1 Nov
2015
1 Nov
'15
6:27 p.m.
On Sun, 2015-11-01 at 07:47 -0700, Brynn wrote:
When more than 1 node are all stacked up, precisely on top of each other -- if it's an even number of nodes, then they appear to be smaller than a regular node. (see in the top aqua circle in the attached ne12.png) It's what you see if you use "Break path at selected nodes".
The effect is caused by the "inverted colours" effect the nodes have when they are being drawn. There is no consideration of existing nodes already on that space and so they're just drawn on top of each other flipping from one apparent state when even to another when odd counted.
One can also see this when two nodes are very close to each other enough to overlap.
Martin,