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Help I dont know how to do this.. :S


mrmanagerr

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Like dimensions on a drawing - I would interpret the step-by-step instructions having precedence.

 

My demo does attempt to follow the step-by-step instructions, and those are ambiguous as well. Since you don't seem to have any question about the proper procedure, I'm asking what I did wrong, or what I misinterpreted.

 

If the attached drawing was the drawing in question, which is the correct answer... or is it none of them?

Triangle.jpg

triangle.dwg

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Meanwhile, back on the merry-go-round................:lol:

 

Please, not the merry-go-round. It should be the galloper. There is a horsey interest in this :lol:

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It sounds like the OP's question is open to interpretation. When one has to guess at what is required one has already started down the path to confusion.

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My demo does attempt to follow the step-by-step instructions, and those are ambiguous as well. Since you don't seem to have any question about the proper procedure, I'm asking what I did wrong, or what I misinterpreted.

 

If the attached drawing was the drawing in question, which is the correct answer... or is it none of them?

[ATTACH]26939[/ATTACH]

 

If there are still those that would like a step-by-step. When I get time I will see about starting a NEW thread. By the lack of response, I gather the OP has it figured out.

 

Way to work at it nestly.

 

Your blue line is correct. If I get some time I will go through each step.

 

The only way to provide the correct answer for the OPs example would be to have the actual drawing.

 

It is now

 

Posts by OP=1

Posts by all others = 41

:D

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If there are still those that would like a step-by-step. When I get time I will see about starting a NEW thread. By the lack of response, I gather the OP has it figured out.

 

Way to work at it nestly.

 

Your blue line is correct. If I get some time I will go through each step.

 

The only way to provide the correct answer for the OPs example would be to have the actual drawing.

:D

 

I'm not so much interested in the process for the OP's benefit, rather I find it intriguing that so many members here that I regard as being competent individuals cannot agree about whether the instructions are clear enough for a student (let alone experienced users)

 

The blue line on in my drawing was NOT drawn using Xline > Bisect as the instructions indicate, it was simply snapped to the top most vertex and the midpoint of the shortest leg. I don't know how one could use Xline > Bisect to make the xline pass through the midpoint of the shortest leg unless the triangle also happens to be an isosceles triangle.

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My guess is that the OP is the instructor. The students complained that the question was confusing - so the instuctor came here to see how professionals would solve the problem. Obviously the students were correct. But then again, all is speculation without two-way communication with the OP. Any wonder why there is confusion....

 

After spending wayyyy too much time on this - I retract a good bit of certainty on this without the file.

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I don't know how one could use Xline > Bisect to make the xline pass through the midpoint of the shortest leg ...

 

I think the detractor was not to have the line bisect the short line, but rather, to bisect the angle between the long line and the midpoint of the short line - that is the literal result of the step-by-step instructions. One could suppose the lesson was about what happens when the xline Bisect command is used in conjunction with osnaps. (the result is not what might be expected)

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