![]() ![]() My text where always a wild butchered mess of restructured stuff that was barely readable, so I had to rewrite everything at the end two or even three times. In school there where the children who wrote a text in one clean swing without deleting and restructuring sentences, words and paragraphs and some who didn’t. Hit CTRL D to conceal all the windows, need the windows to back. Just hit G (G is the default shortcut for Make Component) and Enter. These are probably very suboptimal habits. A little off topic but why do the extra work of making the component from a group You dont have name a component when you make it. A blank box means no shortcut is assigned to that tool or command. Click the box on the right side of the entry. Find the tool or command you want to assign a shortcut to in the search results and hover over that entry with your mouse. To delete some stuff I often explode stuff and then regroup it. In this video, we talk about groups and components inside of SketchUp and when to use each of them THE SKETCHUP ESSENTIALS COURSE. Open Search and type in the name of the tool or command you want to assign a shortcut to. ![]() Typically I end up with lots and lots of iterations and because often some geometry that is not needed at a certain point is blocking the view I delete it. Often I am undecided if I should continue with an iteration so I leave the iteration “for the moment” without either going forward with it or deleting it but I start another iteration “on the side”. I also have a habit of copying large junks of geometry “on the side” to do some iterations on this geometry, to see “how it looks”. How do I create a shortcut for Edit Group - Pro - SketchUp Community I go through all the usual steps- it even tells me my shortcut was accepted, when I pull up the menu. Ok, I guess I also often use cutting out and pasting stuff in place. At this point, I start to clean up the mess by exploding a bunch of groups and subgroups to reorder/regroup them into something more orderly. ![]() So as I am modelling I often only group new geometry as really necessary so it doesn’t merge or something and when I am “finished” I usually end up with some unorderly mess of partially nested and grouped stuff whose nesting structure doesn’t make much sense. WELDING SYMBOL / Provides annotation and acts as a grouping mechanism by referencing multiple beads with a single welding symbol. So existing geometry is typically already grouped and nested together. I often have some idea that I quickly want to try out, so I start modelling geometry in reference to geometry that already exists without much or any consideration in what group this should be done - this feels to break the flow of ideas. I assume because you are a more orderly and organized person and think more carefully about what group, subgroup or layer you should go to before you start modelling new geometry ![]()
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