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    Curvature tool

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Features and Ideas
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    • DanielD Offline
      Daniel @Honor
      last edited by Daniel

      @Honor: it is. If you wish to try it, sign up for a trial account in Gravit Designer and check it out.

      No need to provide card details.

      And the great thing is, the curves drawn in bezigon Tool are still just ordinary Bezier splines. You can change it in any way.

      Whereas as the Spiro Path in Inkscape needs to be changed. They loose their arc spline nature.

      Work: Windows 11 | Intel i9 14900HS (24 Cores/32 Threads) | GeForce RTX 4070 | 64 GB RAM
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      • H Offline
        Honor
        last edited by

        I just had a chance to try it out, and I definitely think it would work much better together with VectorStyler’s tools. I hope it will be included in version 1.3 @Daniel

        DanielD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • DanielD Offline
          Daniel @Honor
          last edited by Daniel

          @Honor: the guy who wrote Gravit, did so as a challenge over a weekend argument with his friends who said vector software can't be Web apps.

          Work: Windows 11 | Intel i9 14900HS (24 Cores/32 Threads) | GeForce RTX 4070 | 64 GB RAM
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          BoldlineB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • BoldlineB Offline
            Boldline @Daniel
            last edited by

            @Daniel playing around with graphite, I noticed how it displayed a straight guideline line between points. made me think of this discussion we've had lately about adding different path creation tools to VS

            0_1743391529455_e7cc420e-f310-4f21-9230-e20f564fd917-CleanShot 2025-03-30 at 23.20.25.png

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            DanielD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • DanielD Offline
              Daniel @Boldline
              last edited by

              @Boldline: That's interesting. It appears like guides for 30, 45, 60 degree angles. I might have to check this.

              Work: Windows 11 | Intel i9 14900HS (24 Cores/32 Threads) | GeForce RTX 4070 | 64 GB RAM
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              • DanielD Offline
                Daniel @Boldline
                last edited by

                @Boldline: Yup, it is a right-angle, 45-degree guide, meant to help create smooth curves. Like this. It is quite useful. I'll add to the XLS thread for visibility.

                0_1743420592716_af689486-51a4-4603-83ed-e4997466df24-image.png

                Work: Windows 11 | Intel i9 14900HS (24 Cores/32 Threads) | GeForce RTX 4070 | 64 GB RAM
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                • BoldlineB Offline
                  Boldline @Daniel
                  last edited by

                  @Daniel @Subpath I appreciate all the effort you've made to share about the spline tools and pen tool options that would really elevate VS in terms of professional use. I already love how the pen tool functions and appreciate the hard work @VectorStyler has made to get it to this point. Adding the options you and others have discussed on this thread would really take it to another level professionally. I can already see how my use of VS would be enhanced by all of this

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                  • H Offline
                    Honor
                    last edited by

                    @Daniel I’ve had the chance to spend more time testing the Bezigon tool, and it’s honestly a really impressive feature. I’m really looking forward to seeing more tools like this added to VectorStyler.

                    @Daniel said in Curvature tool:

                    @Honor: the guy who wrote Gravit, did so as a challenge over a weekend argument with his friends who said vector software can't be Web apps.

                    Wow, that’s seriously impressive!

                    DanielD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • DanielD Offline
                      Daniel @Honor
                      last edited by

                      @Honor: Consider for a moment that it is over 30 years old. Introduced when Illustrator had just a rudimentary pen tool. That's why Adobe didn't want FreeHand competing against it. It was leaps and bounds ahead.

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                      • T Offline
                        ThatMikeGuy @Daniel
                        last edited by

                        @Daniel said in Curvature tool:

                        Curvature tool is a poor implementation of the logic of Bezigon. Curvature tool relies on you telling the software how want the nodes to be AFTER you've drawn them. Bezigon Tool tells the software how the nodes need to be WHILE you're drawing them. This the biggest difference. Bezigon relies on three types of nodes. Corner and smooth. Which you're aware of. But there's a tangent node, which allows smooth transition between the two types of nodes.

                        This isn't actually true about the Curvature tool if I am understanding what you are saying. In using the Curvature tool in Illustrator, you can vary between corner and smooth points while creating by adding a modifier key while clicking <alt> for sharp points. You don't have to create all sharp points first and then double-click to convert.

                        However, I agree with your overall position about a Bezigon tool. I remember that from Freehand and it was great. One thing that is a problem with the Curvature tool in Illustrator is that it is doing some sneaky stuff under the hood. If you take a shape and manipulate it with the curvature tool and then go back to standard Bezier tools for certain things you may find that the Curvature tool has added points in order to accomplish what it was doing. It makes me think that it is implementing some technology from Flash which had a kind of self-healing/self-smoothing mechanism under the surface. I could be wrong about that specifically, but it is clear that Curvature is another layer on top of Bezier rather than the direct handling of tangency and balance in the bezier points themselves which a Bezigon tool is doing.

                        So, I cast my vote for a Bezigon similar to what Freehand had rather than the Curvature tool that Illustrator has.

                        DanielD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • DanielD Offline
                          Daniel @ThatMikeGuy
                          last edited by Daniel

                          @ThatMikeGuy: Not quite. The reason you find those extra nodes is precisely because of what I explained. The tool can only balance the handles after the fact. This "after the fact" can be you telling Illy to convert the node or holding down modifier to click. I'm using very imprecise language to explain a very precise situation: In Curvature tool, you place down the point, the curvature is maintained by Illustrator recalculating the entire path, sometimes adding intermediate points to maintain smoothness. This is what I mean by after the fact correction of the curve.

                          Vitally, as you correctly point out, curvature tool does not have Bezier handles that you can directly and immediately manipulate. You will need to switch tool. Right there, it fails as an option for me completely.

                          Bezigon circumvents these two problems by pre-empting user intention based on the type of node placed. Corner, Smooth and Tangent. The handles are appropriately, instantly balanced with clear visual feedback. We both are saying the same thing. I wanted to clarify this point because what I am saying is true. Curvature Tool is designed precisely for beginners. It is useful to understand how the pen tool itself works, but on it's own merits zero comparison with Bezigon.

                          I've been advocating for it through the backdoor with several different software developers. Not the least of which is Xara. That's Matt Bolton, Xara's CEO. ✌ 😬 - It should have been the standard.

                          0_1744042130926_c5a5a3ff-0c95-4311-8c56-416740a65110-image.png

                          Work: Windows 11 | Intel i9 14900HS (24 Cores/32 Threads) | GeForce RTX 4070 | 64 GB RAM
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                          • DanielD Offline
                            Daniel
                            last edited by

                            The Bezigon Tool offers several advantages over the traditional Curvature Tool:

                            Precision and control: The Bezigon Tool gives you more precise control over curve creation by allowing you to place anchor points and adjust Bézier handles independently, offering greater flexibility for complex shapes.

                            Efficiency: It typically requires fewer anchor points to create the same curves, resulting in cleaner paths that are easier to edit and manage.

                            Predictable behavior: The Bezigon Tool follows the classic Bézier curve system, which many experienced designers find more intuitive and predictable when creating precise illustrations.

                            Handle manipulation: You can directly manipulate both sides of the Bézier handles at each anchor point, allowing for asymmetrical curves and more nuanced control over the shape.

                            Better for technical illustrations: For technical or precision-focused design work, the explicit control over curve mathematics makes the Bezigon Tool preferable.

                            The Curvature Tool, while more accessible for beginners, often requires more anchor points and can produce less precise results for complex shapes. It's designed for simplicity rather than maximum control, making the Bezigon Tool the preferred choice for professionals who need exact curve manipulation.

                            Here's a nice little summary. 🙂 Hope we can all agree on this.

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                            BoldlineB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                            • BoldlineB Offline
                              Boldline @Daniel
                              last edited by

                              @Daniel You've done an awesome job discussing the tools, the Bezigon tool especially! I've learned a ton of information from you on all this and I appreciate your dedication to helping everyone understand better. I'm sure @VectorStyler has a good sense of what you're talking about and when he gets the opportunity to add it, we can go deeper with it and see if there are improvements to be made, etc.

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