what is the quick way to get familiar or master a software from beginning?
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Southmountain wrote:
so I am wondering if you have any genius way to master this software quickly?
No, CAD software has a steep learning curve. Some are a tad easier than others but none of them are easy.
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Southmountain wrote:
so I am wondering if you have any genius way to master this software quickly?
No, CAD software has a steep learning curve. Some are a tad easier than others but none of them are easy.
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this QCAD is 2D drawing, a little easier.
diligent hands rule....
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now I start to play with QCAD software and start by reading its user guide. so I am wondering if you have any genius way to master this software quickly?
diligent hands rule....
Like everything else these days, YouTube videos.
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this QCAD is 2D drawing, a little easier.
diligent hands rule....
Once you learn 3d, it saves you a bunch of time. And i do mean a bunch. If you are going to do a lot of drawing, do yourself a favor and take the plunge. Alibre CAD is $200 bucks for a full starter license, or go with Fusion or another option for cheaper.
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this QCAD is 2D drawing, a little easier.
diligent hands rule....
but only 2/3 the fun. :) Good Luck
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Once you learn 3d, it saves you a bunch of time. And i do mean a bunch. If you are going to do a lot of drawing, do yourself a favor and take the plunge. Alibre CAD is $200 bucks for a full starter license, or go with Fusion or another option for cheaper.
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I agree. AC3D from inivis.com is a good starter at $99
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger
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I agree. AC3D from inivis.com is a good starter at $99
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger
As far as I've seen, AC3D isn't a CAD package - there aren't any dimensioning tools in it to my knowledge. If you know differently, then by all means correct me, but if it doesn't do dimensioning I'd highly recommend NOT purchasing it for CAD work. It will be too frustrating. (I played with it a long time ago.) FreeCAD is a better alternative, but it isn't as user friendly as Alibre CAD, or the other options mentioned. If you are into AC3D, Blender is another option you may be interested in. For many items it is far easier to use than AC3D, and far more powerful.
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Like everything else these days, YouTube videos.
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very few on this topic
diligent hands rule....
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As far as I've seen, AC3D isn't a CAD package - there aren't any dimensioning tools in it to my knowledge. If you know differently, then by all means correct me, but if it doesn't do dimensioning I'd highly recommend NOT purchasing it for CAD work. It will be too frustrating. (I played with it a long time ago.) FreeCAD is a better alternative, but it isn't as user friendly as Alibre CAD, or the other options mentioned. If you are into AC3D, Blender is another option you may be interested in. For many items it is far easier to use than AC3D, and far more powerful.
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I agree. AC3D is a cheap intro to CAD. Blender is a curious app which I have used. Rendering etc. I use Rhino3D when I am serious. But not cheap. There is CAD and there is rendering (ray tracing, etc.) not always congruent. night all.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger
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very few on this topic
diligent hands rule....
You are kidding me, right? It isn't that hard to get on YouTube and type in "QCAD for beginner", or something equivalent. [https://www.youtube.com/results?search\_query=qcad+for+beginner\](https://www.youtube.com/results?search\_query=qcad+for+beginner) This guy seems to have some good stuff: [Draw QCAD RC Plans for the Lite Ranger 1 Step by Step - YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsCmbuysehY)
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I agree. AC3D is a cheap intro to CAD. Blender is a curious app which I have used. Rendering etc. I use Rhino3D when I am serious. But not cheap. There is CAD and there is rendering (ray tracing, etc.) not always congruent. night all.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger
jmaida wrote:
AC3D is a cheap intro to CAD.
No. It is a cheap intro to creating objects in 3D. (Blender is cheaper, at 'free'.) CAD (Computer Aided Design) is something else, and dimensioning is a central part of that 'something else.' With a proper CAD drawing (not a file, but a 2d drawing printed on paper), you can hand it to a machinist and they can make the part from scratch because it has all the dimensions and tolerances needed to make that part. AC3D is incapable of making such a drawing without tons of work to fake the dimensions. You won't be able to have those 'fake' dimensions update when the part is stretched because they will be pure objects (lines, rectangles, elipses, and even text objects probably...) made to look like real dimensions, but having no connection to the part's real attributes. Any competent CAD package, including QCAD, will have real dimensions that can be updated with the part. AC3D most definitely does not. It would be a grave disservice to point a newbie at real CAD drawing to AC3D because it is a waste of their money, for what they want to learn. FreeCAD would be better, because it introduces them to the concepts of real CAD, and it is free. But there are better options available.
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now I start to play with QCAD software and start by reading its user guide. so I am wondering if you have any genius way to master this software quickly?
diligent hands rule....
Simple. Practice. Practice. Practice. You will find yourself in Carnegie Hall.
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:rose:
diligent hands rule....
I know it wasn't directly about mastering a software package, but my point was I learn by doing. See if you can find a youtube video, play it back at double speed, and then just mess with the program.
Check out my IoT graphics library here: https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx And my IoT UI/User Experience library here: https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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Simple. Practice. Practice. Practice. You will find yourself in Carnegie Hall.
Not in today's market. I know a trumpet player who had to quit the biz and become a security guard to put bread on the table.
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Not in today's market. I know a trumpet player who had to quit the biz and become a security guard to put bread on the table.
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Did he/she master the trumpet? Sounds like she/he had gigs. Classical? Jazz?
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Did he/she master the trumpet? Sounds like she/he had gigs. Classical? Jazz?
He mastered it in college, did cruise ships, then Vegas. Huge downsizing in business because bean counters took over, etc...
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Other people's code is how I learn the quickest, TBH. I'll skim a manual and then look for examples of things I'm likely to want to do until I get my "sea legs"
Check out my IoT graphics library here: https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx And my IoT UI/User Experience library here: https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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now I start to play with QCAD software and start by reading its user guide. so I am wondering if you have any genius way to master this software quickly?
diligent hands rule....
The quickest way to learn anything is to go all in. Doesn't matter if it's software or a new language. Devote all your time to it and 10,000 hours later you might know a thing or two.
Jeremy Falcon
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Other people's code is how I learn the quickest, TBH. I'll skim a manual and then look for examples of things I'm likely to want to do until I get my "sea legs"
Check out my IoT graphics library here: https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx And my IoT UI/User Experience library here: https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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The quickest way to learn anything is to go all in. Doesn't matter if it's software or a new language. Devote all your time to it and 10,000 hours later you might know a thing or two.
Jeremy Falcon
When I'm learning a new "thing" nothing else exists until I nail it -I think I may be a tad autistic
In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP