How can I rotate multiple objects at a time on Draw.io (relative, not absolute rotation)?
Alright, so I'm creating a card game, and there's an icon and number on the top left of the card. On the bottom right, it should be mirrored so that if the card is dealt upside-down, time is not wasted. A good example is standard playing cards with the numbers and royals mirrored on both sides.
My icon consists of multiple shapes in different rotations (20,5,350,335 degrees), so it would be tedious to manually rotate. Example: https://gyazo.com/1951f9bf82435518fe19a070d54b5ae6
When I try to rotate all of them, there is no button for relative rotation -- I can only enter an absolute rotation such as 90 degrees in the format panel, and then my icon is messed up.
For now, I ended up manually rotating all of them and changing the coordinates so that the manual rotations would fit as a whole. Maybe I might be wasting my time, though.
draw.io
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Alright, so I'm creating a card game, and there's an icon and number on the top left of the card. On the bottom right, it should be mirrored so that if the card is dealt upside-down, time is not wasted. A good example is standard playing cards with the numbers and royals mirrored on both sides.
My icon consists of multiple shapes in different rotations (20,5,350,335 degrees), so it would be tedious to manually rotate. Example: https://gyazo.com/1951f9bf82435518fe19a070d54b5ae6
When I try to rotate all of them, there is no button for relative rotation -- I can only enter an absolute rotation such as 90 degrees in the format panel, and then my icon is messed up.
For now, I ended up manually rotating all of them and changing the coordinates so that the manual rotations would fit as a whole. Maybe I might be wasting my time, though.
draw.io
New contributor
add a comment |
Alright, so I'm creating a card game, and there's an icon and number on the top left of the card. On the bottom right, it should be mirrored so that if the card is dealt upside-down, time is not wasted. A good example is standard playing cards with the numbers and royals mirrored on both sides.
My icon consists of multiple shapes in different rotations (20,5,350,335 degrees), so it would be tedious to manually rotate. Example: https://gyazo.com/1951f9bf82435518fe19a070d54b5ae6
When I try to rotate all of them, there is no button for relative rotation -- I can only enter an absolute rotation such as 90 degrees in the format panel, and then my icon is messed up.
For now, I ended up manually rotating all of them and changing the coordinates so that the manual rotations would fit as a whole. Maybe I might be wasting my time, though.
draw.io
New contributor
Alright, so I'm creating a card game, and there's an icon and number on the top left of the card. On the bottom right, it should be mirrored so that if the card is dealt upside-down, time is not wasted. A good example is standard playing cards with the numbers and royals mirrored on both sides.
My icon consists of multiple shapes in different rotations (20,5,350,335 degrees), so it would be tedious to manually rotate. Example: https://gyazo.com/1951f9bf82435518fe19a070d54b5ae6
When I try to rotate all of them, there is no button for relative rotation -- I can only enter an absolute rotation such as 90 degrees in the format panel, and then my icon is messed up.
For now, I ended up manually rotating all of them and changing the coordinates so that the manual rotations would fit as a whole. Maybe I might be wasting my time, though.
draw.io
draw.io
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New contributor
edited 3 hours ago
CreativiTimothy
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asked 5 hours ago
CreativiTimothyCreativiTimothy
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2 Answers
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ABSOLUT ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
RELATIVE ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- rotate object as desired
RELATIVE ROTATION TO OUTSIDE POINT:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
- rotate object as desired based on outside point
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Alright, I found it out eventually for relative rotation. You need to group the objects first.
- Hold CTRL key and select the objects to group.
- Click Arrange -> Group, or CTRL + G
- Proceed to rotate as you would with one object, as the grouped objects are now considered one object (but you can un-group them).
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
ABSOLUT ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
RELATIVE ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- rotate object as desired
RELATIVE ROTATION TO OUTSIDE POINT:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
- rotate object as desired based on outside point
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
add a comment |
ABSOLUT ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
RELATIVE ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- rotate object as desired
RELATIVE ROTATION TO OUTSIDE POINT:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
- rotate object as desired based on outside point
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
add a comment |
ABSOLUT ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
RELATIVE ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- rotate object as desired
RELATIVE ROTATION TO OUTSIDE POINT:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
- rotate object as desired based on outside point
ABSOLUT ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
RELATIVE ROTATION:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- rotate object as desired
RELATIVE ROTATION TO OUTSIDE POINT:
- hold CTRL key and select objects you want to rotate
- press CTRL+G to lock them in a group
- go to Arrange
- select Direction
- select Rotation
- enter the desired value
- press Apply
- rotate object as desired based on outside point
edited 3 hours ago
answered 5 hours ago
MARK MY ANSWERMARK MY ANSWER
5,18841126
5,18841126
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
Actually, this just does absolute rotation, not relative rotation.
– CreativiTimothy
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
@CreativiTimothy I see, answer updated...
– MARK MY ANSWER
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Alright, I found it out eventually for relative rotation. You need to group the objects first.
- Hold CTRL key and select the objects to group.
- Click Arrange -> Group, or CTRL + G
- Proceed to rotate as you would with one object, as the grouped objects are now considered one object (but you can un-group them).
New contributor
add a comment |
Alright, I found it out eventually for relative rotation. You need to group the objects first.
- Hold CTRL key and select the objects to group.
- Click Arrange -> Group, or CTRL + G
- Proceed to rotate as you would with one object, as the grouped objects are now considered one object (but you can un-group them).
New contributor
add a comment |
Alright, I found it out eventually for relative rotation. You need to group the objects first.
- Hold CTRL key and select the objects to group.
- Click Arrange -> Group, or CTRL + G
- Proceed to rotate as you would with one object, as the grouped objects are now considered one object (but you can un-group them).
New contributor
Alright, I found it out eventually for relative rotation. You need to group the objects first.
- Hold CTRL key and select the objects to group.
- Click Arrange -> Group, or CTRL + G
- Proceed to rotate as you would with one object, as the grouped objects are now considered one object (but you can un-group them).
New contributor
edited 2 hours ago
MARK MY ANSWER
5,18841126
5,18841126
New contributor
answered 3 hours ago
CreativiTimothyCreativiTimothy
1255
1255
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
CreativiTimothy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
CreativiTimothy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
CreativiTimothy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
CreativiTimothy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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