Construction Aids
In both 2-D and 3-D, HiCAD provides numerous construction aids which can
be placed anywhere in the drawing. These construction aids can be used, for example, for aligning and
positioning of drawing objects.
Examples include:
- Isolated
points
Isolated points are points that do not need to lie on a drawing element,
but can be entered freely into the drawing. The are deployed as aids in
construction and can be used as reference points - also called fitting
points - when transforming parts.
- Grids
and Auxiliary lines
Working with a grid is similar to drawing on a graph paper, the
difference being that you can choose the spacing between the grid points
freely and change it at any time. Moreover, you can place a grid on a
certain point in the drawing. 2-D provides point, line and angle grids,
while 3-D makes point, line and projection grids available. 2-D also allows
you to use various auxiliary lines as construction aids.
- Processing
planes
Defining processing planes allows you to place the drawing plane, i.e.
the plane in which you construct, in any plane. Processing planes can
be used effectively in a large variety of 3-D construction areas, as follows:
- When you create
revolved solids, the base surface is normally placed in the xy-plane of
the active coordinate system. By defining processing planes, however,
you can also use any plane for this.
- When you work with
sketches, e.g. when creating extruded solids or when boring, the sketch
plane is automatically placed in the active processing plane. This enables
you to create sketches directly in the axonometric view.
- You can make it
significantly easier to fit standard parts by choosing the appropriate
processing plane.
- Coordinate
system display
The current 2-D/3-D coordinate system is shown in the drawing, for information
purposes. The current coordinate system is also displayed in the status information line.
Coordinate System Display • Grid • Processing
Planes (3-D)
© Copyright 1994-2018, ISD Software und Systeme GmbH Version 2302 - HiCAD Basics Date: 30/10/2018
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