RhinoBasics Part01

Пікірлер: 6

  • @AnnaKareninaArchiAnnaKareninaA
    @AnnaKareninaArchiAnnaKareninaA Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Lee, for the great tutorial

  • @jin4502
    @jin45026 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Lee, for the great tutorial. Very informative and educative.

  • @rashijain8037
    @rashijain80374 жыл бұрын

    You also tell in this tutorial about how to use Pan View My doubt is what is use of PAN VIEW.

  • @SansP3ur
    @SansP3ur6 жыл бұрын

    Great tutorial but my aliases aren't working as expected. I'm coming from Maya/Max/etc., so all that's needed to invoke a kb shortcut in those programs is to tap the key and voilà, done. However, that isn't happening in Rhino. I tap the key and the Command line activates, but even hitting enter does nothing. What am I missing?

  • @brunomiguel6002
    @brunomiguel60026 жыл бұрын

    hey lee thanks so much for sharing this, I must say that is helping me a lot , but one question and i am struggling with this a lot, is the exporting method or the reliable method to export the drawings preserving the line weight. How can export a rhino file to pdf or png or jpeg but keeping the line weight. Thanks Bruno

  • @leeboo1211

    @leeboo1211

    6 жыл бұрын

    The complex version is here, editing and controlling lineweights in Illustrator: kzread.info/dash/bejne/iJeTraZvoNioqNY.html The simple version, which I use a lot nowadays, if you have your Display Mode set up to your liking, is to simply viewcapture the viewport. If you add a hypen in frony you can pick settings "--viewcapturetofile", and you can set the export pixel dimension to 2-3 times the viewport resolution using the "Scale" setting. This should be enough to give you nice skinny linework. This works well with an abstract viewport style like "Pen" or the new "Arctic" .