You can construct surfaces and 3D solids from 2D geometry by extruding, sweeping, lofting, and revolving.
When you extrude, sweep, loft, and revolve curves, you can create both solids and surfaces.
Open curves always create surfaces, but closed curves can create either solids or surfaces depending on certain settings.
If you select a closed curve and extrude, sweep, loft, or revolve an object, you create:
The type of surface depends on additional settings. For example, you create
In this illustration, the same profile creates a solid (left), a procedural surface (middle), and a NURBS surface (right).
You can also create 3D solids from 2D geometry or other 3D objects. For example, a 3D solid can also be the result of extruding a 2D shape to follow a specified path in 3D space.
The following methods are available:
The curves that you use as profile and guide curves when you extrude, sweep, loft, and revolve can be:
Splines are one of the many 2D object types that can be lofted, extruded, swept, and revolved to create NURBS surfaces. Other 2D objects that can be used include lines, polylines, arcs, and circles. Splines, however, are the only 2D object customized to create NURBS surfaces. Because they allow you to adjust tolerance, degree, and tangency, they are better suited than other types of 2D profiles (such as lines, polylines, and circles) for surface modeling.
Many of the same commands used with NURBS surfaces, can also be used with CV splines.
Surfaces can be associative while solids cannot. If surface associativity is on when a surface is created, the surface maintains a relationship with the curve from which it is was generated (even if the curve is the subobject of another solid or surface). If the curve is reshaped, the surface profile is also updated.
The DELOBJ system variable controls whether the curves that generate an object are automatically deleted after the solid or surface is created. However, if surface associativity is on, the DELOBJ setting is ignored and the generating curves are not deleted.