/*! \page scale_operation_page Scale Transform \n To produce a <b>Scale Transform</b> in the <b>Main Menu</b> select <b>Operations - > Transformation - > Scale Transform</b> \n This operation creates a scaled shape basing on the initial shape. For this, you need to define the \b Shape to be scaled, the <b>Central Point</b> of scale and the Scale Factor(s). \n The \b Result will be a \b GEOM_Object. \n <b>Advanced option:</b> \ref restore_presentation_parameters_page "Set presentation parameters and sub-shapes from arguments". \image html transformation10.png \n <b>TUI Command:</b> <em>geompy.MakeScaleTransform(Shape, CenterOfScale, Factor)</em> \n <b>Arguments:</b> Name + 1 shape(s) + 1 vertex + 1 Scale Factor. \image html transformation10a.png \n <b>TUI Command:</b> <em>geompy.MakeScaleAlongAxes(Shape, CenterOfScale, FactorX, FactorY, FactorZ)</em> \n <b>Arguments:</b> Name + 1 shape(s) + 1 vertex + 3 Scale Factors. \note If the <b>Central Point</b> is not defined, the scaling will be performed relatively the origin of the global coordinate system. \note Scaling by one factor is a simple transformation, it does not modify the geometry of the shape, while scaling by several different factors along axes is a general transformation, which can modify the geometry, for example, a circle can be transformed into an ellipse. \n <b>Example of simple scaling:</b> \image html scale_transformsn1.png "The initial object" \image html scale_transformsn2.png "The resulting object (resized)" \n <b>Example of scaling by different factors along axes:</b> \image html scale_transformsn3.png "The initial object" \image html scale_transformsn4.png "The resulting object (resized and distorted)" Our <b>TUI Scripts</b> provide you with useful examples of the use of \ref tui_scale "Scale Transformation" and of \ref swig_scale "Scale Along Axes Transformation" */