The following workflows describe how to use the old Align 2008 tool. To use the new version of the tool (Align), see Workflows for the new Align tool.
This tool moves or reshapes two objects to achieve positional, tangent, or curvature continuity.
Align two surfaces
This aligns the surface edges along their lengths.
If it’s easier, you can click an isoparametric curve close to the edge you want to align. Make sure to click an isoparametric curve running in the same direction as the edge you want to align.
The align tool cannot reshape trim edges for alignment.
Align a surface edge to an entire curve
This aligns the length of the surface edge to the length of the curve.
Align a curve end to a surface edge, isoparametric curve, or curve-on-surface
This aligns the end of the curve to the end of the surface curve.
Align two curves or curves-on-surface
You can only align curves-on-surface on the same surface.
Choose an Alignment Type
The different alignment type options have different uses in different scenarios. You may often find yourself applying one type of alignment, saving the alignment with the Accept button, and applying another type of alignment “on top” of the first.
Refer to the online help for Object Edit > Align > Align 2008 for tips on using the different alignment types.
As you are editing, you can click Accept to “lock-in” the current alignment. Click Revert to revert to the last Accept (or if you haven’t clicked Accept, to the unaligned state or to the state at which the file was opened).
Manually control the alignment
The surface control manipulators let you directly edit the skew, tangent scale, and curvature scale at points along the aligned edge.
Use different settings at the beginning and end of an aligned edge
You can have separate controls for the alignment type, skew, tangent scale and curvature scale at the beginning and end of the aligned edge.
Align two objects while only allowing the CVs to move along one direction
You can create a reference vector with the Construction > Vector tool.
Remember that this alignment type only allows the CVs to move along a single direction. Some of the controls in the Align window (such as Skew) may behave counter-intuitively because the CVs are so constrained.
Click Revert in the options window. This will revert the surfaces to the last time you clicked Accept, or if you haven’t clicked Accept, to the unaligned state or to the state at which the file was opened.
Use the Join Parameter option to move the align point back from the end/edge of an object.
The Join Parameter option is in the object’s section of the option window (such as Curve 1 or Surface 1).
Do one of the following: