The study design most commonly used was pre-post intervention (11 of 26, 42%). 38, 39 There were several different types of study designs among the articles. 15– 34, 37, 40 Only 2 studies occurred entirely outside of the United States, 35, 36 and 2 more occurred in both Canada and the United States. Most of the studies occurred in the United States (22 of 26, 85%). Justice, MLIS, AHIP, is Community Health Librarian, Christiana Care Health System and Lee Ann Riesenberg, PhD, RN, CMQ, is Professor and Associate Director of Education, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham. Also I'd like to see that pattern created right on top or bottom in the 3d window similar to how layer clone over and under works.Joshua Davis, BA, is Fourth-Year Medical Student, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University Catherine Roach, BS, is Third-Year Medical Student, Medical University of South Carolina, and Foundation for Anesthesiology Education and Research Summer Research Fellow, University of Alabama at Birmingham Cater Elliott, BS, is Fourth-Year Medical Student, University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Research Assistant, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham Matthew Mardis, BS, is Second-Year Medical Student, University of South Alabama College of Medicine, and Research Assistant, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham Ellen M. That way it would take away the tediousness of selecting a bunch of edges. I'd love to see a function similar to the 3d pen/flatten function, It would work like this- with the tool selected, in the 2d window, when you hover over a pattern and the section would turn blue, divided up by internal lines/edges holding shift would let you select multiple, and clicking would create a new pattern in that shape. I LOVE the trace tool, but it could be better. Also when offsetting the pattern outline, the sewing extends with the pattern outline, if there was an option for the sewing to remain on the original line, that would be super awesome.ġ3. On "offset pattern outline" the "create internal line" checkbox should remember the option you pick, and stay on or off until you manually change it, or just be "on" by defaultġ2. I'd really like to be able to link multiple sewing lines together manually.ġ1. Likewise I'd like to see more options with the Layer clone tool, like having right click options for whether you want the pattern instanced or even sewn together at all.ġ0. With the "layer clone over/under" instead of having one big circular sewing around the outline you should have the sewing divided up by the segment points.ĩ. Selecting internal lines with the same property should apply ONLY to the selected pattern pieces.Ĩ. More options for "selecting all with the same property" Things like selecting all internal lines with the same length, or shapes that are all the same size and shape. There should be a "match up" option in the "edit sewing" right click menuħ. When you're using the scroll wheel to change the offset internal line length it should stop at 1 and not 0.6. Being able to offset internal lines from both directions at once.ĥ. You should be able to "add perpendicular internal line" to multiple vertex's at onceĤ. You should be able to move around in the 2d pattern window while the dialog boxes are open, this is pretty important to be able to see what you're doing.ģ. When using pop up dialog boxes such as "offset pattern outline" or "add perpendicular internal line" or many others, the 2d pattern window and 3d pattern window are locked. When you have an internal line that extends to the pattern outline, and that pattern edge is sewn to another edge, there should be a snappable point on the other pattern piece that shows where the internal line intersects so you can easily line up internal lines across patterns.Ģ. So, I've been using Clo for about 2 years now and I made a list of things I'd really like to see, I've tried to list these from most important to least important.ġ.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |