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Yep now with this circle tip I can finally draw a circle which is great because circles are cool especially in the one situation where I really just need a perfect circle specifically only on a canvas that is easily turn-able. So that's how those compasses work that I had in elementary school.
Now come would come the steps to consolidate and improve upon paper. Then I think remarkable has a chance comes to grow and become the best PDF manager by slowly adding intuitive tools to PDF layers. I.E a Typing layers, line art / vector layers. Another dimension remarkable already is getting really good is the file system.
For circle , instead of moving your whole hand just move the wrist in circular motion. For oval draw a cross then try to connect the oval on all four points. You can try making smaller strokes and build upon it to draw shapes. Practice makes perfect. Hope it helps you ☺️☺️.
Hold your pencil/pen down, extend your pinky finger firmly, and place the tip of it at the center of your circle. Rotate the notebook around the pinky, using it as a pivot point, while pressing the pencil/pen down onto the paper. You can get a wide range of circles with this technique, depending on how big your hand is and how you hold the ...
895 subscribers in the nealfun community. neal.fun. well yeah it would be, but if it was fail it would say something like (wrong way), (draw a full circle), or (too slow), it doesn't say any of that and it shows me my high score, also it lets me copy that and it says my circle is 0.0% perfect or something, so i don't think it is a fail, it is just a small percentage that the game rounds down
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However if you draw a single point with your pencil, the dot you make will have a height and a width. They will be very small but the will exist, which means your point is not perfect. This same logic applies to shapes, a perfect circle, in theory, has an edge that has only one dimension (circumference or length, depending on how you define it).
If it has to be a perfect circle, I don't draw it freehand. Same as if I have to draw a perfectly straight line, I use a straightedge to do it. You can draw a lot of circles in the same place with a light pressure on the pencil. Then you use them as a guide to make a circle with a hard pressure.
Our motor neurons have to learn how to perform certain cognitive commands through practice. Because your eye is better (at least more trained) at finding minute imperfections than your hand is at drawing. It is very easy to draw circles. Just hold the pen steady and rotate your paper about the center.
I would think a note taking app would have a shape pallet - pick a circle icon (or hit the [modifier]-c key) tap the center, drag the radius. And with flyouts for 2 point, tan tan, 3 point, etc. 3 picks max gets you your shape. Shame it doesn't exist. I use Onenote in University and it is really great.