We continue migrating KCL stdlib functions to use keyword arguments. Next up is the `angledLine` family of functions (except `angledLineThatIntersects, which will be a quick follow-up).
Before vs. after:
`angledLine({angle = 90, length = 3}, %, $edge)`
  => `angledLine(angle = 90, length = 3, tag = $edge)`
`angledLineOfXLength({angle = 90, length = 3}, %, $edge)`
  => `angledLine(angle = 90, lengthX = 3, tag = $edge)`
`angledLineOfYLength({angle = 90, length = 3}, %, $edge)`
  => `angledLine(angle = 90, lengthY = 3, tag = $edge)`
`angledLineToX({angle = 90, length = 3}, %, $edge)`
  => `angledLine(angle = 90, endAbsoluteX = 3, tag = $edge)`
`angledLineToY({angle = 90, length = 3}, %, $edge)`
  => `angledLine(angle = 90, endAbsoluteY = 3, tag = $edge)`
		
	
		
			
				
	
	
	
		
			82 KiB
		
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			82 KiB
		
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
title, excerpt, layout
| title | excerpt | layout | 
|---|---|---|
| segAng | Compute the angle (in degrees) of the provided line segment. | manual | 
Compute the angle (in degrees) of the provided line segment.
segAng(tag: TagIdentifier): number
Arguments
| Name | Type | Description | Required | 
|---|---|---|---|
| tag | TagIdentifier | The line segment being queried by its tag | Yes | 
Returns
Examples
exampleSketch = startSketchOn(XZ)
  |> startProfileAt([0, 0], %)
  |> line(end = [10, 0])
  |> line(end = [5, 10], tag = $seg01)
  |> line(end = [-10, 0])
  |> angledLine(angle = segAng(seg01), length = 10)
  |> line(end = [-10, 0])
  |> angledLine(angle = segAng(seg01), length = -15)
  |> close()
example = extrude(exampleSketch, length = 4)