/*!
\page section_operation_page Intersection
\b Intersection operation creates a vertex, an edge, a wire or a compound
of them representing the intersection of two shapes.
To produce it, select in the main menu Operations - > Boolean - > Intersection
\image html neo-section.png "Intersection dialog"
In this dialog:
- Input or accept the default \b Name of the resulting shape.
- Click the arrow button and select in the Object Browser or in the Viewer the intersecting Objects.
- Activate the corresponding check-box if you wish to Detect Self-intersections. If a self-intersection detected the operation fails.
- Activate the corresponding check-box if you wish to use a fuzzy parameter .
If activated, you can define the fuzzy tolerance in the fuzzy parameter input box.
- Activate \ref restore_presentation_parameters_page "Advanced options" if required.
- Press "Apply" or "Apply & Close" button to get the result (VERTEX, EDGE, WIRE or COMPOUND).
\note This dialog supports navigation through the selectable objects (in OCC 3D viewer only):
- Scroll mouse wheel with pressed \em Ctrl key or press \em "S", \em "P" keys when input focus is
in the viewer to navigate between selectable objects.
- Press left mouse button to select an appropriate object to the dialog box.
.
For more details, please refer to the \em "Functionality common for OCC and VTK viewers" chapter
of the GUI module's documentation.
This operation can be performed using a TUI Command:
geompy.MakeSection(s1, s2, checkSelfInte, name, fuzzyParam)
Arguments: 2 shapes + an optional flag for self-intersection check + an optional name + an optional fuzzy parameter.
Example:
\image html fusesn1.png "The initial shapes"
\image html sectionsn.png "The resulting object"
Our TUI Scripts provide you with useful examples of the use of
\ref tui_section "Boolean Operations".
More details
Please refer to this document for a detailed description of Boolean operations.
It provides a general review of the Partition and Boolean
operations algorithms, describes the usage methodology and highlights
major limitations of these operations.
*/