Snapping objects
By snapping two objects you set relations between
them by choosing the types of relations you want between them. Snapping
links the object or part which you are drawing or inserting to another
object or part. By snapping you can set relations for objects you are
currently drawing, or, in the case of a layout or a print part, inserting.
There are two types of snapping:
- Point-focused snapping. With point-focused snapping
you can set relations between the control point you are about to place
(belonging to the object or part you are drawing or, respectively,
inserting) and a point, an object or a part in the graphical pane.
You can use point-focused snapping when you draw points, ellipses,
elliptical arcs, rectangles, regular polygons, Bézier curves and text,
as well as the Place Part and Place Part by Rectangle modes for manual
definition of Layout and Print parts.
The types of relations that you can detect and
set with point-focused snapping are:
On object
On object
point
Horizontal
points
Vertical
points
- Object-focused snapping. With object-focused snapping
you can set relations between a whole object or part, and control
points or other objects. Usually, the object-focused snapping modes
are accessible just before the dragging of the last control point
of the current object or, respectively, the placement of a print or
layout part.
The types of relations that you can detect and
set with object-focused snapping are:
Notes
- When you work with a snapping mode, only the
relations that the mode allows are detected.
- To cancel a snapping mode, press ESC, right-click
in the graphical area, and then click Cancel
Mode, or click the respective toolbar button activating the
current object/part mode.
- The snapping mode buttons are visible only
one at a time on the contextual edit bar. To switch from one mode
to another, click and hold down the currently visible button and drag
the pointer to the button you want to use.
- The values that you enter in contextual edit
bars take precedence over snapping mode relations. When there is a
conflict between the relationship set with snapping and an object
or a part attribute value entered afterwards in the contextual edit
bar, the value in the contextual edit bar will always override the
set relation.
- When an object-drawing or part-placing mode
disallows certain relations, the respective snapping modes will be
unavailable. For example, you cannot make a circle parallel to anything.
- Some object modes require the placement of
the first one or two control points for snapping to be applicable
on them. For example, when you are drawing a Two Objects Tangent Circle,
you should define the first two tangent objects and only after that
you can use tangent-to snapping to define a third tangent object.
- When you draw fillets, chamfers and quick
offsets, you cannot apply snapping: the necessary relations for the
resulting objects are set automatically.