Need Advice About This Advice [Groups or Components?]
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Rich, thanks for thinking of me.
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A good use of group is for deleting geometry while leaving the intersecting boundary in place. That's how I use groups.
I knew you'd say that
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The only time I ever use Group is more of a temporary grouping of a bunch of components that I want to move around together. I usually explode that group back to it's component parts or make it a component when necessary. And that is purely laziness, not wanting to hit enter after clicking make component.
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@unknownuser said:
A good use of group is for deleting geometry while leaving the intersecting boundary in place. That's how I use groups.
I'm not sure I follow that. Could you make a picture. Pleeease.
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This is really giving me something to think about. I don't like thinking
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Sorry man. Tell you what. go out for awhile and move some snow. That'll take your mind off it all. Especially if it is as cold there as it is here.
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It's a balmy 8 degrees here. Going to the beach this afternoon.
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@hellnbak said:
It's a balmy 8 degrees here. Going to the beach this afternoon.
I'd be going to the beach too if it was that warm here. It's -17C here. I had to put on a jacket.
Rich, thanks for that explanation and the S&G. I guess I'd do the deletion a different way but yours is quick.
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It's quick alright. I think it was Coen that put me on to it way back. Still use it daily to delete crap.
I think you need to take off your 3D Warehouse hat and move to the next level of bringing SketchUp to a stuttering stop
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I find myself moving more and more from groups to components for all the reasons Dave so eloquently spoke of above. It is hard to come up with a downside for doing this.
The only problem I have is I am still in the old habit of grouping, which I am slowly breaking. -
Dale, one of things that makes it easy for me is not having a keyboard shortcut set for Make Group. 'G' makes components and that's the way I always make them. That makes it more work to make a group than a component.
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Not to beat a dead horse but also remember there's the Make Unique command so that you can break the relationship of components when you do want them to be different. With the stuff I draw, I might want to have elements related to each other for awhile but then later in the process, I will break the relationship. Legs on tables with drawers are a good example of that. They need the same treatment up to a point. When it comes time to draw in the joinery for the rear apron and the front blades above and below the drawer front, the front and rear legs need to be separated in the process. Make Unique to the rescue.
Make Unique also comes in handy when you want to modify a model to make a different model. The bench was made from a copy of the fern stand in the background.
And in the next image, every piece of furniture was drawn starting from the chair on the left. By the way, all of these pieces of furniture are production pieces and the shop uses a similar idea for actually building these things.
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You know you need to share ALL your textures with me don't you?
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That's only two and they're components as well. I just use Make Unique and modify them.
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I'll be starting a pretty ambitious model soon, and I'm going to go the component route and see how it goes. I think the hardest part will breaking old habits.
Thanks for all the input and advice, much appreciated.
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Hi Ken,
So I'm assuming that you are referring to models you've already created using groups instead of components. I periodically receive models from others where this is the case. I would make components of each of the groups. Let sketchUp name them and assume it names them Component#1, Component#2, etc. Rename Component#1 if you wish. That can be done at any time later. Select all of the numbered components and in the Components browser, right click on Component#1 in the browser and choose Replace Selected. No plugin needed.
I don't have it but I think ThomThom or TIG did a plugin that will hunt through a model for identical groups and make them components. It might speed things up for you.
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@hellnbak said:
I think the hardest part will breaking old habits.
Get rid of your keyboard shortcut for making groups or change it to Make Component. That'll be the easiest way to break the habit.
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Dave R
Thank you for your reply. Today is the day I will almost stop using groups. This for me could be a "DUH" thread.
Ken
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@dave r said:
@hellnbak said:
I think the hardest part will breaking old habits.
Get rid of your keyboard shortcut for making groups or change it to Make Component. That'll be the easiest way to break the habit.
That won't be hard, 'cause I don't have any keyboard shortcuts for making components or groups. I know, I'll make some shortcuts, and then get rid of them!
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