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In lugnet.cad, Tore Eriksson wrote:
>
> Is it possible to let, say C3's and D4's y values follow B2? Like, in LDS, you
> can change the code to:
> P2 -10 -10 -10
> P3 0 y2 0
> P4 10 y2 10
> and you only have to edit the y value of P2, then y3 and y4 will also follow. If
> so, that would be really handy.
That's cool. Probably a more versatile notation would be:
P2 -10 -10 -10
P3 0 P2.y 0
P4 10 P2.y 10
Can you also do chained values? eg:
P2 -10 -10 -10
P3 0 y2 0
P4 10 y3 10
ROSCO
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In lugnet.cad, Ross Crawford wrote:
> In lugnet.cad, Tore Eriksson wrote:
> >
> > Is it possible to let, say C3's and D4's y values follow B2? Like, in LDS, you
> > can change the code to:
> > P2 -10 -10 -10
> > P3 0 y2 0
> > P4 10 y2 10
> > and you only have to edit the y value of P2, then y3 and y4 will also follow. If
> > so, that would be really handy.
>
> That's cool. Probably a more versatile notation would be:
>
> P2 -10 -10 -10
> P3 0 P2.y 0
> P4 10 P2.y 10
Yes, but I try to keep it as short as possible. :)
> Can you also do chained values? eg:
>
> P2 -10 -10 -10
> P3 0 y2 0
> P4 10 y3 10
>
> ROSCO
No problems at all. You may also rotate 90 deg's by assigning a -z at the x and
x at z if you like... Almost anything. These are also legal:
P2 -10 -10 -10
P3 0 y2 0
P4 0-z3 y3+4 x3
c=16
FOR i=-200 TO 200 STEP 20
1 c i 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 stud.dat
NEXT i
btw, "1 c i 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 stud.dat" is too long for lazy me to
write, so LDS does that for me if I just write:
stud.dat c i 0 0
See more example at:
http://web.telia.com/~u66203131/LDraw/lds/ldssyntx.htm
/Tore
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