FreeCAD v1.1

(blog.freecad.org)

335 points | by sho_hn 3 days ago ago

106 comments

  • Alupis 2 days ago ago

    Recently one of the magnet holders for my window shutters broke, and I thought I'd take a crack at designing a replacement to 3D Print. I'd never designed anything in CAD software before, so I had no real reference.

    I found FreeCAD extremely easy to use and intuitive. I watched a couple videos and followed-along with the tutorials, then started on my own item. It's a relatively simple 3-part component. I took measurements with digital calipers, and in a few hours was printing the first prototype.

    A couple prototypes later (small measurement adjustments to account for plastic shrinkage, etc), I had the final model. Replaced all of the magnet holders since they were sure to go soon, too.

    I had fun, and finally used my 3D printer for something "real". Pretty cool.

    • godelski 2 days ago ago

      A fun thing to do is take a picture and import it. Then you can trace it!

      This is best done on some kind of grid background but having a ruler (or two) is usually enough.

      One suggestion, print one or two layers first to check the fit. Iterate with that before you print the whole thing.

      Another helpful thing is to start drawing things parametrically. This should be familiar to programmers. You're using variables and you want to design things primarily through relationships. This becomes a huge unlock because scaling your parts becomes much easier

      • chopin a day ago ago

        I started with FreeCAD a couple of weeks ago. Parametric modeling is pretty hard and a couple of things are pretty hard to understand (no easy reuse of sketches between parts for one, one cannot extrude a binder is another one).

        However, without it fine-tuning models for technical use would be untenable.

        Unfortunately , refactoring is nightmare stuff.

        • godelski a day ago ago

          I definitely don't want to say that it's easy, but it's not terribly difficult. Does take a shift in thinking though, but then it clicks.

          For reusing sketches, you can. There's external geometry and subshapebuilder. Doing assembly can be a bit tricky at first.

          I'll admit, FreeCAD is a bit tricky if you're coming over from something more professional like SolidWorks or CATIA but it does get the job done and you can't beat the price. It's also really improved over the last two years

          https://wiki.freecad.org/PartDesign_SubShapeBinder

    • jareklupinski 2 days ago ago

      for incredibly simple parts that i can describe using measurements, i've had a lot of fun pointing a high-power ai at openscad and letting it iterate through making the design for me

      it's still tough to turn it into something i can then keep fiddling with in freecad though

      put on "tron: ares" in the background to fully appreciate the model designing something that will be 3d-printed :)

      • godelski 2 days ago ago

        I haven't tried it, but FreeCAD has scripting

        https://wiki.freecad.org/Python_scripting_tutorial

        Edit: Your website is quite confusing. Took me awhile...

        • jareklupinski 2 days ago ago

          ty for 'tearing through' ;)

          • godelski a day ago ago

            I had to... rip it apart to figure out what it all meant! ;)

      • pdntspa 2 days ago ago

        You can get even more vague and just generally describe the design of something, making sure it leaves exact measurements to parameters, and end up with something usable. ("Make me an openSCAD file for an pointed star with curved points and an inward taper. The number of points, thickness, and angle of taper should be configurable")

      • jetter 2 days ago ago

        Did you try modelrift.com ? Its openscad + ai but way more convenient to preview results in realtime and iterate via annotated screenshots

      • happyPersonR 2 days ago ago

        For a lot of stuff, you might have better luck getting it to generate something like cadquery

    • Milpotel 2 days ago ago

      I had the opposite experience. Creating the parts was easy with some tutorials but when I went to the assembly step it failed horribly. There are different plugins/ways how you can do it but none of them worked and the console solely gave cryptic error messages. I gave up and used pen and paper. :(

    • Ccecil 2 days ago ago

      Learning to design parts was a huge "unlock" for me.

      Wasn't just printing other people's designs.

      Great feeling to measure and design something then have it fit perfectly.

      • Gigachad 2 days ago ago

        I just saw a great video on how to replicate parts for printing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcMvTfUfNXo

        Previously I'd get my calipers first and try to model using the direct measurements. The key point imo of the video was to take photos and model based on the photos, and then correct the measurements with your recorded measurements second.

    • 2muchcoffeeman 2 days ago ago

      I had a hard time but I didn’t start with the tutorial first.

      But once I saw their “philosophy” as it were, everything became so much easier.

    • TacticalCoder 2 days ago ago

      That is the spirit! A friend recommended me to buy a Bambu P2S: there are parts I want to print and I don't want to model then send them to have them printed, nor to bother my friend all the time. Funnily enough I've got magnets falling too: for an alarm system on the doors/windows and they don't hold well anymore after the years. Then my car's radar detection device (fully legal) doesn't fit nicely in the phone holder I use to that effect: I want it a specific angle (I want it both inclined and facing towards me a bit). So I'll model those and just print them. There are a few things like that where I keep thinking: "If I had a 3D printer, I'd just print a part".

      Most importantly: I've got a 11 y/o and I think it's cool for the kid to see how it works.

      Already watch a few vids. Doesn't look too hard for simple things.

    • Toutouxc 2 days ago ago

      It was Onshape for me, but the same idea. The concepts take just a few hours to "click" (the idea that you're stacking changes chronologically, which is different from e.g. layers in photo editing), but then you can suddenly build like 80% of all tools and mechanisms that you've ever seen. Yes, slowly and usually using less efficient tools and approaches, but you can make most things look and work right SOMEHOW.

  • _whiteCaps_ 2 days ago ago

    I post this in every FreeCAD thread: If you're going to start designing something with it, use the spreadsheet tool to make everything parametric. You'll save yourself a ton of time as your designs get more complicated.

    Maybe this isn't anything new to experience CAD users. I don't know if other CAD tools do this as I started using FreeCAD after playing with 3D printing.

    • acrophobic 2 days ago ago

      You can also use VarSet[0], which I think is easier than spreadsheet since you don't have to switch the workbench.

      [0]: https://wiki.freecad.org/Std_VarSet

      • MegaDeKay 2 days ago ago

        The downside of spreadsheets is they can really slow your model down. Every cell change triggers a full recompute of the 3D model. VarSets offer much faster performance while sacrificing a couple spreadsheet features. So always choose VarSets over spreadsheets if you can.

        • regularfry 2 days ago ago

          On the one hand it's clearly suboptimal for any change, even ones that nothing depends on, to trigger a recompute. But also it feels like there's something a bit broken with spreadsheet dependency resolution in the first place. I've never been able to nail down a test case, but models seem to go over a performance cliff at a certain point. Ordinarily I'd put it down to something being unavoidably quadratic, but I've had cases where I'm certain that the same model is radically slower after being reloaded off disk.

      • 2muchcoffeeman 2 days ago ago

        Did not know about this. How do you see all the properties?

        • hn92726819 2 days ago ago

          Just click the varset in the tree view and it lists them in the properties pane

    • sho_hn 2 days ago ago

      It's very common (Fusion calls it User Parameters, etc.) and indeed nice practice. FreeCAD has a few ways to do it, Spreadsheets but also free-form properties on objects. It's very flexible in this regard.

      • gligorot 2 days ago ago

        The Fusion implementation sucks. A spreadsheet is a far more natural way to do this, Im surprised FreeCad is doing it better than the paid variant.

        • Lukas_Skywalker 2 days ago ago

          The only issue I have with the Spreadsheet is that I need to add an alias for every value I want to use in the Sketch or Part Design workbench. In practice, this usually looks like

              A       B
              width   2mm
              length  3mm
          
          and for every cell in B I add an alias with the same value as in column A. Is there a way around that?
          • aib 2 days ago ago

            VarSets[0] introduced recently in 1.0 and mentioned in a grand-aunt comment are a good alternative to spreadsheets used this way.

            [0]: https://wiki.freecad.org/Std_VarSet

          • _whiteCaps_ 2 days ago ago
            • ddlsmurf 2 days ago ago

              not "maybe" this is an absolute must if using parameters in a spreadsheet :)

              • regularfry 2 days ago ago

                Its existence has been used by the devs as a reason not to prioritise fixing user-facing bugs. It really should be in core at this point.

            • Lukas_Skywalker 2 days ago ago

              Oh. I didn't even know there were macros. But that looks very useful!

          • jjkaczor 2 days ago ago

            Hmmm - I seem to recall there was at least 1-2 scripts or macros available to help with aliasing.

        • sho_hn 2 days ago ago

          The Fusion implementation is awful - you can adjust one variable, one time, then you have to reopen the dialog to do another. At least for me it's always become non-responsive after a single edit, for years now. I've always assumed I'm just holding it wrong, but I don't know. I've moved on.

        • vablings 2 days ago ago

          The worst part about fusions implementation is that you CANNOT edit the User Parameters while you are viewing the part easily. I like to edit the params and drag it around, but it SUCKS in fusion

      • _whiteCaps_ 2 days ago ago

        Super flexible. I love being able to use Python to manipulate spreadsheet data.

    • cieplok 2 days ago ago

      This is an outdated advice. Spreadsheet is hard to use in comparison to VarSets [0]. Recent changes in 1.1 make them even easier and more intuitive to use.

      [0] https://wiki.freecad.org/Std_VarSet

    • lagrange77 2 days ago ago

      Some CAD systems, i think NX for example, let you give it a reference to an actual Excel (or csv?) file, that you edit in Excel.

    • VerifiedReports 2 days ago ago

      This seems like good advice. To this day I haven't explored spreadsheets or variable sets, which makes resizing stuff a giant pain in the ass.

      This is an area where FreeCAD really needs work: scaling stuff.

    • bmicraft 2 days ago ago

      Or don't and adjust it in the sketcher? If you name your constrains you can just reference them directly elsewhere.

      I think that's much easier as you don't have to go back and forth with a spreadsheet.

      • dmonitor 2 days ago ago

        Tracking down individual values in the sketcher can get annoying too. Just depends on the complexity of your part

    • IshKebab 2 days ago ago

      Other cad tools do support this but in my experience it's always pretty awkward to use. I haven't tried the FreeCAD implementation.

    • sinker 2 days ago ago

      Spreadsheets are better in theory but varsets work so much better in practice.

  • mauvehaus 2 days ago ago

    I’m a furniture maker (like, for money). I’ve been using it for largely 2-D jig making for a few years and it’s been great in conjunction with a ShopBot for precise templates.

    I updated to the 1.1 release candidates, and it’s been great. I do a lot of design for people who are remote, and being able to model things with more complex curves has been a game changer. Sketchup is adequate at the free level and not good enough to convince me to upgrade to paid.

    The Assembly workbench has let me use FreeCAD much more closely to how I think about putting a piece together, and the sketcher-based workflow is a godsend for curved work.

    1.1 is a huge leap forward. I delivered a table last year that I modeled for the client in FreeCAD. The model was super rough. I’m designing chairs for it now, and for the first time, I feel like my skills are the limit, and not the software.

    If you’ve found it clunky before, it still has its rough edges, but it’s legitimately at the point where I think the good parts are good enough for me to overlook the rough edges and move to FreeCAD almost entirely.

  • class3shock 2 days ago ago

    Is it any closer to functioning like Solidworks, NX, Creo, and all the other professional CAD software packages?

    Edit: After opening it up it seems better than before but still not a replacement. I can use the draw tool to create a rectangle but than immediately cannot apply symmetry or equal length constraints until I delete others which shouldn't overlap. Clicking to create a cut or hole opens up a window that does not make it easy to create a new sketch from within or place something from within (but you can just make a sketch were you want something and then open them up and that they lock onto).

    I've generally been a pretty harsh critic of FreeCAD because it represents the only entry in the market of linux CAD and it has frustrated me that it does not just do what is known to work. This seems usable. Still annoying, still not a replacement, but usable. So progress.

    • adiabatichottub 2 days ago ago

      My impression of FreeCAD as a project is that for much if its life it has suffered from a certain amount of developer churn and lack of focus. It's like somebody builds a workbench and gets it working just good enough using a workflow that makes sense to them, but then nobody ever really bothers to flesh out the rest of it, so if you try to do things in a different way that may be perfectly sensible to you the result is a broken mess. Eventually somebody decides they can do better, and maybe they do, but the replacement still has a lot of rough spots that never get finished and the cycle starts again.

      It seems like the development team has gotten much more organized in the last couple years, so I have a lot of hope for the future. I think that good open source parametric CAD is something the world really needs.

      • class3shock 3 hours ago ago

        I hope. I only use Windows at this point because of CAD and FEA software and it gets worse every version. For FEA there are options on Linux but for CAD you have been SOL since most major CAD suites dropped Linux support over a decade ago.

      • AbanoubRodolf 2 days ago ago

        [dead]

    • digdugdirk 2 days ago ago

      It's inherently limited by its geometry kernel. Most "real" CAD suites use something like parasolid, usually with a bunch of extras slapped on top. Making a new one from scratch is a massive undertaking, but I'll remain forever hopeful that we get a new, modern, open-source kernel one of these days...

      • wizzledonker 2 days ago ago

        I don't necessarily agree in this case - OCCT is more than capable for what FreeCAD is offering. Add to that the development trajectory of OCCT also seems to be really taking off recently (with the 8.0-RC, they've re-worked how all B-Spline algorithms work, with implications for all operations).

      • mastermage 2 days ago ago

        Not gonna lie I just hope the rewrite it in rust community takes a stab at it at one point,

        • WillAdams 7 hours ago ago

          There are already at least two geometry kernels being written in scratch in Rust (see fornjot.app for one) --- the problem is the first parts are obvious/easy, so initial progress is rapid, then one hits the difficult/intractable parts and progress stalls, usually to be abandoned.

          There are a couple of doctorates available for folks who are willing to research and publish in this space --- the commercial products are all holding their solutions as trade secrets in their code --- even then though, the edge cases are increasingly difficulty to solve in such a way as to not break what is already working, hence the commercial kernels having _very_ large teams working on them, or at least that is my understanding from what Michael Gibson (former lead developer of Rhino 3D, current developer of Moment of Inspiration 3D) has written on the topic.

      • imtringued 2 days ago ago

        This isn't really true. The vast majority of problems are in the UI. The geometry kernel is limited, but it's good enough for an open source project. Compared to say OpenSCAD, Open CASCADE is leagues ahead.

      • madushan1000 2 days ago ago

        What's wrong with OCCT?

    • imtringued 2 days ago ago

      The entire FreeCAD development philosophy is to not compare FreeCAD with commercial CAD tools. That's a cardinal sin. Basically, they are completely hostile to feedback from people who've spent their entire career doing CAD.

      • prokoudine 19 hours ago ago

        > Basically, they are completely hostile to feedback from people who've spent their entire career doing CAD.

        There's an entire working group in the project comprised of people who have spent their entire career doing CAD and now take care of making FreeCAD get on par with proprietary counterparts.

        There are numerous discussions online where users have constructive conversations with FreeCAD devs and provide useful input to mutual benefit.

        Would you care to point me to a discussion where an actual FreeCAD contributor is completely hostile to someone like you?

  • cgearhart 2 days ago ago

    Slightly unrelated to this story, but I’m curious if anyone has good resources for learning FreeCAD. I have quite a lot of experience with SolidWorks, AutoCAD, OnShape, and similar software, but FreeCAD has always been hard for me to pick up.

    • mft_ 2 days ago ago

      I often recommend https://youtube.com/@deltahedra3d - some good tutorial videos and other excellent FreeCAD content.

    • jjkaczor 2 days ago ago

      MangoJelly on YouTube was my primary learning source, and a few other channels - but his "gelled" with me the best.

      • jjkaczor 2 days ago ago

        Oh wow - over on Reddit, someone mentioned that the Deltahedra YouTuber has started using his own voice, rather than a generated one - and - well, his content is now far more watchable than it was previously!

        • loloquwowndueo 2 days ago ago

          Deltahedra is awesome. “Like a caveman” is hilarious when uttered by the extremely serious ai-generated voice. At least he writes his own material

      • dabiged 2 days ago ago

        My goal this year is to finish his 40ish hour course. Excellent quality course at a good pace.

      • bartvk 2 days ago ago

        Yup, mine too. He has a course on Udemy as well.

    • nirui 2 days ago ago

      Just a pre-heads-up: depending on what you're trying to do, the exact tool and thus tutorial you need maybe slightly different.

      For example, I made a gasket for my mini PC awhile ago using FreeCAD. Designing it was a hell until I discovered the Sheet Metal Workbench in the plugin manager, and just like that, I got it designed & manufactured within ~4 days.

      During my experience, most of my time was spent on learning how to use the Sheet Metal Workbench as well as how it interacts with other FreeCAD builtin features. FreeCAD itself is not that hard to learn.

      Also, there are Piping Workbench too if you want to work on pipes, Wood Work Workbench if you want to do wood work etc, see: https://github.com/FreeCAD/FreeCAD-addons. Use the correct workbench for the right job will save you a lot of time.

    • WillAdams 2 days ago ago

      I am hopeful of:

      https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/245787716-freecad-beginn...

      and will be adding it to my next Amazon order.

    • Alupis 2 days ago ago

      YouTube was very effective for me to learn FreeCAD. I just searched for some FreeCAD tutorials and followed-along. I had zero prior CAD experience though, so I was a "blank slate" in a way.

    • arcanemachiner 2 days ago ago

      This is for after you've done a tutorial or two:

      There was a PDF I had a while back (can't remember the name) which has a bunch of shapes you had to design in a 3D CAD program, with some guiding measurements.

      The shapes got harder to create as you progressed through the book. That was a good, fun way to sharpen my skills after I learned the basics.

      • roel_v 2 days ago ago

        Probably this one: https://ko-fi.com/offsetcad/shop

        I have it, it's great. There's a free one, I paid a few bucks for the full set. Guy has a Youtube channel too where he shows how he does a few of the designs. Good guy, I had some troubles with the payment getting through to him and then the download didn't work for some reason (some weird combination of issues, don't remember details), and he just send me the whole pack without even knowing if I was going to actually put in the effort to make the payment work.

      • digdugdirk 2 days ago ago

        Commenting here in case you or someone else remembers what this is. I'm always on the lookout for practice resources I can recommend to CAD beginners.

    • spacebouy 2 days ago ago

      I'm similar with 20+ years of experience with Autodesk products so freecad was (and often still is) frustrating for me because I know what I need to do but don't know the freecad ways. Claude has been very helpful when I give it the context of my experience because it relates the Autodesk way to the freecad way in its explanations.

  • eblanshey 2 days ago ago

    FreeCAD is really the only serious contender for CAD on Linux. I love how everything is hackable via Python APIs. Every release seems to fix more and more UX issues. I have very high hopes for it to eventually start attracting more commercial usage, much like KiCad and Blender did in their spaces. We need more open software like that.

    • emporas 2 days ago ago

      >I love how everything is hackable via Python APIs.

      It is hackable with languages other than Python too. The Python interpreter has no restrictions to access and execute everything it likes. Contrast this with Gimp, which it's Scheme interpreter cannot access anything except objects inside Gimp.

      This opens some security hole risks in Freecad, given that plugins can execute arbitrary code in the user's machine, but that means one can write C, C++, Rust and automate the gui.

      Freecad btw, very unfortunately, it loads each .so external library only once, and it will load the library only with different name or version number. I lost 5 hours messing up with Python versions and .venv installations till I figured that out.

    • analog31 2 days ago ago

      Almost purely for amusement, I played around with letting Claude generate Python code for FreeCAD. I actually got a coherent part out of it, that I sent out for fabrication. The practical motivation is that my needs are extremely basic (plates, brackets, etc) but I have some physical issues that prevent me from using GUI based CAD directly.

    • criddell 2 days ago ago

      You can run Solidworks or Onshape as well. The former via Wine, the latter in Chrome.

  • sho_hn 3 days ago ago
    • bartvk 2 days ago ago

      To add to this. MangoJelly offers very good tutorials, as well as a full course on Udemy. He released a 4 minute overview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSwvnZ1jsXg

      DeltaHedra, another great YouTube channel, also released a good video that shows the previous and this version next to each other: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYdobpjTypg

      • ChristianJacobs 2 days ago ago

        Thumbs up for both of them, but I must say that DeltaHedra has become my new favourite FreeCAD content creator. Especially after he started using his own voice. His old content was good, but his current his magnifique! The quality of the content he pushes is above and beyond.

  • oliwarner 2 days ago ago

    This is wild. I'll be honest I've long been scared away from FreeCAD because of the overwhelming number of buttons and hotkeys but have recently started 3D printing and using deliberately limited tools like TinkerCAD and OpenSCAD and quickly found those limits. "Simple" things like easing an edge, adding clearance, or cutting threads.

    On the suggestion of one of these comments I've started watching Deltahedra videos on YouTube [and they're great] but after watching his 1.1 release video it looks like half his tutorials could be remade with the new shortcuts. It's also pretty humbling to see someone who knows their tools make something.

    I'd worry if I was AutoDesk. Given the way they treat their customers like pinatas, I'm surprised they've maintained their dominance.

  • vjerancrnjak 2 days ago ago

    I vibecoded a suitcase handle months ago with its Python interface. A pleasant experience.

    • sgt 2 days ago ago

      Would like to hear more about how you did it. Did you connect it up to Claude Code?

      • vjerancrnjak 2 days ago ago

        Just asked for boxes, curved shapes, cylinders, cuts, mirroring, gave exact dimensions and it built up to ~400 lines of FreeCAD python.

        3d printed handle was exactly how i wanted it to be

  • jepj57 2 days ago ago

    This is awesome! Kudos to the developers, they really went above and beyond for this release.

  • GaggiX 3 days ago ago

    I was not expecting so many improvements in this version alone, I'm impressed. I was already using it for 3d printing but now it seems it's getting actually good, makes me wonder how I was able to use the previous version.

    • vjvjvjvjghv 2 days ago ago

      I am also impressed by how much they are improving things. It just sucks that they are stuck with the OpenCasacade kernel so making stability improvements are hard to make in areas like fillets and others.

      • sho_hn 2 days ago ago

        I don't follow Open CASCADE very closely, but it looks like they're on the verge of a new major release (v8.0) themselves that looks like a lot of refactoring and cleanup.

        I don't know hat version FreeCAD is actually bundling, but from GitHub it looks like a fork of 7.8.1?

        • kwk1 2 days ago ago

          Yes, the OpenCASCADE 8.0 release is very promising. There's a FOSDEM presentation from this year by one of their developers which shows what's in the works.

    • dghlsakjg 2 days ago ago

      This is great to hear. I tried it a few years ago, and it was just so far behind onshape and fusion for usability from a beginner perspective.

      This is single want to give it another chance

  • briandw 2 days ago ago

    Looking forward to this update. There are so many hidden gotchas in FreeCAD once you get past the basics. Load of bugs and head scratching issues. However its free and local so can’t complain to much.

  • fileoffset a day ago ago

    FreeCAD is great for small things but any time I tried a complex model I get performance issues, lock ups and crashes pretty consistently. There are still a lot of hard edges.

    I switched to Solid Edge free community edition, much more stable and the workflow is less bespoke.

  • raziel2701 2 days ago ago

    Freecad never really clicked with me. Tried it most recently in 2023 and the user experience just didn't make sense to me. My impression was that freecad is one of those projects were things have been a certain way for a long time (UX/UI wise I mean) and it works for those people so it will never change. For my small cad usage I just went with onshape.

    • WillAdams 2 days ago ago

      My experience is similar, except that I gave up and did OpenSCAD (now PythonSCAD) and am trying Dune 3D.

  • faangguyindia 2 days ago ago

    In coming time you can see freecad massively improving.

    This space lacks good opensource solution.

    I have tried creating my parts, tried tinkercad (which is simple but limited)

    Tried fusion. And pretty much other things don't support mac.

    I've a hunch lots of vibe coders are going to come and launch stuff like freecad and Gimp (which I never liked, can't even get simple tasks done in gimp)

    Future is bright for opensource powered by LLM coding on steroids.

    • Gigachad 2 days ago ago

      Linkedin sentence structure + baseless LLM promotion.

      There is no evidence here the latest update was vibe coded. It's fairly offensive to devalue the work that the FreeCAD developers put in like this.

    • criddell 2 days ago ago

      Freecad is limited by Open Cascade which is the modeling kernel at the heart of the program. I started with Open Cascade then moved on to Granite from PTC (not open source) and the latter is just so much easier, faster, and stable. I’ve heard Parasolid and whatever it is that Autodesk uses these days are both excellent as well.

      It would be nice for there to be a more modern open source modeling library.

  • Rebelgecko 2 days ago ago

    I've designed some basic parts in Tinkercad and openscad but have never really been able to grok Freecad or Fusion. Is there a good resource for making that leap? Just the explosion of menu bar options is a lot

    • MegaDeKay 2 days ago ago

      I really like Mango Jelly Solutions on YouTube but DeltaHedra is very good as well.

    • faangguyindia 2 days ago ago

      Fusion is very easy to learn. If you can use tickercad.

      Just draw sketches, learn to extrude, push pull, and it all depends on how good you are at sketching in 2d, setting up constraints, workflow is simple and it works most of the times but when it doesn't work, it's pain.

      I am pretty sure fusions workflow sucks but I can't put my finger on why. I am still waiting for a better product which is also free and opensource.

      Maybe llm vibe coding will unlock this finally. Where bunch of people come together to take up parameterized 3dmodeling.

  • sgt 2 days ago ago

    I like FreeCAD but I use it so rarely that I forget how to use it by the time I need it again.

    So I returned to Fusion 360 (for the time being).

    Maybe this new FreeCAD version is easier to use?

  • mentalgear 2 days ago ago

    Congrats - the release video is very impressive !

  • rcarmo 2 days ago ago

    TL;DR: I wish they'd just align with Blender on UX, TBH.

    I wish they settled on a nicer UX with less visual clutter. I use Blender and it is a _massively_ more complex application in every regard, yet its right-aligned panel and progressive exposure of toolbars feels infinitely more polished than FreeCad's clunky panel (which is often rendered with huge, oversized fields and buttons) and their legendary five-stacked toolbars.

    Feels like that satirical Gillette ad, and is much harder to use and navigate, especially since quite a few UX options need to be turned on in Preferences to be usable...

    • jazzyjackson 2 days ago ago

      The day I found out there’s a dropdown menu that turns blender into a multi-track video editor on par with Vegas if not Final Cut… blender hides its complexity well.