Hello!
I work on a grafic. It uses text, which already is converted to paths. The counters of my caracters were kicked out of their original positions, due to a spurious action. Now I’m trying to bring them back into the already existing mask/path.
Selecting the counters’ paths is no problem here. It’s more about, how to get and merge those vectors into the mask-layer (the one marked with an arrow on my screenshot).
I tried the direct-selection-tool, copy/pasting, dragging, cmd J – none of those methods brought any satisfaction.
Can anybody please help? Hints would be much appreciated!
Merci ![]()
http://vektorgarten.de/illu-menus.html (German <> English)
http://vektorgarten.de/illustrator-polyglott.html (9 languages)
This error-message says “No compound path could be made. A compound path cannot be generated by the combination of a clipping mask with a simple path”.
It’s not clear why, if having the counter grouped, influences the execution of the prompt here. Should I deactivate the clipping function in order to compound the paths, and then, reactivate it in order to fulfill the clipping? Not sure if this can be performed.
Some hints would be very much appreciated ![]()
Not really certain why you'd be working on a non-English version if you don't understand the language it is in, but....
Select the current clipping mask path. Object > Clipping Mask > Release. Then select all the paths you want to be part of the mask. And Object > Compound Path > Make, then Object > Clipping Mask > Make.
The warning is basically saying it can't make a compound path using a clipping mask, so remove the mask, make the compound, then apply the mask again.
Hey Scott,
Your English and your hints are perfect – it’s more a question of interpretation on my side, as I started this thread watching on the german version of Illustrator (prompts & documentation in German) and had no equivalents-list for tool-descriptions in foreign languages. Adobe Help seems to deploy the user’s manual in one’s programm-version only. Or did I miss something? Martina Gause provided two excellent links. They make it much easier to compare the prompts between English and whatever language.
Reffering: I was much too cautious with my file as a result it was delivered to me with a huge amount of layers and a quite complex structure – but I took the way you described in your next-to-last post:
1) releasing the clipping mask
2) took the counters out of their group, so they could stand together on the same hierachie-level with the layers issued of the clipping mask
3) re-selected and re-compounded all the paths
Now it seems to work, even if I had to rebuild two elements (don’t know why they disappeared).
Would you say this “compound prompt” does the same job as the pathfinder function, if we only look at “putting-pathes-together”?
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SPHH wrote:
Would you say this “compound prompt” does the same job as the pathfinder function, if we only look at “putting-pathes-together”?
In general, yes. Pathfinder creates Compound Paths when needed. So basically, Pathfinder is merely doing that step in an automated manner.
I suggested the Compound Path command becuase you already had all the paths. You just needed them to interact with each other in a specific manner. If you didn't have all the paths, I would have suggested Pathfinder to create the shapes you need. And at that time,Pathfinder would have taken care of the "compound" part of the structure.
SPHH wrote:
Now it seems to work, even if I had to rebuild two elements (don’t know why they disappeared).
This may have been a color or stacking issue. Before running the Compound Path commaand it can sometimes be helpful to ensure all object have the same fill color applied to them. It's also best to ensure all counters are at the top of the stacking order.
[scott w] wrote:
This may have been a color or stacking issue. Before running the Compound Path commaand it can sometimes be helpful to ensure all object have the same fill color applied to them.
This is precisely what I think makes Illustrator quite complicated at that point. Assuming you’ve built your elements (see screenshot), adding paths to the already existing ones forces you to unbuild. Mostly, the designs are quite complex and you’re not keen on introducing potentially new error sources by let’s say, throwing your elements’s coloration out, then applying it to each one of them new after compounding. I think Illustrator could become more convinient here – or is there another best practice? What do you think?
The magenta triangles disappeared after conpounding and had to be rebuild using a clone of one of the elements next to them. That was much easier than integrating the counters back into the compounded paths, for these layers were on the same hierarchy, with no group interferring.
(magenta = just in order to mark the elements beneath)
I'm with Monika and Scott I do not know why you need a compound path.
But perhaps this will help. I tried to do some simply art that would behave the same way and i think I did accomplish it.
I then open the attributes panel thinking it the fill rule but leaving it as the default was the way to go.
However if you notice that there is at first a triangle that does not fill, that works with a gradient or a flat fill color.
But if in the attribute panel I select to reverse the path's direction, does not matter which direction I choose, the triangle which is not filled will fill in?
Hello Monika, Scott and Wade,
Sorry I forgot to bring up a detail: “The magenta triangles disappeared after conpounding THE COUNTERS WITH THE REMAINING PATH (marked blue here / the clipping mask of the page)”.
The two triangles, formerly marked in magenta (magenta is just a mark-up), disappeared due to an action performed on the outer clipping path of the page (marked blue here). I had to extend and then to crop this path, in order to bring its side lines vertical. It seems “cropping the clipping mask” influenced the objects inside the group in some way. So, you’re right, there is no need for the triangles to be compounded. The necessity of compounding came up in relation with the counters, who also were kicked off from their original stack’s position due to the cropping step. The cropping step affected both, the counters and also the two triangles.
I’m sorry for not having been able to come back sooner to you!
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