Thanks for your post. Your observations are helpful to us in tuning the capability.
a) It defaults every time to "loop select", why?
This is a bug. Fusion commands should now, in most cases, remember the last setting and preserve it (within the same session). We will fix this.
b) It defaults on the last offset dimension used, even if you click the arrow to go the other way
If you are referring to the fact that offset defaults to the last offset value used (if you type in a value), that is intended. Personally, as a frequent user of Fusion, I find this very valuable. If I am making something with 3 mm walls, I like the fact that offset remembers "3 mm" and uses it the next time. So, this one I would say is a personal preference. If we stopped remembering the last typed value, other users would be upset. I'm not really sure what you mean by "even if you click the arrow to go the other way".
c) Why have arrows if you still have to add + or -
Yes, you could argue that we could dispense with the - sign, and just handle that internally. This is something that is somewhat Fusion-wide. To Extrude in a negative direction, you need to add the "-". But, we could certainly change that at some point.
d) The - sign is not visible in the window so you are unawhere where the line is going. If you are using a large dimension it goes off of the screen so you have to zoom out to find it.
This is a good point. The text entry boxes should be bigger, I agree. There will always be values where the "-" is scrolled off, but I agree, the way it is today is not good, even for small values. We can improve this.
e) Sometimes you want to step on from the last offset line, this is not possible
This is a much-discussed current limitation. I won't go into details, but "offset of offset" is hard, due mostly to the complex nature of Fusion offset's tolerance to geometry changes in the offset, and the associative nature of the new offset. The workaround is to just offset again from the original, and add in the first offset value. We hope to fix this, but it will take a while, and we felt that the added benefit of adding associativity to offset was worth the tradeoff of this limitation. Others can disagree, of course.
But, in my personal opinion (as a user of Fusion, not as a developer of the product), the advantages of having associative offset outweigh some of these downsides (the bugs notwithstanding - those need to be fixed). Having a design where you can change the initial sketch and have the entire design update is pretty powerful. Associative offset was one of the big blockers of that. I am obviously biased here, but I do think that the new offset is a significant improvment over the old one.
Jeff Strater (Fusion development)
Jeff Strater
Engineering Director