Prim Master is a prim alignment tool for builders, store owners, designers and much more. It's a great tool for anyone who does anything with prims, whether it's building a castle or lining up the pictures on your wall at home. For example, I'm a builder, but I also used a tool like this to line up the exhibits in my gallery, a job which would have taken much longer without it!
Prim Master is easy to use -- simply click the prims you want to line up, click the alignment tools on the HUD, and your prims line up perfectly every time.
You can join prims perfectly, seamlessly, down to 5 decimal places of accuracy (the standard SL object editor only offers 3 places!) You can be sure your prims touch precisely, with no gaps and no flicker-causing overlap. Align prim centers with each other, or perfectly align the edges of different-sized prims. Prim Master features exclusive Multi-Touch, which allows you to join multiple prims in a single operation!
Prim Master works with prims of any size, from the biggest megaprims, down to the tiniest standard prims.
This is an early, very basic version of this product. For this reason, I am making it free for now. I don't plan to keep it free for long, though; I already have another feature nearly done, and will start charging for it then, if not sooner. Many more features are planned. Upgrades are and always will be free, which means that if you get Prim Master now, you'll never have to pay a Linden Buck for it. All I ask in return is that you let me know how you use it, whether it works for you, any ways that it doesn't work for you, and what else you would like it to do.
Join the Prim Master Users group in-world for discussion and announcement of updates.
Caveats:
* Prim Master works best with unrotated prims, or prims rotated in multiples of 90 degrees: 90, 180 and 270. It does not match rotation between prims when joining, so other rotations will not result in a perfectly flat join, but you can join your prims, link them and then rotate.
* Prim Master may not produce a perfectly flat join when working with cut prims, or some prim types such as the Prism. In many cases it will produce a proper join, however; the only way to know is try it. This limitation is due to a bug in SL. Once this bug is fixed, I'll be issuing an update. If you'd like to help speed that up, go vote for this issue to get fixed. You'll have to log in there, but it's part of the SL site, just use your SL name and password.
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