Nikon Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago (edited) Good day everyone! I've discovered new (old?) the possibilities of a true rectangle. It is very convenient to work with him! The only drawback is that the rectangle is unstable. You can create it and work with it only in the current file. If you then close and open this file, the properties of the true rectangle are lost. Is it possible to make it stable so that its properties are preserved? https://autocadtips1.com/2011/11/20/autolisp-make-a-real-rectacgle/ AutoLISP: Make a Real Rectangle Posted on November 20, 2011 by AutoCAD Tips A long time ago, AutoCAD used to make Rectangles and polygons as their own entities. When you made a rectangle and then did a LIST <enter> on it, it would show as a rectangle. Nowadays, these objects are those objects in their geometry but are made of polyline entities. So modifying these objects is sometimes hard. that’s where this routine steps in to help. This routine lets you create a rectangle and even after you continue working elsewhere in your drawing, you can come back to that rectangle and modify that object and it acts like how rectangles used to act in AutoCAD. Here’s how: TREC <enter> to start “True RECtangle” Create a rectangle how you normally create one When needed, this routine will let you drag a single corner and the rest of the rectangle’s geometry will adjust accordingly to keep its geometry as a rectangle. TrueRect.lsp Edited 9 hours ago by Nikon 1 Quote
GLAVCVS Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Hi Nikon It seems your code is simply performing a scroll. You don't need Lisp to do that. Simply, select the grip and press the spacebar. Quote
GLAVCVS Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago (edited) Ugh I think I watched your video too fast. I haven't had much time to do anything slowly lately I believe object reactors only survive the current drawing session. You must consider that the reactor was created relative to an object name, and object names change between drawing sessions. Edited 4 hours ago by GLAVCVS 1 Quote
Nikon Posted 4 hours ago Author Posted 4 hours ago It is a pity that there is no creation of a true rectangle in autocad itself! Quote
Lee Mac Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 20 minutes ago, Nikon said: It is a pity that there is no creation of a true rectangle in autocad itself! It can be done, but it requires creating a custom object using ObjectARX (C++). 1 Quote
Nikon Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 1 hour ago, Lee Mac said: It can be done, but it requires creating a custom object using ObjectARX (C++). Maybe someone will be able to do it someday. Quote
pkenewell Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) @Nikon FWIW - you can use the midpoint grips to drag the rectangle in straight directions to keep it square. Edited 2 hours ago by pkenewell 1 Quote
Nikon Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 1 hour ago, pkenewell said: FWIW - you can use the midpoint grips to drag the rectangle in straight directions to keep it square. With a true rectangle, there is much less movement to change the position of the sides. Edited 1 hour ago by Nikon Quote
pkenewell Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago @Nikon Like I said - "For What It's Worth". Note also you can shorten the steps slightly by using the PERP object snap. 1 Quote
Nikon Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 17 minutes ago, pkenewell said: @Nikon Like I said - "For What It's Worth". Note also you can shorten the steps slightly by using the PERP object snap. I agree with you, I use these bindings. But when I found out how easy it is to change a true rectangle, I "fell in love" with it. I've been working in Autocad since 2000, but I don't remember that it was possible to build such a rectangle back then. I wonder in which version of Autocad was such a command available? Edited 1 hour ago by Nikon Quote
dexus Posted 50 minutes ago Posted 50 minutes ago 38 minutes ago, Nikon said: With a true rectangle, there is much less movement to change the position of the sides. If you only edit the rectangle with this the rectangle will stay true and the editing will be a bit more intuitive because the preview will be a true rectangle as well: Quote
pkenewell Posted 44 minutes ago Posted 44 minutes ago @Nikon Technically - your example could be done with object reactors. Alternatively, you can also use 2D constraints, which have been in AutoCAD since version 2010. Quote
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