Hello Everyone- In this weeks Fusion Friday, Brad shows how to use the Boundary Fill command. Watch to see some examples of how it is used and what it can be used for. #fusion #nexgen
Thanks for covering that Brad 👍🏻 The example with surfaces is pretty straightforward but, as you rightly say it's the selection of cells that really complicates the use and understanding of it. Maybe a graphical preview when selecting cells would really help users understand this tool better
Ya, I wish Fusion "highlighted" the regions for each cell. I had another more complicated example that had multiple cells, but it made the video way too long, so I cut it out. Maybe I'll show it in a future webinar or something. Thanks for watching and commenting!
@@bradtallis8968 It's totally understandable for filling a bounding box of surfaces and planes. It's when it's used with creating intersecting bodies when it really becomes confusing and not intuitive at all. With that water volume example it's almost easier to create a zero offset surface on the inside and a zero offset plane at the top and then use boundary fill in the same way you show at the beginning, because that way it results in a single cell to select.
Maybe the checkboxes are in order from outside to inside? Not sure what the top check was for since you didn't show that one. I'll have to try it myself...