To achieve highly detailed modeling effects, you can directly transform, modify, and align the geometry of objects at the
sub-object level.
Sub-objects are the pieces that make up objects, such as vertices and faces. You can also access and transform the sub-object components of
modifiers.
The particular geometry or gizmo available at sub-object level depends on the object type or modifier. For details on sub-objects for each object type, see
Edit Modifiers and Editable Objects. For information on modifier sub-objects, see the topic for the modifier in question.
The middle column is modified at a sub-object level by scaling vertices.
Play this to view an example of sub-object editing:
The geometry of sub-objects is defined by vertices, edges, and faces. When working at the sub-object level, you can select only one of these components at a time. The type of component to be selected is set on the Selection rollout.
Use the following techniques to add and remove components from sub-object selections:
To select a vertex, edge, or face/polygon/element, simply click on it. Clicking on an unselected component will remove any other selected components.
To add to a sub-object selection, hold down
Ctrl and either click the component to add or drag to specify a region to add.
Note: When you drag to specify a region with an existing sub-object selection, if any transform tool is active, you'll transform the selection instead of changing the selection. To avoid this, start the region away from the object, or first activate
(Select Object) on the main toolbar.
To subtract from a sub-object selection, hold
Alt and either click the component to subtract or drag to specify a region to subtract.
To select a loop:
For
vertices or
polygons, first click a vertex/polygon, then hold
Ctrl and
double-click a second vertex or polygon in the direction of the desired loop.
For
edges, simply
double-click an edge in the desired loop.
To select and deselect limited loops:
To select a limited loop, click a vertex, edge, or polygon, and while holding
Ctrl,
double-click a second vertex, edge or polygon at the end of the limited loop.
To deselect part of a loop, hold
Alt and click a vertex, edge, or polygon within the selection. While still holding
Alt,
double-click a second vertex, edge or polygon at the end of the section to deselect.
To select a ring (edges only):
Select an edge, then hold
Ctrl and
double-click a second parallel edge.
To use Point-to-Point selection:
Hold
Ctrl+Shift and then click a vertex, edge, or polygon. Move the cursor and the selection will follow along the shortest possible path. Click again to confirm the preview. You can then continue adding and confirming more sub-objects to select, or release
Shift to complete the action.
Convert the object into an editable object such as an editable mesh, editable spline, editable poly, and so on. (Some modifiers that can only be applied to the object, such as Edit Mesh, Mesh Select or Spline Select, also have sub-object levels.) For example, to convert an object to editable poly format, follow
this procedure.
Tip: Always make sure to work in a wireframe view mode so you can see the affected geometry.
On the modifier stack display, click
(the plus-sign icon to the left of the name of the modifier or editable object). This expands the object's hierarchy, showing the names of the sub-object levels at which you can work.
On the stack display, choose the kind of sub-object geometry you want to work with: for example, Vertex, Face, or Edge. Each sub-object selection level has rollouts with their own sets of options.
The sub-object level is highlighted in the list.
Use standard selection techniques (see preceding) to select sub-object geometry, from a single sub-object to the entire object. By default, the sub-object selection highlights in red.
Once a sub-object is selected, you can press
spacebar to lock the selection while you’re working with it.
Storing Sub-Object Selection Sets
The surface formats (mesh, poly, and so on), automatically remember the most recent selection for each sub-object level: vertex, edge, and so on (there is overlap in some cases, such as poly edge and border). These selection sets are saved with the file. With sub-object selections, you have these options:
Choose one of the selection sets to pass geometry up the stack to other modifiers. Only one selection set is active at a time.
Change to one of the other selection sets at any time by activating its sub-object level.
In modeling a character head, for example, you might have a number of different vertex selections for forehead, nose, and chin. Such selections can be difficult to re-create, so using named sets gives you easy access to the original selection when you want to rework a particular area.
Using Sub-Object Selections
Once you make a sub-object selection of geometry, you can do any of the following:
Apply any options supplied for the kind of object and the selection level.
Apply standard transforms: Move, Rotate, Scale. For more information, see Transforming a Sub-Object Selection, following.
Apply object-space modifiers (Bend, Taper, and Twist, for example) to perform useful modeling operations.
Apply object-space modifiers (UVW Map or Smooth, for example) to perform useful surfacing operations.
Bind a
space warp to the selection. The rest of the object is unaffected by the warping.
Using an editable mesh, poly, patch, or spline, you can directly transform any sub-object selection. However, “Select” modifiers like
Mesh Select and
Spline Select enable only selection.
To transform a sub-object selection made with a Select modifier:
Add an
XForm modifier to the stack, following (or somewhere above) the Select modifier.
In the stack, open the Select modifier and make a sub-object selection.
Choose XForm in the stack. You then transform the XForm gizmo, which applies the transform to the selection.
Cloning Sub-Object Geometry
Using
Shift+transform with a selection of vertices or faces displays the Clone Part Of Mesh dialog. This lets you choose whether to clone to a separate object or an element. Click the desired option, optionally giving the cloned object a new name, then click OK.
If you choose Clone To Object, the cloned copy becomes a plain mesh object, entirely separate from the original object. The new object is given the name in the field to the right of the Clone To Object radio button.
If you choose Clone To Element, the selection is cloned in its new position and remains part of the original object.
Animating Sub-Object Geometry
When you work with an editable mesh or poly object, you can directly transform and animate a sub-object selection. In effect, the selection works like any other object.