
Op 06-12-10 18:23, Jasper van de Gronde schreef:
Clipping basically uses the same area as the fill of the object, so does the fill of the xmas tree show the right area? In any case, you can make Inkscape connect two subpaths by using the node tool, selecting the two ends you want to connect and pressing one of two buttons on the node toolbar, one shows a gap being changed into a segment, the other shows a gap plus its two endpoints collapsing into one (regular) point. The second button is most useful when you already have two endpoints in (almost) the same location (just select both endpoints by dragging a selection rectangle around them).
If you still can't figure it out, you may want to send the image (you can send it to me personally if its large for example). That way we can see what's the problem.
What happens now with your Lotus Notes apps - do you make another costly upgrade, or settle for being marooned without product support? Time to move off Lotus Notes and onto the cloud with Force.com, apps are easier to build, use, and manage than apps on traditional platforms. Sign up for the Lotus Notes Migration Kit to learn more. http://p.sf.net/sfu/salesforce-d2d _______________________________________________ Inkscape-user mailing list Inkscape-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/inkscape-user
Yes! I tried that connecting of adjacent nodes *before* I combined the arc-paths in to one path, but then that didn't work. Now it does, and with a visible filling one can see the difference node by node in the connecting process.
And now the clipping works as wanted!
Thanks a lot, Jasper and of course also Andreas.
Jogchum