01-12-2018, 05:11 PM
Hi,
The pictures you attached to your post are available, so I will answer based only on what I understood from the text:
Depending on if the spline is open or closed, the definition of a valid range differs. For a closed spline, looping inside the spline is possible, so values above 1 (0 being spline start, 1 spline end) are valid. So you can have a range from 1.5 to 1.8, or said otherwise, a range that starts at 1.5 and has a length of 0.3.
For open splines, only values between 0 and 1 are valid, and the length should not be bigger than 1 - start
To reflect the difference on valid ranges, the range property drawer behaves differently whether the spline is open or closed.
It is true that the range property drawer can be improved to make this logic obvious. I will add this to the backlog.
Thanks for your feedback
The pictures you attached to your post are available, so I will answer based only on what I understood from the text:
Depending on if the spline is open or closed, the definition of a valid range differs. For a closed spline, looping inside the spline is possible, so values above 1 (0 being spline start, 1 spline end) are valid. So you can have a range from 1.5 to 1.8, or said otherwise, a range that starts at 1.5 and has a length of 0.3.
For open splines, only values between 0 and 1 are valid, and the length should not be bigger than 1 - start
To reflect the difference on valid ranges, the range property drawer behaves differently whether the spline is open or closed.
It is true that the range property drawer can be improved to make this logic obvious. I will add this to the backlog.
Thanks for your feedback
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Please consider leaving a review for Curvy, this helps immensely. Thank you.
Please consider leaving a review for Curvy, this helps immensely. Thank you.

