This is the first I’ve heard of Windows having per-application scroll settings, since it’s something you’ve heard of, have any interest in linking to some instructions? It looks like maybe AutoHotKey and some mouse software might be able to do it, but the existence of those softwares doesn’t excuse Adobe. If you’re suggesting reversing the scroll direction for the entire system… no thanks. You’re saying you’ve seriously never heard anyone have an issue with the zoom/scroll direction in AI?
Doing a web search for the words I’ve highlighted may elucidate the existence of this being an old and common complaint, one that most (all?) other graphic-design programs have solved by including an option in their settings.
This? Did the person who made this video leave some functionality out? Because nowhere in that video are connected lines joined at their endpoints, and nothing done in the video can be described as a single step.
This doesn’t seem to be joining lines together either, and seems to require many steps.
There’s a tool in Illustrator called “join”, that tool does stupid things when multiple disconnected shapes are selected.
Basically, I think Illustrator should be able to solve the problem described here…
… without requiring a lot of time/user input. I have no reason to believe that it can. I’m interested in seeing a solution though, if one exists.
In Rhino you’d need to hit Ctrl + A and then click the “join” button.