Line Shape
Line Shape
CorelDRAW Help : Lines, shapes, and outlines : Working with lines, outlines, and brushstrokes : Drawing lines
Drawing lines
A line is a path between two points. Lines can consist of multiple segments, and the line segments can be curved or straight. The line
segments are connected by nodes, which are depicted as small squares. CorelDRAW provides various drawing tools that let you draw
curved and straight lines, and lines containing both curved and straight segments.
The Freehand and Polyline tools let you draw freehand lines as if you were sketching on a sketchpad. If you make a
mistake while drawing freehand curves, you can erase the unwanted part immediately and continue drawing. When drawing straight
lines or segments, you can constrain them to straight vertical or horizontal lines.
The Freehand tool lets you control the smoothness of the curved line you are drawing as well as add segments to an existing line.
However, the Polyline tool is easier to use for quickly drawing a complex line that consists of alternating curved and straight
segments.
In addition to drawing freehand lines and straight segments, you can use the Polyline tool to draw circular arcs.
You can choose settings to control how the Freehand and Polyline tools behave. For example, you can change the default
smoothness of a curved line that you’ve created with these tools.
You can draw straight lines by using the 2-point line tool. This tool also allows you to create straight lines that are perpendicular or
tangent to objects.
The Bézier and Pen tools let you draw lines one segment at a time by placing each node with precision and controlling the
shape of each curved segment. When using the Pen tool, you can preview the line segments you are drawing.
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You can draw lines with multiple segments by using the Bézier tool and clicking each time you want the line to change direction.
You can draw curves by using the Bézier tool and dragging the control handles at the ends of the Bézier curve.
B-spline tool
By using control points, you can easily shape a curved line and draw B-splines, which are typically smooth, continuous curved lines.
B-splines touch the first and last control points and are pulled by the points in between. However, unlike the nodes on Bézier curves,
control points don’t let you specify the points through which a curve passes when you want to align a curve with other drawing
elements.
The control points that touch the line are referred to as "clamped." Clamped control points function as anchors. The control points
that pull the line but do not touch it are referred to as "floating." The first and last control points are always clamped on open-ended
B-splines. The points in between float by default, but you can clamp points if you want to create cusps or straight lines within the
B-spline. You can edit completed B-splines by using the control points.
The path of a B-spline curve is determined by the control points you set.
The 3-point curve tool lets you draw simple curved lines by specifying their width and height. Use this tool to create arc shapes
quickly without manipulating nodes.
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You can draw a curved line by specifying its width (left), and then specifying its height and clicking the page (right).
The Smart drawing tool lets you use shape recognition to draw straight and curved lines. For more information, see Drawing
by using shape recognition.
Some lines have nodes and control handles that you can manipulate to shape lines as you draw. For information about node types,
see Using curve objects.
When drawing lines by using the curve tools, you can hide the bounding box that is displayed around the lines once they are drawn.
The curve tools include the Freehand tool, the 2-point line tool, the Bezier tool, the Artistic media tool, the Pen tool, the B-Spline
tool, the Polyline tool, and the 3-point curve tool.
You can hide the bounding box to make drawing artistic media strokes in quick succession more fluid.
To Do the following
Draw a curved line Click where you want to start the curved line, and drag.
Draw a straight line Click where you want to start the line, and then click where you want the line to end.
Control the smoothness of a curved line Type a value in the Freehand smoothing box on the property bar. Higher values
produce smoother curves.
Reposition a line Hold down both the left and right mouse buttons, and drag the line to a new
position.
Place a copy of a line in the drawing Hold down the right mouse button, and drag the line to a new position. Click Copy
here.
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Add line segments to an existing line Click the end node of a selected line, and click where you want the new segment to
end.
Create a closed shape from two or more In a line that contains two segments, click the end node, and then click the start
connected lines node.
You can constrain a line created with the Freehand tool to a predefined angle, called a constrain angle, by holding down Ctrl
while you drag. This feature is useful for drawing straight vertical and horizontal lines. For information about changing the
constrain angle, see To change the constrain angle.
You can erase a portion of a curved freehand line by holding down Shift and dragging backward over the line before
releasing the mouse button.
Reposition a line while drawing Hold down both the left and right mouse buttons, and drag the line to a new position.
Place a copy of a line in the drawing Hold the right mouse button, and drag the line to a new position. Click Copy here.
You can close an open object by clicking the Close curve button on the property bar.
2 . Click in the drawing window, and then release the mouse button.
3 . Hold down Alt, and move the pointer to create an arc.
4 . Do one of the following:
• Click to finish the arc, and release Alt to return to freehand drawing.
• Click to finish the arc, and, without releasing Alt, move the pointer to draw another arc.
5 . Double-click to end the line.
You can hold down Ctrl in conjunction with Alt to constrain the arc to 15-degree increments or another predefined angle,
called a constrain angle. For information about changing the constrain angle, see Constraining objects.
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2 . Point to where you want to start the line, and drag to draw the line.
As you drag, the length and angle of the segment appears in the status bar. If you’re adding to a line, the total length for all
segments also appears.
3 . Click the edge of an object, and drag to where you want the line to end.
If you want to draw a line that is perpendicular to two objects, drag to the edge of the second object, and release the mouse
button when the perpendicular snap point appears.
To extend the line beyond the second object, hold down Ctrl when the perpendicular snap point appears, and drag to where you
want the line to end.
This procedure cannot be used for drawing a line that is perpendicular to the baseline of a text object.
You can also drag from an existing curve to draw a perpendicular line.
3 . Click the edge of a curved segment in an object, and drag to where you want the tangent line to end.
If you want to draw a line that is tangent to two objects, drag to the edge of the second object, and release the mouse button
when the tangent snap point appears. When the quadrant snap point coincides with tangent snap point, the quadrant snap
point appears.
To extend the line beyond the second object, hold down Ctrl when the tangent snap point appears, and drag to where you want
the line to end.
The Tangential 2-point line mode can be used for drawing the sides of the cylinder.
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Draw a curved segment followed by a Draw a curved segment, double-click the end node, and click where you want the straight
straight segment segment to end.
Draw a straight segment followed by a Draw a straight segment. Click the endpoint of the segment, drag to where you want, and
curved segment release the mouse button. Drag to draw a curve.
Change curve angle to preset While holding down Ctrl, drag a control handle.
increments as you draw
Preview a line Enable the Preview mode button in the property bar. Click on the drawing page, and release the mouse
while drawing button. Move the mouse, and click to finish the line.
Add a node to a Enable the Automatically add or delete nodes button on the property bar. Point to where in the line you
line
want to add a node, and click when the pointer changes to the Add nodes state .
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Delete a node Point to a node, and click when the pointer changes to the Delete nodes state .
from a line
To draw a B-spline
Reshape the line by using Select the line by using the Shape tool , and reposition the control points to reshape the line.
control points
Float a control point Select the line by using the Shape tool , click a clamped control point, and click the Make
control point floating button on the property bar.
Clamp a control point Select the line by using the Shape tool , click a floating control point, and click the Make control
point clamped button on the property bar.
Add a control point Select the line by using the Shape tool , and double-click along a control line.
Delete a control point Select the line by using the Shape tool , and double-click the control point that you want to
delete.
Select multiple control Select the line by using the Shape tool , and hold down Shift while you click on the control
points
points that you want to select.
If you add to a B-spline by selecting the first or last control point, the clamped control point automatically changes to a
floating control point as you draw the new portion of the line.
You can also add control points while you draw a B-spline by pressing Spacebar instead of clicking.
2 . Click where you want to start the curve, and drag to where you want the curve to end.
3 . Release the mouse button, and click where you want the center of the curve to be.
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Double-click the Freehand or Bézier tool to display the Freehand/Bézier page in the Options dialog box.
When you hide the bounding box while working with one curve tool, the bounding box remains hidden for all curve tools. For
example, if you hide the bounding box when using the Freehand tool, it remains hidden when you switch to the Bézier tool.
You can also hide the bounding box by clicking Tools Options, clicking Display in the Workspace list of categories, and
then enabling the Hide bounding box for curve tools check box.
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