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I've worked with F360 for quite some time now, but this simple task seems to bedevil me constantly. How do you best use F360 Sketch features to simply create a rectangle centered at the origin?
After drawing the rectangle (which comes with H and V constraints on the sides), I just want to align the midpoints of two sides to the X and Y axes. If I attempt to use the midpoint constraint with a side and the origin, it wants to actually place that side through the origin (unlike some demo videos I watched which don't seem to do that).
So I then laboriously create vertical and horizontal construction line, and add constraints so they align on the X and Y axes.
Then I attempt to use the midpoint constraint to get one of the rectangle side's midpoint to coincide with the construction line... but most of the time it does something else, moving the rectangle side midpoint so that it's at the midpoint of the construction line. (Which of course is an arbitrary location on the construction line, because it's a construction line.) This happens regardless of what order I choose the two participants in the midpoint relationship.
So to avoid that, instead I add a couple of standalone points to the sketch. I then use the midpoint constraint to constrain the points to the midpoints of two sides. NOW I can use coincident constraint to get those two points to coincide with the construction lines.
So to just to get the rectangle centered at the origin, I had to add:
- (the rectangle itself, with its vertical and horizontal constrained sides)
- horizontal and vertical construction lines, with two coincident constraints to the origin
- two points, with midpoint constraints to the rectangle sides
- two coincident constraints from the points to the construction lines.
This surely can't be the right way to do this!? I suspect my trouble is because I really can't get the &^%$# midpoint constraint to do what I want. I can't tell whether to feel frustrated or stupid.
Solved! Go to Solution.