Immediately after switching the page, it will work with CSR.
Please reload your browser to see how it works.
https://web.archive.org/web/20211126210706/https://wiki.shap...
(trying to get that back into shape at: https://old.reddit.com/r/shapeoko/wiki/cad ob. discl., I work for Carbide 3D)
and FreeCAD seemed simultaneously the most ambitious, and the most promising --- hopefully v1.0 will pay off on that, and result in a tool which can be used widely --- but it will eventually need some sort of commercial support. Ondsel seemed a good fit for that, and it's unfortunate that they didn't make it.
Notable other options include:
- Solvespace --- a venerable and simple tool, it is barebones to the extent that many folks won't be able to accept it
- Dune 3D --- this is an incredibly elegant and usable tool, which I hope FreeCAD will look to in terms of UI, previously discussed here previously: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37979758 and https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40228068
- BRL-CAD --- _the_ venerable choice, but the interface is so old school and programming-like, most folks won't even consider it
- OpenSCAD --- 3D modeling for programmers --- the great thing about it is, anything which one can describe mathematically can be modeled --- the awful thing about it is, what one can model is limited by one's mathematical knowledge. A further concern is that DXFs from it are just polylines, no arcs --- I've been working to address that using OpenPythonSCAD at: https://github.com/WillAdams/gcodepreview
LibreCAD is workable for 2D, though I only use it for file conversion.
The other notable options are OnShape (free for public designs), Alibre (quite affordable), Solidworks for Makers (for values which include non-commercial usage watermarking).
I’d been learning CAD with Ondsel, and have printed off half-a-dozen of my models to help around the house.
If this comment finds its way to the team, I just want to say thanks.
The topo naming fix and the assembly workbench were enormous contributions to the community that will be with us always.
But I really believed in Ondsel’s vision for an online repo for 3d models.
Some of the comments already mention how blender's existence is predicated upon it filling a niche in certain senses, instead of trying to achieve feature parity with an entrenched giant. That makes sense, and it's unfortunate, as this space could use an open source option with Blender's polish. In my own industry, mining, I am certain some commercial interests would happily make their product an extension/plugin for a polished FreeCAD (or other), were it at that point.