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    Using Mouse to Delete Nodes

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    • debraspicherD Offline
      debraspicher
      last edited by

      Is there a way to easily delete nodes that doesn't involve right click and selecting from the menu? In Corel, we can just double-click and it'll retain the line as much as it can. That's very helpful for node clean up.

      Windows 11 Build 26200.7171 (25H2)
      AMD Ryzen 7 9700X with Gigabyte X870E Aorus Pro Ice
      32GB RAM @ 6000MHz
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      • S Offline
        Subpath @debraspicher
        last edited by Subpath

        @debraspicher

        Double click on a Node inserts a Node in the middle between
        two Nodes in Vectorstyler.

        Maybe the middle mouse button could be used for this ?
        Then with one click šŸ™‚

        But i dont know how happy Mac user would be with a solution like this.

        Define another Shortcut Key then the Back Key would be another Idea.
        A gaming mouse with a few more buttons may be also a possible solution?

        Win 11
        CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 9600X, 6-core.
        GPU: Nvidia Geforce RTX 5070.

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        • debraspicherD Offline
          debraspicher @Subpath
          last edited by debraspicher

          @Subpath I think Affinity uses Ctrl + click. Don't quote me as I barely use it now. Holding a modifier to achieve this would be fine.

          It might even be better for users with drawing tablets that there's a modifier key because that way it's not calling for a double click as some people turn that off to avoid issues with line defects when speed drawing/painting.

          Edit: I put my designs through a cutting machine sometimes so I have to clean up paths before I do this. Especially if they're Pencil-drawn lines. Almost always have to go back and tidy up things.

          Windows 11 Build 26200.7171 (25H2)
          AMD Ryzen 7 9700X with Gigabyte X870E Aorus Pro Ice
          32GB RAM @ 6000MHz
          PNY NVIDIA RTX 5070 Ti 16GB; Display 1: 4K @150%; Display 2: 4K @200%
          Wacom Intuos Pro L (2025); Wacom Intuos Pro M; Epson ET-8550; Siser Romeo

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          • BoldlineB Offline
            Boldline @debraspicher
            last edited by

            @debraspicher Maybe I'm misunderstanding, but why not just use the delete key to erase the nodes? VS does a very good job of maintaining the path even after deletion of certain nodes

            šŸŽ macOS Tahoe 26.2, Mac mini (M1, 2020), Chip Apple M1, Memory 16 GB
            Cintiq 27QHD Display and LG Ultra HD Display

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            • VectorStylerV Offline
              VectorStyler @debraspicher
              last edited by

              @debraspicher said in Using Mouse to Delete Nodes:

              Is there a way to easily delete nodes that doesn't involve right click and selecting from the menu?

              Select the node and press Delete, this is the easiest way.

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              • S Offline
                Subpath @debraspicher
                last edited by

                @debraspicher

                I cleaned up a lot of paths, in my previous job. CorelDRAW was one of
                the best apps for me to preserve the shape of a path.

                However, my workflow involved keeping one hand on the Delete key
                and the other double-clicking the mouse to add a node wherever I
                thought it best to maintain the shape.

                I think VectorStyler also does a pretty good job.

                Win 11
                CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 9600X, 6-core.
                GPU: Nvidia Geforce RTX 5070.

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                • IngolfI Offline
                  Ingolf @debraspicher
                  last edited by

                  @debraspicher said in Using Mouse to Delete Nodes:

                  Is there a way to easily delete nodes that doesn't involve right click and selecting from the menu? In Corel, we can just double-click and it'll retain the line as much as it can. That's very helpful for node clean up.

                  This could be a brilliant opt-in feature, perhaps tucked away -but not far away - in an toolbar or somewhere more central (no thanks). For those of us who deal with heavy "clean-up" workflows involving hundreds of nodes, the current click-then-delete routine literally doubles the effort. It forces you to switch between two tools (mouse and keyboard) or, even worse, navigate a context menu.

                  In terms of usability, you must distinguish between different types of user needs:

                  • The Disciplined Designer: These users work with precision, creating objects in just a few steps. Their needs are often the "default" focus in UI design because the extra overhead of a few clicks is negligible when the total operation count is low.
                  • The Complex Vector Artist: Then there are those working on highly intricate designs where the node and object count is massive. In this context, doubling the steps for a repetitive task effectively doubles the production time for that specific operation.

                  I’m not sure what the exact split is between these user types, but I believe this is worth considering as an opt-in toggle. CorelDRAW has a great implementation of this, and VectorStyler already possesses superior curve-preserving algorithms. Combining that kind of algorithmic power with a frictionless way to remove nodes would be the perfect feature partnership.

                  šŸ macOS Sequoia Apple Silicon

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                  • VectorStylerV Offline
                    VectorStyler @Ingolf
                    last edited by

                    @Ingolf said in Using Mouse to Delete Nodes:

                    This could be a brilliant opt-in feature, perhaps tucked away

                    Could be a settings?

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                    • IngolfI Offline
                      Ingolf @VectorStyler
                      last edited by

                      @VectorStyler said in Using Mouse to Delete Nodes:

                      @Ingolf said in Using Mouse to Delete Nodes:

                      This could be a brilliant opt-in feature, perhaps tucked away
                      Could be a settings?

                      I would prefer it instantly available - not in main settings. I would personally enable/disable it on the go in the same documents depending on where in a workflow I am.

                      Sleep on it perhaps. šŸ™‚

                      šŸ macOS Sequoia Apple Silicon

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