I didn't download the plug-in (which may or may not work) but I did mess around with the rotate view tool button (next to the hand tool and zoom tool in the menu at the top of the screen - not the 3D rotate tools in the main toolbar) until the compass thing went away. Hope this helps.

I am having the same troubles on a macbook pro... the compass rose comes on for no apparent reason, then won't go away. When I do select the rotate tool, the rose disappears with mouse down, then reappears when I let up, just the opposite of what is described above.


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Don't mean to resurrect a thread from the dead, but I'm still wondering if there is a remedy for this. I don't want to disable the rotation, just the "compass" visual guide. I really wish seeing it was an option.

Well, that certainly rotates it without showing the compass rose. Thanks. Unfortunately, rotation is impeded by the left-hand side of the screen and it isn't quite as convenient, nor intuitive, to go up there and do that every time you want to rotate. I work in an illustrative/painterly style where I might be rotating constantly as with a sheet of paper. I could see how this would be handy if the rotation was only occasional. The fact that the compass rose doesn't show when you use your method vs. the prescribed method illustrates even more how goofy Adobe's implementation of this very useful feature is. This is a good trick to know, but I don't think I will ever use it with any frequency. Still, thanks.

no matter how i position the camera, the stick is in the way and i dont see the compass. i cant find any "hide stick" control, there is no clickable area on the stick either to make it disappear (like in hornet for example). hide stick checkbox in game settings is ignored.

The SOLIDWORKS Composer Compass Icon in the top-right corner of the viewport is used to help orient your viewpoint within the 3D environment. The compass is a collaborative actor and can be used and controlled just like any other collaborative actor.

How would you look for something that can be in two 'places' at once? The answer, according to Oxford University research into a quantum phenomenon called superposition, seems to be to ask where it isn't rather than where it is.

'Superposition allows an atom to be simultaneously 'here' and 'there'. Electrons behave like tiny magnets which can point both North and South at the same time,' explains Professor Andrew Briggs of Oxford University's Department of Materials. 'This is a distinctive quantum effect; it is quite different from anything in our intuitive every day experience of the world.'

'Just as a magnetic compass aligns itself with the Earth's magnetic field, because its energy is lower when it points that way, so a single electron in a magnetic field has a different energy depending on which way its spin points,' he says.

But in the quantum world nothing is easy: try to look directly at which way this 'quantum compass' is pointing and the very superposition you wanted to catch in the act - of it pointing north and south at the same time - is destroyed. Instead the superposition state will be replaced with one where the magnet is pointing either north or south at random.

The researchers used the magnetism of a single atom of nitrogen trapped in a high-purity diamond as their 'quantum mechanical compass'. Under laser light, the nitrogen atom fluoresced according to how it was magnetised.

Rather than asking, 'Is the magnet pointing north or south?' the team asked, 'Is it pointing not east?' Measurements that confirm 'not east' were still compatible with the quantum superposition of pointing both north and south at the same time. The researchers studied three successive rounds of measurement on the nitrogen quantum compass, and used correlations between different rounds to prove the presence of quantum superposition in their system.

'We had previously performed experiments in which the nuclei of our atoms had two states available to them. Now we have extended this to a superposition of three states, if you like North, South, and East,' Professor Briggs explains.

'The investigation involved an intermediate measurement, which was equivalent to opening one of three boxes and seeing if a ball was not in it. We showed that not only could you not tell which box had been opened; you could not even tell whether a box had been opened. This in turn, thorough some rather detailed reasoning, allowed us to prove experimentally some fundamental conjectures about the nature of reality.'

According to Professor Briggs this work is pushing the boundaries of 'quantumness' and developing techniques that will help to investigate whether quantum superposition applies to larger and more complex objects.

Dr George adds: 'Our confirmation of these subtle quantum predictions is an important step on the road to transplanting quantum mechanics from a theoretical and laboratory curiosity and into the devices which we use in commerce and everyday life. Our vision is to scale up and build computers in which every 'bit' is replaced with a 'quantum bit' that uses superposition as an integral part of their operation.'

The Oxford Science Blog gives you the inside track on science at Oxford University: the projects, the people, and what's happening behind the scenes. Curated by Ruth Abrahams, Media Relations Manager (Research and Innovation).

I'm up to the bit where I craft an Analysis Visor, and am expected to return to my ship by looking for its compass icon, but there's no way to find it since there's so many base icons filling my compass that I can't see it.

North offset is awesome: now I can adjust the compass to match orientation of the display. Is it possible to put a custom image on the background? It could be a top overview of the house. So it would be nice to see, which windows wind actually goes.

I was wondering what are the options for the indicator object? Details on that are missing in the manual: there is a non-active link to (GitHub - tomvanswam/compass-card: A Lovelace card that shows a directional indicator on a compass for Home Assistant). Is it possible to use an mdi-icon as an indicator object?

I know my own abilities with a compass, and they suggest getting lost. So I chose the easiest of the five different courses, and asked fellow newbies Toni Johll of Downers Grove and her date, Kevin Uryasz of Naperville, if they would let me tag along.

Not speedy ones. We finished our 2.3-kilometer course, which a well-paced beginner should do in under an hour, in 66 minutes. The winner had done it in 19 minutes. I say Johll and Uryasz did it in under an hour. I cost them a good 10 minutes asking for their help.

Located in the lower-left corner of the canvas, the 3D compass acts as an orientation and shortcut device. It has active and passive states, depending on whether the pointer is positioned over it. In its passive state, it displays the orientation of the three world axes (X, Y, and Z). In its active state, the compass presents color-coded shortcuts to activate the reference (orthogonal and perspective) cameras. 152ee80cbc

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