAD... It's a bit convoluted but could work - watch this space...
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TIG . . what are the font limitations? Can I use ANY TTF font I have installed?
Edit : I re-read your instructions . . I can add fonts by editing the script. i will try that. -
@stuartb said:
TIG . . what are the font limitations? Can I use ANY TTF font I have installed?
Edit : I re-read your instructions . . I can add fonts by editing the script. I will try that.Yes: Scroll down from the instruction part and find ###FONTLIST...
You can add any TTF fonts you want. Only use a plain text editor - word-processors will mess up the script by putting in hidden formatting characters etc...
Firstly make a back up of the ruby somewhere in case you mess up...
The font names are sorted into alphabetical order later on in the script so you could add your own fonts at the beginning...### FONTLIST... ### ADD into the font list [or delete] any fonts YOU use [don't ever want to use]... @fontlist=["YOUR_FONT","Arial",...]
Use the 'name' that appears in the system's list of fonts, rather than the file name itself - so it's "Arial" NOT "arial.ttf". If you want to remove any fonts ensure that the whole thing goes with any separating commas - e.g. <kept>"Tahoma",<kept>... The more fonts you have in the list then the longer the dialog's list and then you might have to resort to typing the first letter and then using the arrow keys to find the one you want - like on the colors... I recommend you have a concise list of fonts you usually use - I find that I only use a few fonts.
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@unknownuser said:
Lets not get side-tracked here or make this more complicated than necessary . . . . there's absolutely nothing wrong with the basic 'vector' text in Sketchup . . . I just wish it had the same options as the dimension text already has. Specifically, the option to have it aligned/glued to a surface and not to always 'float about' aligned to the viewport.
I like the idea so much I logged a feature request.
Hope that helps.
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I'd like to see this too, it is so fundamental!
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@stuartb said:
Specifically, the option to have it aligned/glued to a surface and not to always 'float about' aligned to the viewport.
OK, I finally found the dimension text alignment option in 'model info' but I only see 'align to dimension line'. How does one glue the text to a surface?
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Tim,
That's not possible from "native" SU but you can use TIG's script for that:
http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/viewtopic.php?f=153&t=2953 -
Tim,
Gaieus is incorrect. For dimension text, native SU is fine.
By unticking 'align to screen' and choosing 'align to dimension line' you will notice that the dimension text does 'glue' to the sketchup surface and does not float about.My complaint is that 'normal' text cannot do this. It is always 'aligned to screen' . .hence the need for TIGs script . . . which is nice . . but doesnt export to a dwg so you cant share your text with anyone.
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I was also referring to the text tool, not the dimension tool.
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