![]() ![]() A godsend when you accidentally clicked off of a group of objects you were painstakingly selecting. Tolerance refers to accepted gaps between successive curves simply type in the maximum gap distance and angle that you want to accept. Selects individual curves that touch end to end. These will appear as suggestions when you type SelCrv, SelSrf, or SelPoly. For curves, surfaces, and polysurfaces, there are additional commands that filter by whether the objects are open or closed. Select by object type (line, polyline, surface, etc.) in a handy checklist panel.įor those of us stuck with Rhino 5 or Rhino for Mac, we must type individual commands for selecting by object type. If you want all overlapping lines, regardless of length, to be deleted, try joining all lines before selecting duplicates. Useful for deleting duplicate lines and surfaces (similar to overkill in AutoCAD). Selects all objects wholly bounded by the selection box.Īvoids dragging objects when dragging a selection box. Manually overrides Window if you need to drag the selection box from left to right. This happens automatically when you drag a selection box from right to left. Selects anything that intersects with the bounding box when you drag a selection box. Using these commands while selecting a line/object will return those values for you. You can play around with this or get rid of it. The gridding that appears on surfaces in shaded/wireframe/ghosted views. ** Be careful making the lens length bigger than 30, it starts to distort the edges of the view. This is helpful in generating “Rhino render” views. ** Making the resolution on the higher end gives a better quality image capture, but it will take longer for Rhino create the image.Ĭan toggle between views (Parallel, Perspective, and Two-Point Perspective)Ĭhanging the lens length of the camera allows you to get narrow or wide-angle camera views. It will show you where the original line was broken.Ĭaptures the current viewport and exports it to a JPEG/PNG (depending on the file type you choose). For use with lines, simply extrude the lines, then apply this command to the resulting surface. Useful for finding gaps in lines or surfaces. Shows all naked edges in a surface or polysurface. Makes it easier to notice inconsistencies and discontinuities in complex surfaces. Selected object is assigned a semi-reflective surface. (In each option, you have further options for Top, Bottom, Left, or Right views.) However, for briefly hiding objects to see something clearly, these commands are helpful. To avoid this, hide by layer instead of by selected object. Type “chain” in the command line after entering “isolate” to select a chain of lines.īe careful with this one… hidden objects tend to be forgotten. ZE zooms out such that all objects in the Rhino file are visible. ![]() Navigating Rhino Zoom ( Selected | Extents) ![]()
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