> I do have all snaps enabled, but no "from tan" snap showing.
Just to clarify - in the video you posted, the settings that you popped up are actually a portion of the "Object Snap" settings, which are on that shortcut menu that pops up above the Object Snap button.
For those look under the main Options dialog, under Snaps > Straight snap options.
You may have had Tangent snapping disabled there - here is a screenshot to show you where I'm referring to:
Having that checkbox disabled would produce the result that you showed in the video. If that checkbox was enabled but you still did not get any tangent snap, then that woudl be some kind of bug.
This reminded me of a situation where I wanted a line tangent to a circle at a particular angle.
The work around was to draw the line tangent to the circle at 90° then rotate it at the angle needed.
Anyone with an easier way, maybe I'm missing something.
Hi Danny, well just doing a rotation transform on the line after you draw it is a pretty straightforward way to get that.
But I guess a quicker way would be to create a construction line, and then use the option for rotating the construction line. For example here I draw a line angled at 45 degrees from the circle tangent at a point, using this method:
To get the pop up menu with the various cline options, press and keep the mouse button down on that little launcher tag for about a second.
> well just doing a rotation transform
> on the line after you draw it is a pretty
> straightforward way to get that.
Yeah, that's why I didn't mention it before it was no big deal to do, but because of this thread it reminded me of the situation, so I thought maybe you could have a look at it.
What I was getting at was more like this situation.
Hi Danny, I think I see what you mean, you want to find the point on a circle that will give you a tangent line of that angle.
Before when you were talking about rotation, I had thought you meant rotating the line around one of its own ends, but I think I see that you meant rotating the line around the center point of the circle?
You can actually still use an angled cline to help with this if you want - if you draw in an cline at the desired angle, you can then drop a second cline using perp/perp snap to get the point you want:
That's sort of like using the cline as a temporary angled grid.
But another method that may be easier for you is to set up a construction plane angled by 30 degrees, which will then give you a quad snap at the point you want.
When setting this cplane, you may want to uncheck the "Orient ortho views" option so that your top view will stay the same and you will see the angled cplane. To do that, click a point for the cplane origin, then type <30, and drag the x axis to angle it at 30 degrees. Then use quad snap:
It looks like there is currently a bug where setting angle constraint does not work properly if you try to adjust the cplane from its current location instead of picking a new origin point for it, so until I fix that in the next beta you need to pick an origin point anywhere for the angle adjustment to work in the cplane tool.
Hi Burr, that's a cool one, I think that does work because you basically form this isosceles triangle here:
which has the same angles as the extended one:
But sometimes it can be hard to remember a method that involves drawing things in a kind of different initial direction than what the main goal is though.
Hi Burr - for speed, I would think that your method there is going to be the fastest since you get the right snap point after creating just 1 construction line.
Just to be clear, if I was going to do any kind of isoscele, I would have to go out to the backyard and dig that guy up and take his bones far, far away! :O
This old thread is the first Google result for "moi3d construct tangent", so I wanted to put a tip here that I just found out:
If tangent snapping does not work ("Tan" doesn't appear) it's probably because the point at which you started the line is part of three-dimensional geometry and the point and the circle are not aligned in the third dimension.