If the solids are based on a Draft objects such as Wire, Line or Recantgle, you can stretch the underlaying 2D geometry and the solid stretches too. It does not work on solids which are based on a sketch object.
@@w.binder-freecadchannel Yes, it would! But I would not count on that, because Part, Part Design, and Draft/BIM workbenches use different methods to create solid geometry. It is not easy to connect workbenches to create one tool that would work well with all of them.
Hi Tom, thanks for your video, especially showing your examples / use cases, e.g. sink and floor plan. Exploring FC is great. Cheers Duncan
I am happy you appreciate the examples.
Thank you so much again for your very instructive video.
You are welcome!
Thanks! Really good lesson! 👍
Thanks for the praise!
thank you
You are welcome!
Wondering why not drag and drop direclty as in the sketch workbench?
There is very little drag and drop functionality in the Draft workflow.
Does it also work with solids?
If the solids are based on a Draft objects such as Wire, Line or Recantgle, you can stretch the underlaying 2D geometry and the solid stretches too.
It does not work on solids which are based on a sketch object.
@@FCBlounge Yes, I thought so, it would be very useful if such a tool existed
@@w.binder-freecadchannel Yes, it would! But I would not count on that, because Part, Part Design, and Draft/BIM workbenches use different methods to create solid geometry. It is not easy to connect workbenches to create one tool that would work well with all of them.
@@FCBlounge Where there is will there is always a way, of course you can combine them
@@w.binder-freecadchannel I like this positive approach :)