Gestures are DaVinci's way of enhancing your experience while sketching with
a pen by simplifying some of the common tasks you do while sketching. In
specific, DaVinci's gesture recognition allows you to adjust line direction,
adjust small lines and angle measurements, and place labels much more naturally
than with traditional means. Here's how to use gestures to speed up sketching in
the field.
- Call Outs - At times you may have to adjust a line length
or angle measurement that proves too difficult to adjust simply because the
measurement is so small that you can't write in your adjusted measurement over
top of the existing measurement label. For this reason, DaVinci allows you to
draw "call outs" from any measurement so that you can write in your adjustment
without having to try to squeeze it into a small space on your sketch or
adjust the zoom of your sketch. To write in an adjustment using the call out
gesture...
- In a sketch, tap the arrow beside the
Draw button in the toolbar.
- Put the tip of your pen on the label for the measurement you wish to
change.
- Draw a line from the label away from your sketch (or simply to an open
area of sketch "paper").
- Write in the adjusted measurement at the end of line you've drawn. After
a moment, DaVinci interprets the call out line and adjusts your measurement
accordingly.
- Line Directions - Sometimes it's easier to adjust a
line's direction by simply writing in the direction you wish for the line to
go instead of attempting to drag the end point to adjust the line. To account
for this, DaVinci supports the use of compass directions (N, NW, W, E, SE,
etc) when adjusting a line. To adjust a line's direction using compass
directions...
- In a sketch, tap the arrow beside the
Draw button in the toolbar.
- Write the desired direction abbreviation (N, S, E, W, NW, NE, SE, SW)
for the line exactly over top of the line's length label. DaVinci interprets
your handwriting and alters the line's direction.
- Shorthand Labels - DaVinci also recognizes any labels
that you write onto your sketch. The only requirement for this is that you
have the label in your Labels list prior to trying to use the label. Whether
you've added a custom label or are using DaVinci's stock labels, all you need
to do is write directly onto the screen in the area where you wish to place
your label. Here are a few points to keep in mind as you're writing labels
onto your sketch.
- You can either write the full label or a shorthand version of the label
and DaVinci will recognize it.
- Make sure the label exists in your Labels list before attempting to
write it onto your sketch. If it's not a part of your labels list, DaVinci
will not be able to match your handwriting against the correct label.
- If you're writing a shorthand label, you must write out at least three
letters of the first word in the label. If there are multiple words, you
must write out at least one letter of each extra word. For instance, to
write a shorthand label for "Master Bedroom" you would write no less than
"Mas B" (three letters of "Master" and one letter of "Bedroom").
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Hint: Windows Vista-based mobile PC's
can progressively improve their understanding of your handwriting. Just
click Start, Control Panel. Then, click
Mobile PC, Tablet PC Settings and click
the Handwriting Recognition tab. Now just make sure that
Use the personalized recognizer and Use automatic
learning are both checked and click OK. If
you're using Windows XP, it cannot improve its understanding of your
handwriting. Instead, see this article for tips on how to write in a way that it
can understand better. |
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