Maybe a dumb question about coordinates (Z coord on point picking)
Posted: Fri Apr 17, 2026 5:56 am
Hello there,
there is something i can't get even after some time spent tweaking and checking my setup.
For i have a world-coordinates-referenced point cloud,
a -yellow- plane (set wireframe) which is set to be on Z=1000
here the screenshots:
so... why if i shift-pick a point which is correctly shown as Z0 = -91.231567, then the same widget reports a "Coord. Z = -1035.231567" ?
here's a second screenshot, i added a second -green- plane which is set on Z=0
As the single point picking returns (or does it?) an absolute coordinate data, why shouldn't be that Z0 IS EQUAL to Coord.Z?
They are not different values, an offset is applied (note the decimals, they are the same)
This seems strange at least, but it must be either wrong or wrong is my take on it (and my two cents are bet on the latter)
I do not have any kind of global shifts, or somehow voluntary altered the coordinate system.
By the way, i used shift-picking but the other methods return the same data
there is something i can't get even after some time spent tweaking and checking my setup.
For i have a world-coordinates-referenced point cloud,
a -yellow- plane (set wireframe) which is set to be on Z=1000
here the screenshots:
so... why if i shift-pick a point which is correctly shown as Z0 = -91.231567, then the same widget reports a "Coord. Z = -1035.231567" ?
here's a second screenshot, i added a second -green- plane which is set on Z=0
As the single point picking returns (or does it?) an absolute coordinate data, why shouldn't be that Z0 IS EQUAL to Coord.Z?
They are not different values, an offset is applied (note the decimals, they are the same)
This seems strange at least, but it must be either wrong or wrong is my take on it (and my two cents are bet on the latter)
I do not have any kind of global shifts, or somehow voluntary altered the coordinate system.
By the way, i used shift-picking but the other methods return the same data