Re: carving
Posted by Wild Card on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 8:15pm
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I think I know what you mean....
On the top toolbar, there is a button with the letters ig
click on it. then click your brush.
Re: carving
Posted by fishy on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 8:29pm
fishy
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or do you mean that when you hit Shift+X to select the clip tool, that one side of the brush you want to clip gets lost?
if so, then you only need to hit Shift+X again, and it cycles through 3 different settings. one of the settings leaves both parts of the brush in place.
[edit] btw, carving is looked on as the work of the devil here, so it's safer not to ask about it [/edit]
Re: carving
Posted by Dr Brasso on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 8:59pm
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personally, i think you guys are full of s**t as far as the "not using the carve tool" rule....i find it very useful when doing 90 degree corners etc...if ya learn when and when NOT to use it, it can be a hella timesaver...and you really end up with no less faces to deal with than if you build the brushes individualy.....now...for complex geometry, ie, carving polygons of different shape and thickness, i'd say stay the hell away from it, because it goes completely snakes**t, carving bizzarre geometric shapes, and leaving huge gaps that are no where near close to the 1 to 1 grid.....now, before you all pummel the s**t outta me (i know im gonna get calls... :heee: ) think about what ive said....and maybe even try it in practice....eh?....for me :heee: ***running like hell
Doc Brass... :dodgy:
Re: carving
Posted by Yak_Fighter on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 9:00pm
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When you use the clip tool to cut a brush into two pieces, the red part is deleted and the white part remains. If you want to keep both parts, put the clip on the brush like you normally would, but don't press enter. Click back on the clip button and the side that is red should switch. Click again and both sides will be white. When you press enter the cut will be made but the two brushes will remain. This makes making triangles for terrain quick and painless.
(for those who don't use newfangled key combos to do things and prefer the slow and painful way :razz: )
Re: carving
Posted by OtZman on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 9:05pm
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I kinda agree with Dr Brasso... the carving tool can be useful. But NEVER carve using a cylinder!!! NEVER, NEVER, NEVER!!!
Re: carving
Posted by Wild Card on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 9:07pm
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I carved a cylinder once...
Re: carving
Posted by Wild Card on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 9:12pm
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I carved a 32 sided cylinder with a 16 sided one once. Wasent pretty... Thats why when I want a hollow cynlinder, I make it myself.
Re: carving
Posted by Crono on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 9:16pm
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Fishy, it's 'Shift+X' 'ctrl+x' cuts. You can also (as Yak said) go clicking the clip tool to cycle through them (yuck) hitting enter once every piece of the brush is white.
Re: carving
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 9:59pm
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I still don't like to carve, simply because it keeps me in control of where the brush gets split and how.
Re: carving
Posted by Dr Brasso on
Wed Jan 21st 2004 at 10:32pm
Posted
2004-01-21 10:32pm
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and when used correctly, you STILL have the same level of control TB....honestly, i cannot understand the paranoia of carving....work with it, learn its traits, see what i does and does not do.....i swear, in the end, if you really give it a chance, itll be a beneficial tool....a real time saver.... :wink:
Doc B... :dodgy:
Re: carving
Posted by Hornpipe2 on
Thu Jan 22nd 2004 at 9:49pm
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Occupation: Programmer
Location: Conway, AR, USA
I carved a sphere with a smaller sphere to make a dome.
It ruled.