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Date: | Mon, 07 Jul 2014 19:52:25 +1200 |
From: | Lilith Bryant <dark141 AT gmail DOT com> |
Subject: | Re: [geda-user] pour clearing around pads |
To: | geda-user AT delorie DOT com |
References: | <1404637590 DOT 750 DOT 43 AT zotlet> |
<201407061702 DOT s66H2GlL022465 AT envy DOT delorie DOT com> | |
In-Reply-To: | <201407061702.s66H2GlL022465@envy.delorie.com> (from |
dj AT delorie DOT com on Mon Jul 7 05:02:16 2014) | |
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Reply-To: | geda-user AT delorie DOT com |
On 2014-07-07 05:02:16 AM, DJ Delorie wrote: > > > Sorry to answer my own reply here, but I've just thought of a better way > to > > do this. If the raw polygon is first built with clearances of (P+L) > instead > > of just P.... > > That just moves the problem to other places where the clearance would > have been P+L+L > I don't think it does. If the final step (i.e. the "dilate") is union-ing a series of L width "lines" on the (super-eroded) polygon's perimeter, then no part of it can possibly end up thinner than L. How does a "proper" dilation differ from this anyway?
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