On Sat, Jun 25, 2022 at 10:00 AM David Strip via Qgis-user < qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org> wrote:
> To the extent that anyone is interested in a discussion of adding CAD-like > dimensioning capabilities to Qgis: > > In a CAD model dimensional callouts present the user with information > about lengths, angles, radii, and other metric properties. Dimension > call-outs in a CAD model (probably more accurately, a CAD drawing derived > from a model) are annotations to the model, they are not model objects per > se. In a well-designed system, the dimension call-out displays the actual > metric value of identified length, radius, angle, etc. The dimension > "object" is tied to the underlying geometric model and will change the > presented value if the underlying object is changed (eg, scaled in size). > In addition, if the underlying object moves with respect to other objects > in the model, the dimension annotations move with it, maintaining a > constant relationship, for example to the edge whose length we are > dimensioning. > At the risk of stating the obvious, all of that can be done with labels in QGIS. A simple line can be annotated with angle and distance, which are dynamically updated when the line is modified. QGIS has the ability to move labels relative to the object being labeled and supports "call outs" aka "leader lines". Labels are not "model objects", in other words, labels are saved in the QGIS project, not in the underlying data. -- Richard W. Greenwood www.greenwoodmap.com
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