• @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    Sadly, I couldn’t fine even one that was at least usable in my experience.

    I model a lot for 3D-printing, and of course tried FreeCAD.
    It had a very steep learning curve and is very unique in its workflow, compared to other CADs.
    I somehow got the hang of it, but it still was very much not usable.
    It crashed every 5 minutes, the UI is very convoluted, and even the simplest tasks take half an hour, compared to the 2 minutes it takes on other software.

    Since Fusion360 doesn’t work on Linux, there’s pretty much only Onshape.
    Apart from being a SaaS-product (“cloud based”), and therefore out of your control, which I strongly dislike, it’s absolutely great UX wise.


    But good news, there are people working on a solution. I will add the name of the project later if I can remember it again.
    Edit: found it: https://github.com/dune3d/dune3d

    There are also people forking the engine and some core features of FreeCAD and want to turn it into something better, but I don’t know if they’ve made something out of that idea yet.

    • @[email protected]
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      611 months ago

      I personally never had a problem with Free cad. It’s the only cad software I ever used, so I can’t compare it to others but it just worked after I learned some basics.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      But good news, there are people working on a solution. I will add the name of the project later if I can remember it again.

      Im definitely interested as well, we got plasticity I suppose, but that doesn’t have a timeline and is missing a lot of more advanced features

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          Thanks! That’s awesome, I’ll check it out. Hopefully it will one day be able to match more professional software in terms of functionality and stability

      • @ikidd
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        111 months ago

        Nobara has a pile of graphics optimizations, as well as OS fixes for programs like Blender and daVinci Resolve. It should work well for other CAD programs.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        At this time Fedora. I used both the Flatpak and native package, but both were very prone to crashes.
        I used it for some time too on Windows, same problem. It isn’t a Linux issue, it’s a FreeCAD issue. It’s too convoluted and bloated, while probably not having enough maintainers.

        • yianiris
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          -111 months ago

          You should try arch or an arch fork, arch doesn’t leave broken upstream pkgs unpatched too long, either they work or they are out

          @Guenther_Amanita

          • @[email protected]
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            211 months ago

            I am already.
            While I don’t plan to use FreeCAD in the near future, I already use Arch in Distrobox on Fedora Atomic. I quite like it, but still mostly refer to Flatpaks first when possible, since they have a lot of users and are better sandboxed.