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When in the Sketch mode I want to rotate an object by an user defined variable. So I click on the space defined by the lines defining the object. (or what I think the object is) When I do so it turns blue and I understand this to mean I’ve successfully selected the object. I think this as no amount of additional clicking or double clicking makes any difference to the ‘selection’.
I then call up the marking menu which requires me to then select the sketch menu to get to the sketch menu - why this is necessary when I’m in the Sketch mode is a ****ing mystery.
In the Sketch menu I find no move tool or rotate tool.
When I search for constraints there is none appropriate.
The next option is to call up the move/copy tool itself. The object or set of curves I thought I’d selected is then unselected and a tool menu comes up asking me what I want to select! And BTW there’s nothing coming close to obvious how one actually makes copies with this gem! (Maybe it only shows up in the modeling mode - but I’m not in the ****ing modeling mode am I !)
Fine - I window select the curves and then must assign a pivot point. For some reason, the ability to find the midpoint of a curve is not available. But that’s where I’d like to the pivot point to be! In fact I’d be just giddy if I could actually place a point tween the midpoint of two lines that define the vertical limits of the drawn shape, (a simple rectangle) as well as online with the midpoints of said curves.
All I can manage however is the choice of one of the four corners. Gosh.
Now it’s time to enter a degree. I want to use the user variable A1 which at present is set to 12 degrees. I enter this in the degrees box. The tool seems happy, showing off the “Okay” option so I click it ….
Nothing changes.
Now we’re in WTF territory - a vast area well populated with Fusion 360 sillies!
How much trouble to do such an operation? Yes of course, I just don’t yet ‘know’ how to properly use the application … But for ****’s sake, how mysterious must it be? Isn’t the essential premise informing all subsequent application development that the means tween conceptual ideas of the user and the translation of such in digital form be as transparent and unnoticeable as possible?
I read the latest release fanfare which boasted of one particular tool now ‘remembering’ the last settings used! This is like wanting a cookie for not wetting yourself.
User parameters are fantastic; they’re a ‘back to the future’ escape from timeline tyranny! I’m completely onboard in this respect. Constraints (despite a recurring source of annoyance ) are brilliant for refining design over time and testing.
I want to establish model components that can be repositioned and maintain desired relationships to over components. I want to drive this with a variable for degrees. I do not want to use the joint function in the model mode - it’s not particularly useful in this case.
So now I have to find out what will make the application do what I’d like to do, and despite all the available tutorials such a simple question can take an absurd amount time and effort to get an answer. The forum of course is nice, but it’s clunky, tedious, and like the application more of an obstacle than a help.
But I digress…
I again window select the set of curves that define the ‘object’ and call up the move tool. I don’t select the rotate option in the tool box but instead click on the rotate aspect of the thingy and a little entry box appears in the upper right corner of the workspace - I didn’t notice the first time I tried it. Now I enter the user variable and the task is finally completed. Unfortunately the drawings had been rotated on a few other planes since then as I’ve the 3d sketch option enabled. SOB! I delete every last worthless curve and to my amazement the little degree entry box remains open! Apparently we’re still in WTF territory. The escape key will not get rid of it. There is nothing selected that could be demanding an input. It’s just there, and furthermore it was hiding in the lower left of the work space for a bit before I noticed it. The last I’d placed it was where one might expect it, so the little ****er’s gone rogue. The only way out is to stop the sketch.
At this point I’m well and truly disenchanted. I wish I were a more clever sort when it comes to dealing with computer applications but I’m not. I’m am however quite capable of solving design problems in the actual world. Fusion is not yet that thing I imagine will be.
edit added.
Actually stopping the sketch didn't get rid of the degree box either I was unduly confident in the application.
I was going to include visuals but using the screencast feature is another excercise in silliness. It's remarkable for a corporation the size of Autodesk to present itself with such nonintuitive and inefficient UI
Solved! Go to Solution.
