Computer Science, asked by Nivruttipatil, 1 year ago

steps to create procedures to draw a circle and rectangle

Answers

Answered by nilesh43
3
Hey!


To draw a rectangle with the Rectangle tool, follow these steps:

Select the Rectangle tool from the toolbar or press the R key. The cursor changes to a pencil with a rectangle.

Click to set the first corner point of the rectangle. To align the plane of your rectangle with a specific drawing axis or other geometry, press the arrow key that corresponds your desired alignment, as explained later in this section. If you prefer to draw the rectangle from the center, press the Ctrl key.

Move the cursor diagonally to find the desired size and shape for your rectangle. To draw the rectangle with precise dimensions, use the Measurements box, which at this point displays your rectangle’s dimensions as you move the cursor. To help you place the rectangle in relation to the drawing axes or other geometry, sketch UP's inference engine displays on-screen cues. When the inference you need appears, move to Step 4. Both the Measurements box and the Rectangle tool inferences are explained a little later in this section.

Click again to set the second corner point of the rectangle. Or if you're drawing the rectangle from center, click again to set any corner point. 

As you draw a rectangle, the Measurements box helps you model precisely as follows:

Set the length and width. Type a length value, a comma, a width value, and then press Enter. For example, type 8‘,20’and press Enter. If you type only a number or numbers, SketchUp uses the current document units setting. You can also override the document units setting by specifying imperial (such as 1’6") or metric (such as 3.652m) units.

Specify only a length or width. If you enter a value and a comma (3‘,), the new value is applied to the first dimension, and the second dimension doesn’t change. Similarly, if you type a comma and then a value (,3’), only the second dimension changes.

Change the rectangle’s position with negative numbers. If you enter a negative value (–24, –24), SketchUp applies that value in a direction opposite to the one that you indicated.


Drawing a circle

Before you draw a circle, it’s helpful to understand how SketchUp creates circle entities:

Circle entities have a radius and connect multiple line segments.

These segments act as a single line in that they can define the edge of a face and divide a face. Additionally, selecting one segment selects the entire circle entity.

SketchUp’s inference engine still sees the segments in the circle. So, if you hover your mouse around the circumference of the circle entity, you’ll see endpoint and midpoint inferences.

To draw a circle, follow these steps:

On the toolbar, select the Circle tool from the drop-down menu next to the Rectangle tool. Or press the C key. The cursor changes to a pencil with a circle, and the Measurements box indicates the default number of sides: 24, as shown in the figure.

Click to place the center point of the circle. To align the plane of your circle with a specific drawing axis or other geometry, press the arrow key that corresponds your desired alignment. For example, the up arrow aligns the circle's plane with the blue axis. See the table in Drawing a rectangle or square for details.The Measurements box changes to display the circle’s radius. You can type a radius value now or immediately after you draw the circle.

Move the cursor out from the center point to define the circle’s radius. As you move the cursor, the radius value is displayed dynamically in the Measurements box. Press Esc at any point to start over.

Click to finish the circle. SketchUp creates a circle-shaped face, as shown in the figure. 


(Optional) Until you select a new tool or draw a new circle, you can use the Measurements box to change the circle’s radius or the number of sides as follows

To change the number of sides: Type a number and the letter S (for example, type 5s for 5 sides or 42s for 42 sides). Then press Enter (Microsoft Windows) or Return (Mac OS X). Alternately, you can hold down the Ctrl key (Microsoft Windows) or the Option key (Mac OS X) while pressing the + or - to increase or decrease the number of sides, respectively. If you're using a French Canadian keyboard, hold down the Ctrlkey (Microsoft Windows) and the +/=key to increase the segments. For Mac OS X, press Command and = to increase segments or - to decrease segments.

To change the radius: Type a number and a unit (if desired), such as 6”, 8’, 34cm, or 7m. Then press Enter or Return.

hope its helpful

Nivruttipatil: your answer is very big I want short answer ☺
Answered by bdeshmukh342
0

Answer:

write a producure to making rectangles

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