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Combining Multiple Objects
The result of the combination is given in the following illustration:
At first glance, this can seem rather surprising. Fortunately, once you have understood the
rules governing combination in OpenOffice.org, it will become clear:
The attribute of the resulting object is the attribute of the object that is the furthest back
from the viewer. In our example, it is the circle. The resulting drawing has the same color,
line thickness, etc., as the circle.
The result of the combination is a Bezier curve.
Where the objects overlap, the overlapping zones will be represented as a filled or empty
zone depending on the number of overlaps. When there is an even number of overlaps,
you get an empty space (represented by a 'hole') in the drawing. When the overlaps are odd
in number, you get a filled area. In our example, we can count the number of
superpositions:
Shape Merge Functions
The functions Merge, Subtract, and Intersect, can be reached though the group's context
menu, under the heading Shapes.
Merge
The result of applying the Merge function to the shapes corresponds to the greatest surfaces
of the selected objects being merged into one object (also known as a union).
Draw Guide 81
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