Editing¶
These preferences control how several tools will interact with your input.
Objects¶
New Objects¶
- Link Materials To
To understand this option properly, you need to understand how Blender works with Objects. Almost everything in Blender is organized in a hierarchy of data-blocks. A data-block can be thought of as containers for certain pieces of information. For example, the Object data-block contains information about the Object’s location while the Object Data «ObData» data-block contains information about the mesh.
A material may be linked in two different ways:
- Object Data
- Any created material will be created as part of the Object Data data-block.
- Object
- Any created material will be created as part of the Object data-block.
Ver también
- Align To
- World
- New objects align with world coordinates.
- View
- New object align with view coordinates.
- 3D Cursor
- New objects align to the 3D cursor’s orientation.
- Enter Edit Mode
- If selected, Edit Mode is automatically activated when you create a new object.
Duplicate Data¶
The Duplicate Data checkboxes define what data is copied with a duplicated Object and what data remains linked. Any boxes that are checked will have their data copied along with the duplication of the Object. Any boxes that are not checked will instead have their data linked from the source Object that was duplicated.
For example, if you have Mesh checked, then a full copy of the mesh data is created with the new Object, and each mesh will behave independently of the duplicate. If you leave the mesh box unchecked then when you change the mesh of one object, the change will be mirrored in the duplicate Object.
The same rules apply to each of the checkboxes in the “Duplicate Data” list.
3D Cursor¶
- Cursor Surface Project
- When placing the cursor by clicking, the cursor is projected onto the surface under the cursor.
- Cursor Lock Adjust
- When the viewport is locked to the cursor, moving the cursor avoids the view jumping based on the new offset.
Annotations¶
- Default Color
- The default color for new Annotate layers.
- Eraser Radius
- The size of the eraser used with the Annotate Tool.
- Simplify Stroke
- This turns on the post-processing step of simplifying the stroke to remove about half of current points in it. It is only relevant when not drawing straight lines.
Ver también
Custom Weight Paint Range¶
Mesh skin weighting is used to control how much a bone deforms the mesh of a character. To visualize and paint these weights, Blender uses a color ramp (from blue to green, and from yellow to red). Enabling the checkbox will enable an alternate map using a ramp starting with an empty range. Now you can create your custom map using the common color ramp options. For detailed information see the Color ramps page.
Grease Pencil¶
- Manhattan Distance
- The minimum number of pixels the mouse should have moved either horizontally or vertically before the movement is recorded. Decreasing this should work better for curvy lines.
- Euclidean Distance
- The minimum distance that mouse has to travel before movement is recorded.
Ver también
Miscellaneous¶
- Sculpt Overlay Color
- Defines a color to be used in the inner part of the brushes circle when in sculpt mode, and it is placed as an overlay to the brush, representing the focal point of the brush influence. The overlay color is visible only when the overlay visibility is selected (clicking at the eye to set its visibility), and the transparency of the overlay is controlled by the alpha slider located at the in the Sidebar.
- Node Auto-offset Margin
- Margin to use for offsetting nodes.