The "Duh!" thread (aka the Doh! thread)
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Didn't you mean
010110010110111101110101001000000110010001101111001000000110111001101111011101000010000001110101011011100110010001100101011100100111001101110100011000010110111001100100001000000110001001101001011011100110000101110010011110010010000000100001
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01101000 01101111 01110111 00100000 01110010 01110101 01100100 01100101 00100001
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It wasn't... but
0100011001100101011000110110101100100000011010010111001100100000011100100111010101100100011001010010000000100001
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I think I got geek all over me
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100001 11000 1110 100011 1100 10001 100100 11110
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@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 -
It even works with circular arrays - just type in the angle in degrees
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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
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@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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+1
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@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 just wish you found this last week, when I needed it.
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@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
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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!
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Ctrl+ eraser is to smooth. Shift+eraser is to hide.
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Ctrl+Erase = Soft+Smooth
Shift+Erase = Hide
Ctrl+Shift+Erase = Un-soft+Smooth (But not Unhide!) -
@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 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.
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@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=94863Seems that is more missing here
http://support.google.com/sketchup/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=94867&topic=2458142&ctx=topic -
@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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