Serjo
Guest
Hello, everyone!
I often find myself having to quota internal or external hexagons for keys, and I always inserted the prefix "hex" before the quota of the parallel planes to indicate (although obvious) that it is a hexagon.
I now find myself having to quote an octagon and I don't know what to write, I have seen drawings with "ch" code to indicate "key", but besides being a source of confusion, it is not to indicate the number of sides of the polygon.
that you know, there is a "correct" way of defining a broken hole or an external profile, with number of sides and size in one quota?
as is done with the symbol □ to indicate square series, to understand us.
Perhaps I am making too many problems and it would only be enough the quota as the number of sides is well visible at least in a view, but I always try not to leave anything to chance (you never know that someone can not count six sides instead of eight, nothing is impossible).
I often find myself having to quota internal or external hexagons for keys, and I always inserted the prefix "hex" before the quota of the parallel planes to indicate (although obvious) that it is a hexagon.
I now find myself having to quote an octagon and I don't know what to write, I have seen drawings with "ch" code to indicate "key", but besides being a source of confusion, it is not to indicate the number of sides of the polygon.
that you know, there is a "correct" way of defining a broken hole or an external profile, with number of sides and size in one quota?
as is done with the symbol □ to indicate square series, to understand us.
Perhaps I am making too many problems and it would only be enough the quota as the number of sides is well visible at least in a view, but I always try not to leave anything to chance (you never know that someone can not count six sides instead of eight, nothing is impossible).