
Common UI Widget Library and Widget Styling.
OMNIGRAFFLE 5.0 MAC
OmniGraffle 6 lands today in the Mac App Store. Things to maybe get around to some nice day Get the latest omnigraffle info from our tech-obsessed editors with breaking. Best to move your star once it's been drawn if you are doing more than one.

(If you want odd numbers of sides, I have an OmniGraffle stencil with polygons galore.) All your snow-globe drawing fantasies come true at once.Įnter some number of points (probably best with less than 7) and again, pointiness of zero and you'll end up with a regular polygon with twice the number of sides as the number of points you entered. The interesting thing about this is that you can delete points from the 'circle' to make flattened areas. If you draw a 'star' with around 30 or so points, and set the pointiness to zero, you end up with what looks like a nice smooth circle. Their one is a lot easier to resize, but with mine. This matches very closely the standard star shape provided in OmniGraffle. (This is no longer a problem in OmniGraffle version 4.)Ī classically-shaped star, where every fourth side is parallel, can be had be setting 5 points, and a pointiness of 62. When you've got it the size you want, delete the extra one.

You'll now get the usual eight little resizing handles. To easily re-size a star, duplicate it ( Copy then Paste), then select them both. Small children should be supervised when using any star with a pointiness of more than 70. 50 makes for a nice sensibly pointy star, not too sharp, not too blunt. Something between 0 and 100 is what it's looking for. The following window asks for 'star pointiness'.In the first window that appears, enter the number of points your star is to have, like it says.In OmniGraffle open a new document and select > Star.
