Point Styles |
Line Styles |
There are several display attributes that many objects have in common. You can set most of these attributes using the Display menu, the Text Palette, or the Text tool.
You can also use the Context menu to change an object’s display attributes.
To set other properties of an object, select the object and choose Edit | Properties, or choose Properties from the Context menu.
Every object in Sketchpad can be colored.
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Most objects in Sketchpad can be labeled.
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Objects can be hidden from view, although such objects remain present in the sketch and continue to control or influence other objects.
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Points and geometric objects based on points (including iterated images of points, discrete function plots, discrete point loci, and angle markers) can be displayed in four sizes: Dot, Small, Medium, and Large. To set the point style for selected objects, use the Display | Point Style submenu. When all selected objects share a common point style, a checkmark appears in the submenu next to that style.
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Many geometric objects (including segments, rays, lines, circles, arcs, continuous point loci, continuous function plots, polygon frames, angle markers, and path tick marks) are displayed with straight or curved lines. The appearance of these lines is determined by the object’s line style. To set the line style for selected objects, use the Display | Line Style submenu and choose either a width (Hairline, Thin, Medium, Thick) or pattern (Solid, Dashed, Dotted). When all selected objects share a common line style, a checkmark appears in the submenu next to that style. If you construct a path coinciding with, or collinear to, a longer path (for example, when you construct an arc on the circumference of a circle, or when you construct a segment along a line), the longer path is automatically dashed to better display the shorter path coinciding with it.
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Most objects that occupy a two-dimensional area (polygons, circle interiors, arc interiors, pictures, iterations and loci of these objects, and angle markers) can be made translucent, allowing similar objects below them to show through. To set the opacity of a translucent object on a scale from 10% (nearly transparent) to 100% (completely opaque), select the object and choose Edit | Properties | Opacity. (A completely transparent object would be invisible, so the only objects that can be set to 0% opacity are objects that have a visible frame or stroke such as framed polygons and angle markers.) |
Geometric objects and parameters can be animated so that they move or change of their own accord.
See also: |
Geometric objects can be traced. As they move they leave behind on the screen a trace showing where they’ve been.
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