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This triangle is also called a drafting triangle, hence the name. [1] This triangle is also half of an equilateral triangle , and a polydrafter's cells must consist of halves of triangles in the triangular tiling of the plane; consequently, when two drafters share an edge that is the middle of their three edge lengths, they must be reflections ...
Andrew_Loomis,_Successful_Drawing.pdf (312 × 435 pixels, file size: 22.69 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 151 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Traditional drafter at work A drafter in Portugal in the 1970s, using a drafting machine. A drafter (also draughtsman / draughtswoman in British and Commonwealth English, draftsman / draftswoman, drafting technician, or CAD technician in American and Canadian English) is an engineering technician who makes detailed technical drawings or CAD designs for machinery, buildings, electronics ...
Books from the Library of Congress essentialsofdraf00sven (User talk:Fæ/IA books#Fork5) (batch 1900-1924 #17596) File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
Drafting or draughting may refer to: Campdrafting, an Australian equestrian sport; Drafting (aerodynamics), slipstreaming; Drafting (writing), writing something that is likely to be amended; Technical drawing, the act and discipline of composing diagrams that communicates how something functions or is to be constructed. E.g.: Architectural drawing
Books from the Library of Congress freehanddrawingd00kush (User talk:Fæ/IA books#Fork5) (batch 1900-1924 #20771) File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
Getty Research Institute cyclopediaofdraw02keni (User talk:Fæ/IA books#Fork21) (batch 1000-1924 #9892) File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
Note that it may still be copyrighted in jurisdictions that do not apply the rule of the shorter term for US works (depending on the date of the author's death), such as Canada (50 p.m.a.), Mainland China (50 p.m.a., not Hong Kong or Macao), Germany (70 p.m.a.), Mexico (100 p.m.a.), Switzerland (70 p.m.a.), and other countries with individual treaties.