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10-15
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Elang, I took a look at this a bit more today and there's kind of a complication.
If it's set up as "angle turning to the left or right", that would mean a turn of 0 would just keep going in the same direction as the previous line, right?
But your figure you posted above is not measured using that, it uses the opposite direction.
For example your figure measures 67 degrees like this:
As the angle decreases, point C comes closer to point A with segment BC. With an angle of 0 you'd have line BC going in the opposite direction from AB, right?
But specifying the amount of turn to the left or right would be like this instead, wouldn't it? :
- Michael
Image Attachments:
TurnToRight1.png
TurnToRight2.png
From: Elang
Hi, Michael... yes indeed!
Actually what I did was put 270+67 in the '<' tab to achieve the exercise. First, I checked if I put the end-point 'right below' then what is the '<' stated. Turns out that it was (and always) 270, so I add it with 67 to achieve the same result. However, 'the snap' would also includes snap to X Axis.
Maybe, to achieve the same result we can put like "65r_67" ? ( @_@; )
The '_' goes for 180-x degrees... so '_67' = '180-67' ?
I don't know which way is better, to be honest....
From: pressure (PEER)
Would adding 4 snap lines resolve the ambiguity of r67? Say the black line is the prior segment and magenta is the snaps:
- Peer
Image Attachments:
relative angle.png
From: MO (MO_TE)
Hi
Maybe it makes more sense to use "clockwise" and "counterclockwise" definitions instead of left or right.
E.G. c99 or cc99
c0, cc0, c360 and cc360 will be on the last polyline segment, And c180 or cc180 will be along the last polyline segment.
From: Michael Gibson
Hi Peer,
re:
> Would adding 4 snap lines resolve the ambiguity of r67?
It could for picking with the mouse but not for controlling it by text input alone.
- Michael
From: Michael Gibson
@MO,
re:
> Maybe it makes more sense to use "clockwise" and "counterclockwise" definitions instead of left or right.
Maybe it's not so bad for left and right to mean make the point on the left or right hand side but it doesn't necessarily also have to be a "directional turn angle".
- Michael
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