- The XOY plane of the <b>Global coordinate system</b> is suggested by default (if no plane or planar face is selected when <b>2D Sketcher</b> is activated).
- If any Local Coordinate Systems have been created in the study earlier, they can be selected as a reference coordinate system in the corresponding list box.
- The \b Arrow button allows selecting a \b plane or a <b>planar face</b> in the viewer or in the object browser as the reference coordinate system for the sketch. The start point will be set in the \b geometric \b center of the face.
- <b>Restore</b> button orientates the viewer correspondingly to the chosen working plane and fits the scene to show all objects.
- Define the start point. By default the start point of the curve is located at the origin of the reference coordinate system. A point in 2D Sketcher can be defined in one of three ways:
- By \b Selection of an existing point. Select \b Selection radio button in \b Points group, select a point in the viewer or in the object browser and click \b Apply button.
If an \b ark radio button is chosen, \b Point or \b Direction define the location of the next point of the sketch, but this point and the previous one are connected by an ark segment.
- By default, <b>None (Tangential)</b> radio button is selected as <b>Additional Parameter</b>, and the arc is \b tangential to the end of the sketch, which means that it is created on two points as a half-circle with radius equal to a half of the distance between these points.
- \b Radius radio-button allows creating a more limited arc segment by defining a custom ark radius, which must be greater than half of the distance between the last point and the end point of the arc.
- Finally, \b Center radio-button allows explicitly defining the center of the circle. If an arc segment cannot be built on the defined points, a warning is shown.
This algorithm creates a sketcher (wire or face), following the textual description, passed through the <i>Command</i> argument. The edges of the resulting wire or face will be arcs of circles and/or linear segments.