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I'm experimenting with spirograph like patterns and effects, To do this I have created primitive shapes like squares and hexagons and applied transfrom effects like this…
In the above example there is one square with a black stroke and no fill. Even though I tell the stroke not to scale, it is scaled.
The problem is the duplicates are stacked below the primary object or group. I don’t think this has always been the case. See this one…
If I expand the appearance I can see outlines for all the shapes. But I need the duplicates to appear above the source image. Is thee a way to do this? Is this a bug?
Scott,
If you start with a small shape and scale it up (that is, greater than 100%), it stacks the other way. And I'm not seeing stroke scaling unless I tell it to.
Peter
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Transform is a "Post-effect" - it always gets applied afterwards initially. But you can move it above the Contents.
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Didn’t help.
What did work is making the shape a compound path.
I think this is a bug.
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Sorry. I was on the wrong track. But I seem to remember this was always the case (for me at least, which means CS2).
My oldest version is CS3 and here is the screenshot:
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My oldest version is CC 2017 and it does the same. I guess it was always bugged. And I would certainly call this a bug. Duplicating with Option-drag or Object > Transform puts the duplicate above the source. The effect should do the same.
Reported as a feature request.
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It does not solve your problem with the stacking order, but it gives a similar effect.
I filled a rectangle with white and gave the fill a Difference blending mode.
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Scott,
If you start with a small shape and scale it up (that is, greater than 100%), it stacks the other way. And I'm not seeing stroke scaling unless I tell it to.
Peter
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Your approach sounds promising, Peter. Unfortunately I cannot confirm the reverse order.
Guess by "it stacks the other way" you mean that the copies are then created above the original path, don't you?
What am I missing?
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Kurt,
I am certain that Peter (it is rather early/late for him) means that the effect of the inherent and unchangeable order is countered by starting from the small end, so larger will be behind smaller, as desired.
Obviously, to get (almost) the same size of the largest one, it is necessary to invert the settings (inverse scaling and rotation and a starting size that equals the desired ending size divided by the [number of copies]th power of the (inverse) scaling (was that sane speak?).
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Obviously, your last sentence is rather insane, Jacob, but all in all I think that you clarified a bit and Peter may have a well-deserved catnap.
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Obviously, Kurt.
I forgot to mention that it is, of course, possible to correct the (almost) desired size of the largest one, simply multiplying/dividing by the relative inaccuracy in the Transform palette (in the case below it was about 1.0002).
The switch of order as suggested by Peter can be seen here, with a filled square and a slower scaling, showing the inversion of the stacking order quite clearly.
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Apparantly, there are four snoopy crocodiles at the edges in your first red sketch, Jacob.
What are they doing there? Are they dangerous?
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Thanks, Jacob, for clarifying my blather. I've been Shakespeareing all day, and haven't checked back here to survey the damage. Yes, I am in an off-the-beaten-track time zone, and keep out-of-standard hours therein.
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Indeed, Kurt, ever waiting for those foolhardy enough to plunge in(to the unknown).
Hence the (rather solid) colour of the water.
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Peter,
Would that be the Scottish play, or are you too close to the theatre to give an answer?
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Henry IV, part 2, and I'm not superstitious.
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Jacob, consequentially your second red shot shows the crocodile death rolls, as far as I can see. Is that right?
Pretty coherent sketch.
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Quite right, Kurt.
But I believe they will claim to be misunderstood lizards.