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Sarah814

: Display zero-width strokes in Illustrator? I'm working on some die-cutting designs in Illustrator. I have made a symbol out of a 200px-wide rectangular shape. The stroke around the shape's perimeter

@Sarah814

Posted in: #AdobeIllustrator #Path #Stroke

I'm working on some die-cutting designs in Illustrator.

I have made a symbol out of a 200px-wide rectangular shape. The stroke around the shape's perimeter has a thickness of 1px. As a result, the symbol has a width of 201px.

I would like the symbol to not include the stroke thickness in the dimensions of the symbol.

Things I have tried:


Converting the strokes to guides. While they show up light-blue in symbol isolation mode, they are invisible otherwise.
Giving the shape a fill. This works, but I do not want the shape to have a fill.
Giving the stroke a thickness of 0. They turn invisible and I cannot see them.


Thank you for any suggestions!

Edit: Further complicating things: the path is open. That is, one edge of the rectangle has no strokeā€”so I can't change the stroke alignment.

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@Gail6891361

You can set a stroke to a master layer. This way your symbol can have no stroke while the user sees a stroke because the layer draws in one. This is a bit like most CAD applications handle things. Do this:


Select the circle next to the name of your object
In appearances panel click on the new stroke button

Edit the stroke settings


Every non stroked path now has the stroke you selected drawn on top of it. If you dont want to affect the layer then you can use a sub layer or group instead.

Alternatively you could draw the object 1 pixel thinner by moving sides in by 0.5 pixels. This would have the added advantage of aligning the strokes to the pixel dimension grid.

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@Tiffany317

If I understand correctly you should be able to align the stroke to the outside of the shape to preserve the measurement.

The three shapes below are the same size (.75"). The top square's stroke is aligned to center (usually by default), the center square's stroke is aligned to inside and the bottom stroke aligned to outside. The width of the outside stroke is not counted in the measurement.

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