![]() You can also stretch using grips – which technically isn’t using the STRETCH command, but I’ll allow it. You can now hold down the control key during the ARC command and go clockwise. Alert readers would have pointed out some exceptions, so I offer this full disclosure. You probably noticed a couple of asterisks in my first sentence. Just make your gap tolerance to be the size of the door and create your hatch. You can use it a “fuzz factor” for those drawings where someone failed to use object snaps, and things don’t always connect.īetter yet, have you ever needed to hatch a room that has a door opening? Now you can cut out the step of creating a closed polyline within the room then deleting it after you create the hatch. I can think of a couple of good uses for this setting. You’ll notice the default value it zero, so that’s where the rule comes from that your hatch area must be closed. Use the slider or enter a value in your current drawing units. It does precisely what its name implies, allowing you to hatch open areas up to the tolerance value set. Tucked away in the pull-down tools area of the contextual Hatch Creation tab in the Ribbon is a setting called Gap Tolerance. You actually can hatch inside an area that has a gap in its boundary. An ARC is drawn counter-clockwise*, STRETCH requires a crossing window*, Layer 0 is “special,” and you must have a closed boundary in order to HATCH. ![]() We all learn certain AutoCAD rules early on. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |