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    Different line widths

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    • J Offline
      Jorgensen
      last edited by

      One thing I really miss in SU is different linewidths.

      In plans to would be great if it was possible to have width 4 for heavy walls, and cuts, and the rest, funiture floors ect. in width 1.

      I haven't found a way to do this. Does anyone know of a workaround ?

      What I do now is fill the heavy walls width a color. An other way is to model in 3d and use cut sections, but sometime is faster only to draw in 2d.

      Thanks
      Jorgensen

      sketchup pro 2016 16.1.1449 64 bit | windows 10 pro | i7-3770k @3.5 GHz | 16gb ram | gtx 780 ti / gtx 980 ti | nvidia driver 368.39

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      • plot-parisP Offline
        plot-paris
        last edited by

        unfortunately I am not aware of a way to change this.

        the only thing we can do is painting edges in different grayscale colours; that gets a bit towards line weights... (but it is of course not the same).

        a very tedious workaround (which provides you with different line weights) is to export the different elements seperately, changing the thickness of the profiles in the styles editor. later you can merge all the images to one final drawing (in photoshop for example).

        there is maybe a third way by exporting a dxf-file and importing it into illustrator (where you, as far as I know, are able to change line weights). I have never worked with that app though, therefore can't give you any tips. but I think someone in this forum did use this way (can't remember who)

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        • J Offline
          Jorgensen
          last edited by

          uf, not a easy way 😞 hopefully it will be possible in SU 7.0

          sketchup pro 2016 16.1.1449 64 bit | windows 10 pro | i7-3770k @3.5 GHz | 16gb ram | gtx 780 ti / gtx 980 ti | nvidia driver 368.39

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          • BurkhardB Offline
            Burkhard
            last edited by

            There's a script called thickie ( or similar ) I think available on smustard, but I'm not sure. It can help you.

            [http://www.ia-plus.de(http://www.ia-plus.de)]

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            • plot-parisP Offline
              plot-paris
              last edited by

              well you can get at least something like this with coloured edges:

              http://img229.imageshack.us/img229/133/080625opt1zx9.jpg

              but the thickie script sounds interesting... if you can get your hands on it, could you give us a short review?

              cheers,

              Jakob

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              • GaieusG Offline
                Gaieus
                last edited by

                I don't have the script but afaik it works in such a way that draws another line very close to what you want to display thicker and since all edges are 1 pixel thick, two edges are 2 pixel thick and from any distance (maybe expect for very close) they seem to merge into each other.

                Gai...

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                • Alan FraserA Offline
                  Alan Fraser
                  last edited by

                  I don't imagine that you will ever see different line weights in SketchUp itself, it's a modeller not a 2D CAD program. That's where Layout comes in....to keep the two functions separate. There is, indeed a Ruby script that draws in extra lines to apparently thicken them, but it does actually create extra geometry, it's not a line weight tool as normally understood.

                  3D Figures
                  Were you required to walk 500 miles? Were you advised to walk 500 more?
                  You could be entitled to compensation. Call the Pro Claimers now!

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                  • B Offline
                    bellwells
                    last edited by

                    http://www.crai.archi.fr/RubyLibraryDepot
                    The script is called Thicklines.rb and it's under the Architecture heading.

                    Ron

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                    • DavidBoulderD Offline
                      DavidBoulder
                      last edited by

                      You can stack scenes with different geometry hidden in Layout, but that brings up its own problems.

                      If you are really only modeling in 2d you could move objects that you want a lighter line weight very far away and use depth cue setting.

                      And yes, exporting to Illustrator also works. With CS3 you even have ability to export and import dwg/dxf to scale.

                      --

                      David Goldwasser
                      OpenStudio Developer
                      National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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                      • J Offline
                        Jorgensen
                        last edited by

                        Thanks to everyone. It seems not so easy to do, so I just keep on useing colors to create differences in the drawing. Ultimate I use autocad, but I would just like to keep it in the same drawing.

                        I will have a look at Thicklines.rb.

                        I simply don't like Layout, to slow and to complicated (a fundamental thing like updating views/layouts is a pain). What is possible inside Layout, should be a intern part of SU, like model- / paperspace in AutoCad. But thats a nother story πŸ˜„

                        I like the combination of SU and Indesign - but SU is a bit of a pain to print from, but I get hold of it now using PDF995 πŸ˜„

                        Thanks all.
                        Jorgensen

                        sketchup pro 2016 16.1.1449 64 bit | windows 10 pro | i7-3770k @3.5 GHz | 16gb ram | gtx 780 ti / gtx 980 ti | nvidia driver 368.39

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