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Hi guys
I saw a vid a little while ago that showed me how to easily round one corner of a rectangle and I can't remember how to do it. Im sure its very simple - could someone enlighten me please??
Ta
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Have a look on the link
This is the easiest way to do i.e using the script other wise it will invovlve lot of steps to round just one corner.
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You could simply buy Vector Scribe. Might be one of the smartest plug-in investments you'll ever do...
Mylenium
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The itbros script looks good, but you'll need to know the exact corner radius you want—or, run the script multiple times as you sort it out.
I have two different tools in my Ai arsenal.
I bought VectorScribe, and it's awesome. It offers a lot more than just rounding single corners.
And my other corner rounding solution is developed by CValley Inc called "Xtream Path." It is also very cool!
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It's beyond belief that such a simple task can't be done in illustrator in 2012. Just saying.
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It's beyond belief...
Except to devotees predisposed to defense of the indefensible.
Smart geometric primitives, Adobe. Take a look at your other drawing program. But no rush; you're only decades late on this.
JET
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i mean really lol
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the procedure includes
multiple fills
round the corner of the 1 fill
the 2 - apply transform effect using the scale or move options so you mask out the rounded corners (making visible just the ones you want)
and depends of the corner you want you use fils and move them over the object
this is a live effect which is the beauty
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Well to me it does not seem to difficult to accomplish even if there is no tool for it.
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Well to me it does not seem to difficult to accomplish even if there is no tool for it.
Sure, drawing an arbitrary single-cornered, horizontally-aligned rectangle from scratch isn't so time-consuming. But see how long it takes you to add two corners each (different radii) to three existing rectangles which are all at odd angles. Doing it manually becomes less viable rather rapidly.
DF
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Sure, drawing an arbitrary single-cornered, horizontally-aligned rectangle from scratch isn't so time-consuming. But see how long it takes you to add two corners each (different radii) to three existing rectangles which are all at odd angles. Doing it manually becomes less viable rather rapidly.
DF
Is that what the OP asked?
As far as d4efending the indefensible I who and where the poster sees this hapening in this tthread? Or what it has to do with this thread at all?
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I should add I for one do not see how all of these complaints about what Illustrator has or does not have can serve any purpose on a User to User Forum as there is absolutley nothing any of us as users can do about it, is there a purpose to it?
I would think the feature request forum would be the place to post such concerns or the feature request page.
I really sure you guys think there is a purpose but it eludes me.
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if you need the graphic style send me eail sddress
the upper left corner will be regular
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That is very interseing one probably could make a sort of template with a rectangle with one round corner one with two and one with three and each could have a round corner radius adjust able independently.
I wonder if they could code that as a tool?
Very interesting and clever.
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We've had many approaches in the past, including graphic styles, actions and scripts.
All of them suffered from specific limitations. None of them may be called "beautiful". All of them are just that: Mediocre workarounds.
Although not that old-fogyish as Illustrator, FreeHand and some other programmes are antiquated as well in that area. To me, a true "Smart geometric primitive" would not just offer a couple of predefined corner styles. No, it would allow you to define your own corner styles, comparable to the way you can create corner tiles inside pattern brushes.
That would be an innovation. Just doing it the same way as FreeHand or Draw does at the moment would be a reactionary step.
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I think it is probably agreed by all that what you say would be fine and as emil has shown the anatomy of the method that vasil posted it also points t6o the fact the mechanism for constructing such a feature is inherent in the Effects current capabilities so it should be possible without restructuring AI to bring this feature into Illustrator.
The question is if so using that same mechanism can the feature be applied to any shape that has corners regardless of whetrherr they are 90º corners or not and I think it is possible and probably not as difficult as my have been thought of in the past, the good thing is that Adobe could develop the feature this way rather than purchasing it.
But unfortunately what we write here will go nowhere since feature request are seldom taken from this forum.
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Isn't this more work than just drawing it with the pen like the way Wade suggested. The only advantage I see is if it is reused for a narrow range of the same size objects with sides at 90° angles which in my opinion is not much worth. If you scale down the object it will quickly fall apart and if you scale it up it will quickly limit the size of the possible radius, and also the size of a scaled object will not be reported and control at its effected size. In fact if I have to go that route I would rather use a group of four objects and this will give me the same thing with much greater flexibility to use interactively the transform tools - the image below shows what I mean. Just scale the rounded corner with the transform box holding Shift and move the edges of the other objects to fill gaps or move overlaps. For final usage apply the Unite function of the Pathfinder.
Of course the best solution is if Adobe provides a tool or functionality dedicated to do this.
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yes then try tweaking the angle afterwards
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What do you mean afterwards, after uniting with Pathfinder? As i said, you do that before final usage.
But even after that I think it is still less work to tweak it - select the two anchor points of the arc, click on one with the scale tool to place the scale center and Shift drag to create the desired round corner, move/scale snapping the edges of the object to the new size. At least you can do it with interactive tools instead of guessing and entering numeric data in multiple fills after each resize.
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Here's a step by step way to change the size of a rounded corner - I don't think using the appearance panel takes less clicks and effort, nor it gives more flexibility.
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Illustrator bezier support is complete junk. Sure it's an awesome piece of software for logo design and small print jobs and web pieces but just don't call it an illustrator.
If you are into complex vectoring either get plugins like Vectorscribe or XtremePath or just switch to new CorelDRAW X6 or Autodesk Sketchbook 2013. You will be amazed by polygonal control of both, heck X6 even offers vector 3D cast shadow of single two point line if you desire so with one click and drag.
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The easiest way for me is to create the rectangle w/one rounded corner in InDesign and save it as an eps then open it in Illustrator. I don't know why Adobe can't make this InDesign feature work in Illustrator too. Maybe next version?
Audrey
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I found a simpler way:
1. Create a square or triangle
2. Create a circle with the radious you want your corner to be
3. Copy Circle (if you want more than one corner rounded)
4. Place Circle over the square to create the radious you want on square corner
5. Select Circle and sqaure - make sure circle is on top
6. Click Divide
7. Ungroup it all
8. Delete unessessary parts
9. Select all pieces again
10. Click Unite....Done
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Strange enough, InDesign has it all! Do what ever you want in ID copy and paste into AI
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Wow, that was a lot of really complicated and/or possibly unnecessarily expensive (pluggins!) ways to get a very simple job done.
Believe it or not Illustrator DOES have all the tools you need to accomplish what you need to do.
1. Create your square object.
2. Go to Effect > Stylize > Rounded Corners and choose the radias at which you want the corner rounded.
3. Then use the Scissors tool (its hiding behind the Eraser tool) to cut the object in half or in quarters, depending on what corner you wish to keep rouned.
And whala! You've got your one rounded corner object. 😃