do endpoints of lines merge irrevocably?

do endpoints of lines merge irrevocably?

maker9876
Collaborator Collaborator
593 Views
8 Replies
Message 1 of 9

do endpoints of lines merge irrevocably?

maker9876
Collaborator
Collaborator

If one draws a line and then draws a second one, attaching it to some point along the length of the first line, then a coincident constraint is automatically applied and you can slide the point of attachment up and down the first line. Nice.

 

Removing the coincident constraint you can then detach the second line from the first. Good.

 

HOWEVER

 

If I draw the second line so that it attaches to the end point of the first line.... I cannot figure out how to separate them again??? Click and holding on the attachment point reveals multiple sketch curves but only one sketch point: does this mean that the end points have been irrevocably merged?

 

(Have come quite a long way without ever finding a solution, the workaround being to delete one of the lines temporarily to release the end point of the other. However this is problematic if other elements of the design are contingent upon the line to be temporarily deleted.)

0 Likes
Accepted solutions (1)
594 Views
8 Replies
Replies (8)
Message 2 of 9

PhilProcarioJr
Mentor
Mentor
Accepted solution

@maker9876

Right click on the point and select delete coincident.



Phil Procario Jr.
Owner, Laser & CNC Creations

Message 3 of 9

maker9876
Collaborator
Collaborator

Thank you!

0 Likes
Message 4 of 9

HughesTooling
Consultant
Consultant

Just like to add to what Phil shows in the screencast, if you have several lines\curves joined at the same point you can right click near the end of the line you want to unconstrain and you get the same menu allowing you to delete the constraint at the end of that line.

In this example all the objects are constrained to the circle centre.

Clipboard03.png

 

Right clicking near the end of the 45° line gives the option to delete the coincident constraint for just that line.

Capture04.PNG

 

Mark

 

 

 

Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature


Message 5 of 9

maker9876
Collaborator
Collaborator

That's exactly the situation I had and had just cycled through deleting all of the coincidents to find the right one!

 

Additional tip therefore much appreciated.

 

Thanks.

0 Likes
Message 6 of 9

PhilProcarioJr
Mentor
Mentor

Nice catch Mark. I need more coffee..it's to early...lol



Phil Procario Jr.
Owner, Laser & CNC Creations

0 Likes
Message 7 of 9

jeff_strater
Community Manager
Community Manager

Thanks @PhilProcarioJr and @HughesTooling for your usual quick and helpful responses.

 

Just FYI - we realize that this is not very discoverable and are working on some solutions to that problem.  Showing an actual constraint glyph for these (so you can select and delete it to break the lines apart) is what we are discussing now.  The problem with that, of course, is clutter.  You could conceivably have thousands of those coincident glyphs in your sketch.  So, we're discussing ways around that - only showing those glyphs when the point is selected, etc.   We'll figure something out, hopefully soon.

 

Jeff Strater (Fusion development)

 


Jeff Strater
Engineering Director
0 Likes
Message 8 of 9

PhilProcarioJr
Mentor
Mentor

@jeff_strater

I don't think clutter would be an issue if you only show the glyph for a selection. For instance if you select a line it would only show the glyphs for that lines constraints. If you select two sketch entities show only the glyphs for those two entities. Seems reasonable.....



Phil Procario Jr.
Owner, Laser & CNC Creations

0 Likes
Message 9 of 9

HughesTooling
Consultant
Consultant

Something like this would help.

 

http://forums.autodesk.com/t5/ideastation-request-a-feature-or/selection-highlighting-enhancement/id...

 

Mark

Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature


0 Likes