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		When I create any shape, for example rectangle or circle, and then use shear tool, how can I know what is perfect isometric transform ?
I use shear magnitue along Y but I never know what is true isometric value of it.
	
	
	
	
		
	
 
 
	
	
	
		
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		Thank you. I'll check LibreCAD.
How did you get these red lines in the background ?
	
	
	
	
		
	
 
 
	
	
	
		
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		 (11-05-2018, 05:57 PM)rich2005 Wrote:  It is an isometric grid generated by Inkscape and exported as a svg file - so it is a path.
With an image in place. Open in Gimp by: right click in paths dialogue, select Import path, find the svg file, open it, make it visible. Since it is a path it shows up over any layer, can be scaled to any size, only temporary to aid construction.
Attached to play with, remember to unzip it.
edit: had to look it up but Ofnuts has a plug-in to generate various grids as paths. The iso is equivalent to 'triangles' with a vertical orientation. 
https://sourceforge.net/projects/gimp-pa...y/download
Ohhh this is what I was looking for!  
 
 
I even found a video explaining how to create isometric grids in Gimp, but this plugin definitely does exactly what I wanted and very easily (actually it became easy after 
Rich2005's tip "
The iso is equivalent to 'triangles' with the vertical orientation").
Thanks a lot guys!
	
 
	
	
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Samj Portable - Gimp 2.10.28 - Win-10 /64.