@Anonymous wrote:
I wouldn't say that I am limiting myself, so much as refining. I know what methodologies have worked for me over the years, which ones I enjoy, and which ones I don't. A lot of it depends on purpose and scope. I am not an engineer in a manufacturing plant that has a specific part that needs modeled, and a deadline. I am a hobbyist that loves to create and enjoy the journey. I get enjoyment out of an empty canvas and an end goal.
Same here. I don't make anything with Fusion. I just wanted to teach myself some 3D parametric CAD for fun. That was a couple of years ago, and I've done NOTHING with it BUT learn it and practice it and participate here in the forum. MOST of the stuff I've modeled has been in an effort to work through a problem somebody else came here to the forum with.
The inability to make reference to things that don't exist yet, in Fusion, is not limiting to the modeler. It is only limiting if you aren't willing to think around it. If I'm halfway into a model, and realize I want something from the past to reference something from now, then I think about how I should have done it differently before I reached this point. It didn't take long to develop the little mental habit of diagnosing and accounting for such possibilities before I even get that far.
Many of the very best modelers - some of the ones that Autodesk recognizes as "experts" and who have been invited to speak on various modeling strategies - will tell you that they often make a "first draft" model, and then a final model that is done better. It's no sin to discover an obstacle halfway into a project, and start over to correct for it. I'm most often able to account for the past-referencing-the-future issue by revising something...maybe making that future thing that needs to be referenced earlier in the process. Occasionally this correction can be made with a simple reordering of timeline steps.
Anyway - if you are interested - I would be happy to take a look at a project you've worked on where you had this problem, and offer ideas about how it might be done without the problem. Perhaps working through it like that might help you see how to avoid it in the first place?