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I have always known it to be this way, but wondering if I'm doing something wrong?
You can snap a guide to the centre of a square or circle shape, something with a centre point. But, is it possible to snap to the mid point of objects without a centre point, or paths? Illustrator shows the handles for anything in the middle, am I able to snap a guide to the position of these handles? If I try it never snaps to these. Picture attached.
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hi, habe you got "snap to point" selected in your view menu?
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Yes I do.
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and you do know that you can align guides to the centre of aby object (well it will be to the centre of the bounding box of the object but you know what i mean)
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How?
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the eg you gave is somewhat misleading as you will/should drag the the centre but an eg like this (the glob) you will need to align the guide whereas the rectangle the guide can snap to the path.
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Thanks for your reply Grant but I don't quite understand what you mean. You're saying I need to align to the centre, but how do I do this? When you have an uneven shape like that glob one you made, there is no "x" centre point marked. Yes, you have the 8 points of the bounding box, but I am unable to snap to them.
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With your guides set to "unlocked", you can draw a vertical and/or horizontal guide randomly, then select the guides and the object, and you can use the align panel to center them horizontally and/or vertically.
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Thanks meganchi, yes that is a work around that I'm sure would work, but would take way too long when trying to work quickly.
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All objects have a center point, but not all of them show it.
Window > Attributes > Show All > Click Show Center
It will show the center of the bounding box.
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mediwing,
"the mid point of objects"
could also refer to the centroid, which is different from the centre of the Bounding Box in most cases, such as the one shown by Grant.
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To illustrate what Jacob mentioned:
Left, the Center of the Bounding box, right (in red) the Centroid (which is according to Wikipedia: "Informally, it is the point at which a cutout of the shape could be perfectly balanced on the tip of a pin")