![]() ![]() That's exactly why you need to resize the objects in your drawing when changing the scale. So for an object that was originally meant to measure 10 feet, changing your units to inches would then require the object to actually measure 120 units (in this case, 120 inches, or 10 feet). ![]() If you did, in fact, change your units, you would eventually need the line to be measured in the number of your new units that match its measurement in the original units. However, the issue of scale forces a new wrinkle into this perfect unitless world. Whether you change your units to inches, meters, millimeters, angstroms, or parsecs, the line will continue to measure 10 units. For example, a line drawn from the coordinates 0,0 to 0,10 in Decimal Feet will be 10 "units" long.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
December 2022
Categories |