Please see this screencast: https://youtu.be/2DBHRdZQiaU
I draw a fully constrained rectangle in a sketch and add an offset of a specified dimension. Any idea why the offset appears in blue (unconstrained)?
Rob Duarte
Associate Professor in Art, Florida State University
Co-Director FSU Facility for Arts Research
http://art.fsu.edu/rob-duarte/
Twitter | YouTube
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by jiang_peng. Go to Solution.
Link doesn't work for me.
Can you move the offset even though the color shows it is not constrained?
Might be a bug, because the constrained color of a sketch is still in development as far as I know.
Phil Procario Jr.
Owner, Laser & CNC Creations
Strange - the link should work now. You get the idea even without the video, I suppose. No, I cannot drag it anywhere so maybe it's a bug in the coloring.
Rob Duarte
Associate Professor in Art, Florida State University
Co-Director FSU Facility for Arts Research
http://art.fsu.edu/rob-duarte/
Twitter | YouTube
The part of Fusion 360 that colors parts based on their constrint status is still experimental...and does not work all the time.
The fully constrained status of offset geometries is a known issue. We are still working on it.
Thanks for reporting the issue!
It seems to be fixed although in my test it shows the source and copy are fully constrained when neither are!
And below with the extra dimension that makes it fully constrained, really would help if the dots changed to black when it's fully constrained. I put this example in the support forum as a bug.
Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
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I'm telling that because in my case I found I strange behavior with projected edges, when I change a past sketch in the timeline, the offset is maintained and everything is in fact fully constrained, but the geometry created from the offset turn in blue and does not remain black to show that it still fully constrained, it just a matter of mind blow in my case, I lost an hour to figure it out how to fully constrain the offset, when it was already, and probably is just a visual bug.
These are the steps to reproduce:
1. create a sketch
2. in the sketch create a rectangle fully constrained in the space, and give some dimension constraints
3. extrude the rectangle and create a body
4. create a new sketch on the top surface of the body
5. project the edges of the rectangle from the bottom sketch to the new sketch
6. create an offset from the the projected rectangle to the inside
7. check that the derived offset rectangle is black, so fully constrained
8. extrude the offset rectangle and cut down to create a box
9. go back and edit the first sketch and change the dimensions of the rectangle
10. open in edit the next sketch where the offset is
at step 10 you will see the rectangle generated by the offset has lost the black color, and become blue as it is not fully constrained when it fact it is, or am I missing something I don't know?
If I edit the offset value, the rectangle become black again, even if I set the same value.
Have you tried running a compute all Ctrl+B after the edit to see if it update the constraint status. Support should still have a look though, @jeff_strater is this a known problem?
Mark
Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
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Rob Duarte
Associate Professor in Art, Florida State University
Co-Director FSU Facility for Arts Research
http://art.fsu.edu/rob-duarte/
Twitter | YouTube
with CTRL+B the edges remain blue, only editing the offset value does the trick.
Yes, that is a bug. I'll log it.
One small point from your video: There is no need to re-project the edges of the block when you create the sketch. Those curves are already in the sketch, because you sketched on that face. The boundary curves are just not drawn, but you can still directly offset them:
Jeff
oh yes I forgot that, when I studied projection I forgot that those boundaries are already there and can be used without projecting them, LOL 🙂
I really appreciate you point that out, thanks!
BTW the bug is there even if I use the implicit boundaries, without project, so maybe the problem resides on the recalculation of the offset it self.
Jeff the last thing, I think is related so I publish right here.
With a ellipse the line remains blue and never turns black, even the first time you create it, and even trying the trick of changing the offset value, see the screencast below:
I was going to say the same about not needing to project the curves from your box. I'm also wondering why you wouldn't (in the case you showed) do it all in one sketch? Thanks for making the video!
Rob Duarte
Associate Professor in Art, Florida State University
Co-Director FSU Facility for Arts Research
http://art.fsu.edu/rob-duarte/
Twitter | YouTube
@robduarte wrote:I was going to say the same about not needing to project the curves from your box. I'm also wondering why you wouldn't (in the case you showed) do it all in one sketch? Thanks for making the video!
It was just for the purpose of showing the bug, but sometimes I do strange steps like that, don't know why, probably because I'm a developer not a designer (I think different ) and probably most important, I'm a desperate newbie trying to do pro-stuff
this has been filed as FUS-34661 for internal tracking
This seems still to be a problem, as I got the exact same result as in the screen casts above while following this tutorial:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5bc9c3S12g
It fails at time 14:09, with my lines still blue, and unable to extrude.
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