Draft Facebinder

Description
The Draft Facebinder command creates a surface object from the selected faces of solid objects. A Draft Facebinder is parametric, meaning that if you modify the original object, it will update accordingly. Even if you move and rotate a Draft Facebinder, it will stay linked to the original faces.

It can be used to create an extrusion from a collection of faces. A typical use is in architectural design to build an object that covers several walls, for example a wall finish.



Usage

 * 1) Pick one face, or hold  and pick several faces, from solid objects.
 * 2) There are several ways to invoke the command:
 * 3) * Press the button.
 * 4) * Select the option from the menu.
 * 5) * Use the keyboard shortcut: then.

Data

 * : specifies an extrusion thickness to apply to all faces of the shape.
 * : if it is it tries to fuse the internal intersections of the Facebinder when it extruded.
 * : if it is it tries to perform a topological sewing operation on the Facebinder when it extruded.
 * : specifies an offset distance to apply betweenthe facebinder and the original faces, prior to extrusion.
 * : the total area of this facebinder.

View

 * : specifies a Draft Pattern with which to fill the face of the shape. This property only works if is "Flat Lines".
 * : specifies the size of the Draft Pattern.

Scripting
See also: Autogenerated API documentation and FreeCAD Scripting Basics.

To create a Draft Facebinder use the method  of the Draft module. This method replaces the deprecated method.

A is a list of tuples; each tuple contains as first element an, and as second element a list (or tuple) of strings; these strings indicate the names of the sub-elements (faces) of that object.
 * Creates a object from the given, which is a list of s as returned by . Only selected faces are taken into account.
 * can also be a.

The thickness of the Facebinder can be added by overwriting its attribute; the value is entered in millimeters.

The placement of the Facebinder can be changed by overwriting its attribute, or by individually overwriting its  and  attributes.

Example: