2012-11-10 02:16 PM - last edited on 2023-05-23 02:39 PM by Rubia Torres
2012-11-10 03:08 PM
2012-11-10 03:59 PM
2012-11-12 03:23 AM
2012-11-12 04:17 AM
David wrote:Try bringing it forward in the display order.
necessitates moving the slab or hiding layers of other elements in order to get the Pet Palette to appear to edit the slab.
2012-11-12 01:18 PM
Stress wrote:Thanks Marc, that will work, but then the adjacent slab is uneditable via the Pet Palette unless it is brought forward, so only one of two slabs is editable at any time.David wrote:Try bringing it forward in the display order.
necessitates moving the slab or hiding layers of other elements in order to get the Pet Palette to appear to edit the slab.
2012-11-20 06:15 AM
2012-11-20 11:09 AM
2012-11-20 01:05 PM
2012-11-20 01:28 PM
Da_RoCk wrote:The problem is not element selection, it is maintaining that selection when using the Pet Palette to edit the element. Also, it is a problem of the same type of adjacent element getting selected when needing to edit the originally selected element.
If we want to edit, say a slab and we click on the edge, then immediately the object that overlaps it gets selected. What i would normally do to work around this is select the slab first, then select the "slab" element from the tool box on the side, and edit it from there. Correct me if i am wrong, but this restricts AC to see the active element only thus allowing you to edit the slab alone.
uisanata wrote:We don't need a new function, we simply need AC 16 to behave like earlier versions.
I think we need a keyboard shortcut to 'lock' the edited object after it was selected with the tab key. Or it should be automatically locked after using the tab key until you tab-select another object or click en empty area or hit 'esc'.