![]() ![]() From what I can tell there is no (visible) loss to the geometry.Ī non-manifold geometry is a 3D shape that cannot be unfolded into a 2D surface with all its normals pointing the same direction. The Thunder software can then render all of the lines properly. The work around I found is to import the Fusion DXF into Rhino and then export it using the lowest line count (2007). Not entirely sure on why this happens, but judging by my google searches, it effects a lot of people trying to do similar things. I've been having issues with significant numbers of lines missing when opening DXF files created in Fusion360 in the Thunder Laser software. Once you export the whole doc in HTML to your site directory it will look like the page you're on now. Typora will recognise the HTML and hide it from view. I also copy and pasted the html for the side nav bar straight into my doc like so: ![]() I just wrote html straight into the top of the Typora doc and linked my styles file.I actually prefer the Typora style now, but I would like to keep the side navigation menu on the pages I write in Typora. I have a separate stylesheet for my site that I was linking to for my earlier hand-written HTML pages. Keep in mind that you should locate this html so that the file paths in the html img tags are correct. Now using ImageMagick or ffmpeg (for videos) convert and copy your media from within the doc specific Typora image folder to the analogous folder in your site directory.Įxport your Typora file as html, with or without style (up to you), to your site directory. In your directory containing your site pages and assets create the same image file tree as you did for Typora. The original image should still be where ever you dragged it into Typora from. and ending with $ ) to your general Typora image folder (not the doc specific one)Īdd an image to your doc and check that a copy of the image was placed into the doc specific image folder within the general Typora image folder. Define the relative file path (starting with.Set the top drop down menu to "Copy image to custom folder".This you have to do every time you start a new doc with images - unless you give Typora permission to create folders which I haven't figured out how to do yet.Be sure to make the name of this folder the same as the name of the doc you are working on. Within that folder create a folder where you will store the images for the particular doc you are writing. Within that folder create a folder where you will store the images you add to Typora documents. This was an extremely tedious process so today I went in search of a solution.Ĭreate a folder where you will save all of your. This week I had to find all the photos, consolidate them in one folder, name them and link to them correctly in Typora, not for where they were currently, but for where their copies would end up in my class folder. Images have still been taking a long time as between screenshots and photos from my phone they're all stored in different places. Typora has proven to be a great tool for writing HTML (you can export your file as html) without having to tag all of my headers, lists, bold and italicised text. Over the last couple weeks I have been experimenting with using Typora, a markdown editor, for note taking (this page is being written in Typora). This was quite a process, one that was eating up way to much of my time. I had to upload photo's, name each one, put it in the correct folder (after compressing) then link to it in my html. ![]() ![]() I would then type up the documentation more completely in html. I started off documenting by hand in a notebook and taking photos with my phone. SEARCH THIS PAGE ( COMMAND + F ) FOR KEYWORDS Documentation 00 cutting 0011 programmer 0100 3Dprinting 0101 elecDesign 0110 makeBig 0111 embedProg 1000 moldCast 1001 inputs 1010 outputs 1011 networks 1100 machine 1101 interface 1110 wildcard 1111 notes Notes ![]()
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