Draft OrthoArray

Description
The tool creates an orthogonal (3-axes) array from a selected object.

This tool can be used on any object that has a Part TopoShape, meaning 2D shapes created with the Draft Workbench, but also 3D solids created with other workbenches, for example, Part, PartDesign, or Arch. It can also create App Links instead of simple copies.


 * To create polar or circular arrays, use the corresponding and  tools.
 * To position copies along a path use or.
 * To position copies at specified points use or.
 * To create copies and manually place them use or.
 * To create exact copies and manually place or scale them, use or.

This command deprecates the previously existing as well as the short lived  tools.



Usage

 * 1) Select the object that you wish to duplicate.
 * 2) Press the  button. If no object is selected, you will be invited to select one.
 * 3) The task panel is launched, where you can select the number of elements in each X, Y, Z direction; and the interval between each created element.
 * 4) You can click on the 3D view to set up all the numbers and intervals, and complete the command. Otherwise, just press  or the  button to complete the operation.

Options
These are the options displayed in the task panel.


 * : the elements in the X, Y, and Z directions. A copy of the original object is always produced, so this number must be at least in every direction.
 * : the values of displacement for the copies in the X direction. To create strictly rectangular arrays, the Y and Z values should be zero.
 * : the values of displacement for the copies in the Y direction. To create strictly rectangular arrays, the X and Z values should be zero.
 * : the values of displacement for the copies in the Z direction. To create strictly rectangular arrays, the X and Y values should be zero.
 * : it resets the interval vectors to a rectangular displacement, that is, , and.
 * : if it is checked, the resulting objects in the array will fuse together if they touch each other. This only works if is unchecked.
 * : if it is checked, the resulting array will be a "Link array". This array internally uses App Link objects, so it is more efficient when handling many copies of complex shapes. However, in this case, the objects cannot be fused together.
 * Press or the  button to abort the current command.

if a Link array is created, this object cannot be converted to a regular array. And similarly, a regular array cannot be converted to a Link array. Therefore, you must choose the type of array that you want at creation time.

Properties
See also: Property editor.

A Draft OrthoArray is derived from a Part Feature object and inherits all its properties. It also has the following additional properties:

The properties in this group are only available for Link arrays. See Std LinkMake for more information.




 * : the number of circular layers to create. The object counts as one layer; it must be at least.
 * : the distance between circular layers.
 * : a number that indicates the symmetry lines in the circular layers. This number changes the distribution of the objects and making it very large may eliminate the more central layers.
 * : the distance between copies in the same circular layer.


 * : specifies the type of array to create,, , or.
 * : specifies the object and edge that can be used as reference for polar and circular arrays; for example, it can be the edge of a or a . If this property exists, it overrides both  and, for polar and circular arrays.
 * : specifies the object to duplicate in the array.
 * : (only available for Link arrays, read-only) it is the total number of objects in the array including the original object. This property is read-only as the value depends on the other "Number" properties, whether they are orthogonal, polar, or circular.
 * : (only available for Link arrays) if it is, the individual App Link objects will be available to select in the tree view.
 * : it defaults to ; if it is, and the copies intersect with each other, they will be fused together into a single shape. This only works if the initial array was not a "Link array".


 * : a vector specifying the interval between each copy on the X axis.
 * : a vector specifying the interval between each copy on the Y axis.
 * : a vector specifying the interval between each copy on the Z axis.
 * : the number of copies on the X direction. The object counts as one copy; it must be at least.
 * : the number of copies on the Y direction.
 * : the number of copies on the Z direction.


 * : specifies the aperture of the circular arc to cover with copies; use 360 to cover an entire circle.
 * : distance and orientation of each copy in direction.
 * : number of copies in the polar direction.


 * : the axis direction around which the elements in a polar or circular array are created.
 * : specifies the center point of the polar or circular array. The passes through this point. For circular arrays, the  specifies an offset from the  of the  object.

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

Parametric array
To create a parametric orthogonal array use the method  of the Draft module. This method replaces the deprecated method. The method can create Draft OrthoArrays, Draft PolarArrays and Draft CircularArrays. For each array type one or more wrappers are available.

The main method:

The wrappers for orthogonal arrays are:

The wrappers for rectangular arrays are:


 * is the object to be arrayed. It can also be the (string) of an object in the current document.
 * ,, and are the vectors between the base points of the elements in the respective directions.
 * ,, and are the  distances between the base points of the elements in the respective directions.
 * ,, and are the numbers of elements in the respective directions.
 * If is  the created elements are App Links instead of regular copies.
 * is returned with the created array object.

Example:

Non-parametric array
To create a non-parametric orthogonal array use the method of the Draft module. This method returns.

Example: