About continuity

Continuity is a measure of how well two curves or surfaces “flow” into each other.

In the Curves tool palette, select the Blend Curve Toolbox curvesgtblendcurvetoolbox.

Why you would set continuity and curve degree

Types of continuity

Continuity is a mathematical indication of the smoothness of the flow between two curves or surfaces.

The following lists the five types of continuity possible with Alias tools, G0 to G4. Note that G3 and G4 continuity are only available with blend curves.

Positional (G0)

The endpoints of the two curves meet exactly. Note that two curves that meet at any angle can still have positional continuity.

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G0_Continuity

Tangent (G1)

Same as positional continuity, plus the end tangents match at the common endpoint. The two curves appear to be traveling in the same direction at the join, but they may still have very different apparent “speeds” (rate of change of the direction, also called curvature).

tangentG1

For example, in the illustration below, the two curves have the same tangent (the double-arrow line) at the join (the dot). But the curve to the left of the join has a slow (low) curvature at the join, while the curve to the right of the join has a fast (high) curvature at the join.

G1_Continuity

Curvature (G2)

Same as tangent continuity, plus the curvature of the two curves matches at the common endpoint. The two curves appear to have the same “speed” at the join.

curvatureG2

Curvature with constant rate of change (G3)

Same as curvature (G2) continuity, plus the rate of change in the curvature matches between the curves.

CurvatureG3

Curvature with constant rate of change of the rate of change of the curvature (G4)

Same as G3 continuity, plus the rate of change of the rate of change of the curvature matches between the curves. This is the smoothest type of join.

CurvatureG4

The concept of “rate of change of the rate of change” may be hard to conceptualize. Consider the following graphs:

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Releated Reference