Taking part on the SketchUp Challenge
The guys of the SketchUp Challenge Blog where asking for a "Space Rescue Pod" and these are the results on a very random way of modelling as is to create a bezier curve and then play around with the shapes that you get from there.
Since last week I discovered the Web Exporter for SketchUp (see this post) i decided to post it here not with a single thumbnail but with the full 360 degree preview that this great plugin allows.
I know, it is not anything amazing, but it got me entertained.
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Benvinguts, Bienvenidos, Ongi etorri, Welcome, Välkommen
I was just checking from which countries I got visits this last week and just wanted to quickly welcome all new visitors. The new Countries are:
Spain, Sweeden and Australia. So here is a quick welcome to all of you who spent some time reading what I post here.
Bienvenidos
Benvinguts
Ongi etorri
Välkommen
Welcome
Hopefully, I´ll keep posting similarly, meaning people from more and more countries have joined me reading once in while what I write.
Thanks to everyone.
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SketchUp Web Exporter
Català - Castellano
Thanks to the guys from this Blog I came across the SketchUp Web Exporter recently released by google (find the installer here). What it does is that it allows us to export a 360 degee interactive view of our model, allowing any user that visits our website to spin the moel and get a complete 360 degree view of our model without the need of having SketchUp installed.
So I though: 'let´s give it a try!' I got an old pretty heavy SketchUp file, installed the Web exporter and created an output to upload on the web, no problems. You can also find a video with more informtion here
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AutoCAD Express Tools: NCOPY
Català - Castellano
The NCOPY command is a very useful one when we are working with XREFs or Blocks. NCOPY stands for Nested Copy which means that it will allow us to copy objects that are nested in XREFs and Blocks.
Instead of opening the xref and copying an pasting the entities we want to move from the reference file to the drawing we are at we can use NCOPY and directly copy this entities without opening the file.
The same applies for Blocks, no need to open the Block Editor to copy objects from inside the block to outside of it.
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AutoCAD: Avoid the Blue and Green Selection Boxes
We have to go to Format --> Options --> Selection --> Visual Effect Settings (see below).
After Clicking there, another dialog Box will appear. There we will have the option to change the color of the selection boxes or to simply get rid of any color. On the "Area Selection Effect" we can turn the opacity to 0 and we will see only the outline of the selecton boxes. We can also change the colors of them or simply adjust the opacity to a setting that matches better ou personal taste.
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AutoCAD: MAXSORT or How many objects to be listed
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Blog update and new domain
On a similar note I tried (and still working on it) to give the blog a more unique style. I am still using the 565 template from blogger, but as you can see not much is left from the original one. I got a new header with my parents house as an AutoCAD scfreenshot, and some quick design that I am pretty happy with. Oh!, and I also added a search box up on the upper part of my sidebar and tweaked a bit the position of the AdSense, please let me know if any of it makes the blog less reader friendly.
On the next weeks, other than a long list of posts that I have ready to publish, I´ll try to go over all the old posts, try to make some sense of the lables I am using, and maybe start to Add some directory to make it easier to search within the blog...But that is just a will, you never know how much time you have for your blog...
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AutoCAD: Missing Dialog Boxes
Català - Castellano
Recently my company upgraded from Autodesk Architectural Desktop 2006 to AutoCAD Architecture 2008. We found the problem that in any computer we ran AutoCAD architecture, the dialog Boxes were missing when running commands such as HATCH or calling the Layer Manager.
The problem seems to come from some sort of hardware issue. We couldn't figure out the way to solve it till we found out that the dialog boxes were not missing, but far away on the left side (outside the screen resolution area).
The solution we found might not fight the source of the problem, but it definitively worked as a solution for us.
After running a command that should call a dialog box like Hatch, we press together Alt+Space+Enter. Then press the right arrow and keep pressing it until, surprise, the dialog box appeared from the left side of the screen.
This is a basic Windows procedure, If you click Alt+Space in any explorer window you will see a dialog open with the options Restore, Move, Size, Minimize, Maximize and Close. The same happens with the Dialog Boxes in AutoCAD, but the only options in most of them are Move and Close. Since Move is the default one, by pressing Alt+Space+Enter we will have selected to move the dialog box without the need to see it. Then we will use the arrows to move it till it appears on scree.
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AutoCAD Architecture: Working with AEC Polygons
This is the first feature that makes them much better to work with than simple polylines. If we click those grips, we will be able to move that edge parallel to its original position, extending th adjacent edge to fit with the new position. See the picture.
But this is not the only thing we will be able to do. Click Ctrl and instead of ofsetting the edge you will be adding a new vertex.Click Ctrl again and you wil transform that edge into an arc.
And for a last useful trick, press Ctrl again and you will get to offset all the edgs at a time.
Similar great features will happen if you click contr after selecting one of the vertex grips instead of the egde ones.
- Click the grip to move the vertex
- Press Ctrl once to remove the vertex
- Press Ctrl twice to Offset both edegs that intersect on that vertex.
As a last cool feature of the AEC polygons try to select the middle grip og an AEC polygon with an arc segment. You will also have several options:
- Click the grip to offset the arc segment (it might add some segments to the AEC polygon)
- Press Control Once and you´ll be able to modify the radius of the arc segment
- Press Ctrl again and you will straighten the segment
- Press Ctrl Again and you will add a vertex (and two arc segments)
- Press Ctrl again and you will offset all the faces of the AEC polygon.
I would say that, combined with the AEC modify tools, there is no reason to keep using the polylines.
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AutoCAD: Disabling selection preview for Hatches
What selection preview does is that it highlights the object we are going to select if we click the left mouse button. This works very nice and smooth with simple objects like lines, polylines, arcs, etc. It happens though that when we have a dense hatch, specially if it is a hatch made of dots it might take several seconds to show the selection preview due to the amount of objects in the hatch pattern.
Although we can turn off the selection preview turning the SELECTIONPREVIEW system variable to 0, what we actually want to do is to keep it on for some elements and off for some others like hatch patterns.
We have two options to do that.
- Set the system variable PREVIEWFILTER to 16, this will only exclude hatch patterns from the selection previews.
- Go to Format --> Options --> Selection Tab -->Visual Effects Options --> Advanced Options --> Uncheck the Box in front of Hatch Patterns.
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AutoCAD: Creating New Palette Group
We click close and right click again the bottom corner of the tool palettes bar. A new line with the name of our group will appear.
Once we have created our grup and configured our palettes we might want to transfer them to other computers. See this post to know how to do that.
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AutoCAD: Transferring Tool Palettes
Català - Castellano
After creating tool palettes in any of the AutoCAD versions, you might want to transfer them to other computers in your network. There is no Export command so finding the way to do so it might be a bit complicated.
Here is a link to the support site from autodesk about the topic. Basically it explains the following steps to do that. You have to use the content browser. But the explanation from autodesk I think is a bit short and might not be enough fo a newby. So here comes a kind of extended version of it.
To store the palettes you have created do the following:
- Click on the content browser icon or type CONTENTBROWSER in the command line window.
- Right click and "Add Catalog" --> Create New Catalog
- Browse to a network location that all computers can access.
- Save the catalog there.
- Double click the new catalog that you have created.
- Drag and drop the new palettes to from you palettes side bar to the Catalog.
- CONTENTBROWSER
- Add catalog --> Add an existing Catalog
- Browse t the network location you specified before
- Double click the new added catalog
- Drag and drop the palettes you want from the catalog to your tool palettes bar. (see that it is not a simple drag and drop operation, you have to click in the palette you want to load in the contend browser and keep pressing the mouse button till a syringe icon loads, then drag to the tool palettes bar in AutoCAD
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