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    How can I make a rectangle 9/10" across? Rounding problem.

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    • H Offline
      Heislloyd
      last edited by

      Thanks to all those who took the trouble to reply. I found the place where I could alter the precision, and I was already at 1/64th. Changing it to decimal enabled me to enter 9/10 and apparently GET 9/10, although then 1 3/16 came out as a decimal, but then I changed back to fractional, and then I had 1 3/16 and ~29/32, which I'm guessing is close to 9/10 (but the actual rectangle is exact?). This is awkward, but may have solved the problem. I find it odd that the fractional setting does not cope with tenths. These are a very common fraction, no? It is standard (in Britain, at least) for rulers to have divisions of tenths on one side and sixteenths on the other. This seemed even odder when the programme happily turned 1 3/16 into 1.1875, which is correct and exact, and it was able to display the rectangle.

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      • Dave RD Offline
        Dave R
        last edited by

        Talking about 10ths of inches isn't unusual but in fields that work in tenths they would generally use decimal notation for that not fractional notation. It isn't common to use more than one type notation on technical drawings either.

        9/10 in. would be about 29/32 but not exactly. The length of the line isn't being changed.

        You can mix and match units when entering them so you could draw a rectangle and enter the dimensions as .900, 1 3/16 if you wanted but the display dimension units will be based on the chosen units.

        I expect if you need to make drawing documents with mixed units, you could probably do that in LayOut.

        Etaoin Shrdlu

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        M30

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        • jeff hammondJ Offline
          jeff hammond
          last edited by

          if you enter 9/10" as your length, the line drawn will be 9/10".. it doesn't matter if you're in metric or imperial or decimal or fraction..

          @unknownuser said:

          These are a very common fraction, no?

          no.. i've never come across tenths of an inch (written as fractions) anywhere in the construction industry or related fields.
          not saying it doesn't happen.. just saying if it does, it's definitely not common.

          dotdotdot

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          • C Offline
            Charlie__V
            last edited by

            remotely relevant......but....land surveyors routinely use "tenths".
            IE: N52Β° 43' 48" E 89.1'
            The "length" (ft) is routinely expressed as in above example.(89.1')

            C

            Precision M1710/Win 7 Pro 64 bit/i-7 6920 Quad core 2.9 Ghz -3.8/16Gb ram/NVIDIA M5000M 8Gb

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            • Dave RD Offline
              Dave R
              last edited by

              They might use tenths of feet but they don't express them as fractions.

              Etaoin Shrdlu

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              • H Offline
                Heislloyd
                last edited by

                As I wrote, tenths are very common on British rulers. Possibly you are an American, and things are different there? When I was using fractions, I typed in 9/10" and I did NOT get a rectangle of the correct length. When I measured it with the ruler tool, it was the wrong length. Wait! I just checked that, and it seems you (Jeff) were right! What it said and what it did were two different things!

                Anyway, today's problem is that I have followed several how-to-draw-a-sphere tutorials to the letter, and SketchUp refuses to do anything of the kind. Instead, it is creating many different bizarre and apparently random shapes, and sometimes causes the shape to disappear entirely. But that's another story for another day...

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                • Dave RD Offline
                  Dave R
                  last edited by

                  As for your sphere, how big is it? How many segments per circle? I'll bet you're running into the tiny face issue.

                  You really ought to upload the SKP file so we can see what you're seeing.

                  Etaoin Shrdlu

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                  G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

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                  • BoxB Offline
                    Box
                    last edited by

                    I've spent a lot of my life in England and have seen rulers with tenths, but not often.

                    To add to what Dave has said, I bet your two problems with the sphere are working too small and trying to drag the follow me tool.

                    Select the path first then select the follow me tool and click the profile.


                    Sphere.gif

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                    • Jean LemireJ Offline
                      Jean Lemire
                      last edited by

                      Hi Rich, hi folks.

                      Using 0.04" as equal to 1 mm is slightly inaccurate since it implies a division by 25.

                      To convert millimeters to inch you need to divide by 25.4.

                      1 mm is then 0,03937007874016 inches (approx.).

                      Just ideas

                      Jean (Johnny) Lemire from Repentigny, Quebec, Canada.

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                      • H Offline
                        Heislloyd
                        last edited by

                        On spheres, I just had another go and got some weird results, but I did manage to get a sphere by using a different method from the one I used to use. I was using SketchUp 8 (I think, or 7) before which was a bit different (for example it had the 'follow me' tool as a button instead of a menu item, which I preferred - I've looked hard for a way to create a button for it in SketchUp Make, but perhaps that's only now in the 'pro' version.)

                        By making the guide circle a group, and then positioning the thing to be made 3D very precisely above its centre and not touching it at all, and then exploding the group, I managed to create a sphere. A warning message flashed up for an instant, but I couldn't read it before it disappeared.

                        I then went into my current project to repeat the feat. No luck! The results seem quite random. Sometimes it disappears, sometimes it becomes a 2D object with bits missing, and other times it becomes a bizarre 3D shape that defies description, but which involves lots of apparently random missing bits and even floating pieces.

                        I never had this much trouble with spheres in SketchUp 7 (or was it 8? - it might have been 5 or 6).

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                        • BoxB Offline
                          Box
                          last edited by

                          There is most definitely a button for follow me as you can see in the animation.

                          If you are working at a very small scale Sketchup is unable to form faces so things disappear. Scale things up and see how you get on.


                          Quick Sphere.gif

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                          • FrederikF Offline
                            Frederik
                            last edited by

                            Box, I have to say I LOVE your small animations... πŸ‘

                            Off topic...
                            Out of curiosity... What program do you use to make these??

                            Cheers
                            Kim Frederik

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                            • FrederikF Offline
                              Frederik
                              last edited by

                              Thanks a lot...! πŸ‘ πŸ˜„

                              Cheers
                              Kim Frederik

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                              • BoxB Offline
                                Box
                                last edited by

                                It's called Gifcam, Kim.
                                Jim originally posted it here.

                                https://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=169&t=57971&p=527392&hilit=gifcam#p527392

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