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Participant
March 16, 2012
Question

How to distribute equal spacing with anchor points?

  • March 16, 2012
  • 9 replies
  • 22182 views

I am working in Lesson 5 of Adobe Illustrator CS5 Classroom in a Book, and am having a problem selecting the 2 anchor points to distribute equal space based on the bottom center anchor point of the violin.  The note said to reference chapter 2, which I have already been through, but even after reading the Illustrator Help dialog on pg 75, I am still at a loss.  Can anyone explain how to distribute this equal spacing of 2 anchors relative to one anchor point?

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9 replies

Participant
June 19, 2012

Here's how I did it. 

I pasted a path in from Illustrator.

The motion keyframes are evenly distributed (and roving) so (a) the motion is even; and (b) I can stretch it to the length that I want without messing with the evenness of the motion.

Since I had six keyframes I wanted evenly spaced at two second intervals, I stretched the path out to twelveseconds.

Then I scrubbed to intervals 2, 4, 8, and 10.

At each one of those intervals I inserted a motion keyframe (which screwed up the path).  I then used the convert vertex tool to unscrew it up.

I didn't put a motion keyframe at 6 seconds because there was already a roving keyframe there.

I then used the layer marker tool to mark the two second intervals for my easy reference.

If you've discovered an easier (or more scalable) way to do it, I'd love to hear.

Thanks for starting this thread!

JETalmage
Inspiring
March 18, 2012

Distributing anchorPoints:

JET

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 18, 2012

James,

I can see that Distribute Spacing has changed after 10, to also work on Anchor Points in addition to Objects (at least until Kurt can make me see otherwise).

Two questions:

1) Can you click the centre Anchor Point as key to keep it in place and have the other two (re)Distribute on either side, and if so, which spacing is applied relative to the original spacings (in 10, with Objects, Auto > 0 and the two are pulled to touch the centre one)?

2) Can you (re)Distribute the Anchor Points horizontally without changing the shape of the violin path, implying a rather intricate underlying calculation (the shape of the rather simple path in post #16 is obviously changed)?

JETalmage
Inspiring
March 18, 2012

1) Can you click the centre Anchor Point as key

If you select the anchorPoints all at once, the Auto setting can be used to distribute the spacing between the outermost anchorPoints. If you select the anchorPoints sequentially, the last anchor you select becomes the key. If the spacing value is set to Auto when you do this, the setting of course auto-resets to zero (effectively aligning, not distributing). But if you enter a spacing value, the other anchors will be spaced from the key anchor.

2) Can you (re)Distribute the Anchor Points horizontally without changing the shape of the violin path.

C'mon...are you kidding?!

Aligning anchorPoints arrived in CS3, by the way. Visible highlighting of key objects was added either CS4 or CS5; don't recall for sure.

JET

JETalmage
Inspiring
March 17, 2012

...am having a problem selecting the 2 anchor points to distribute equal space based on the bottom center anchor point...Can anyone explain how to distribute this equal spacing of 2 anchors relative to one anchor point?

To horizontally center the bottom anchorPoint between the two adjacent anchorPoints:

1. White pointer: Select all three anchorPoints involved.

2. Align palette flyout menu: Show Options (to display the Distribute options at the bottom of the palette).

3. Make sure Align to Artboard is not on.

4. Make sure Distribute Spacing is set to Auto, not to a value.

5. Click the Horizontal Distribute Space button.

JET

tromboniator
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 18, 2012

JETalmage wrote:

4. Make sure Distribute Spacing is set to Auto, not to a value.

Mac 10.6.8, Illy CS5.1: The Auto setting does not exist in my Align Panel. It's there in CS3, but not 5.1. I've restarted, rebooted, deleted preferences, repaired permissions, checked for corrupt fonts. Suggestions?

Kurt Gold
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 18, 2012

The same here, Peter.

Beyond that, the input field is terribly small.

Participant
March 17, 2012

Thanks, everyone, for your replies.  Like you say, Monika, I may have the wrong impression about the alignment distribution.  I guess I just wanted to clear up my 'impression' by posting the literature that I had followed.  In addition, the book did not allow for further explanation as to how to achieve a precise alignment distribution between each point and the anchor point.

If I am under the wrong impression, I will take the advice to just mirror it.

The excerpt from Chapter 2 that I was trying to consult in relation to the book's reference made in Chapter 5 is the yellowish box located above.  I was trying to make the fourth bullet applicable- and I think I might just be trying too hard.  This misconception might just be my attempt to make something work that is just not capable with the software. 

If anyone has any further advice or comment, I'd still love to hear from all parties.  From here, as I have stated, I will just assume to achieve the task taking the "symmetrical - mirror" approach.  Thanks again!

Inspiring
March 17, 2012

This video might be helpful though it might behave differently than you expect this is how it works…

http://www.wadezimmerman.com/videos/DistAnchorPoints.mov

Inspiring
March 17, 2012

That link is not working this should work

http://www.wadezimmerman.com/videos/DistAnchorPoints.mov

Participant
March 17, 2012

Participant
March 17, 2012

Monika Gause
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 16, 2012

It's not possible to automatically align anchor points the way you expect it to work.

I've got the book and I think I found the paragraph you're referring to. It simply states that it is difficult to create the points in a symmetrical fashion. It actually doesn't show a way to do it. What you might do is create "helper objects", e.g. a rectangle that you use to measure the distance between anchors to recreate it on  the other side.

You might also first create only one side of that violin completely and then mirror it when you're finished. Doing it that way would be the most efficient way to do it.

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 16, 2012

csnpreggers,

Maybe the exact wording of the task as presented in the lesson is called for.

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 16, 2012

csnpreggers,

An image or screenshot would help helpers help you.

Participant
March 16, 2012

Steve Fairbairn
Inspiring
March 16, 2012

If it's a symmetrical object you are drawing (you mentioned a violin), remember that you only need to draw one half of it.

Then you reflect the whole thing about its axis of symmetry and all points will be mirrored on each side of the axis and therefore equally spaced.

Without further details it's difficult to give you a better answer.