A compass
A try-square is a woodworking tool used for marking and measuring a piece of wood.
A tri square is a carpenter's tool that is used to check and mark right angles during construction work.
An arc is a portion of the circumference of a circle, and the circumference of a circle is the distance round a circle. So an arc looks like a semicircle, it is part of the circumference. Arcs are often used in constructions, for example if you were asked to draw an angle of 60 degrees without a protractor you would draw arcs following a special method. Arcs are drawn using a tool called a pair of compasses.
it is a try square
Answer--------------------First open MS-Paint ---> select rectangle tool ---> now, to draw a square, press shift and drag (till square does not fits your size requirement) OR to draw a rectangle drag free (without shift).----------- ends!!!!Hope this helpsCheers-------------------------
In most drawing and graphics software, holding down the shift key constrains a dragged box to a square. So, select a "draw rectangle" tool, then hold down the shift key while you click and drag yourself a square.
with corel draw you can output in all common formats
an L-square, a T-square, or a protractor
There might be a specific tool for this, but what I do is separate a line into three equal parts and (with all three parts selected) stretch them from end to end of the rectangle. Then I make two more copies of the rectangle and just stretch them into place, using the width of the original triangle and the lengths of the lines as a reference.
A protractor is used to draw a right angle of 90 degrees.
use an arc tool
type tool, rectangle, line, crop, pick (select object), marquee tool, many, many color swatches, drop shadow tool, bevel and emboss, 3d and so on...
You can draw a circle in assembly program by using a compass-like tool. Secure the tip of the compass and then rotate the compass tool so that it completes the circle.
using l edit
A compass is a geometric tool used to draw circles.
You'd use the Pen Tool to create the "swoosh" in question. Alternately, you could draw a rectangle which was as long as you needed the final art to be and then use the Direct Selection Tool and the Convert Anchor Point Tool to manipulate the points on the rectangle to arrive at the "swoosh" shape you have in mind. You could probably also use one of the Brush Tool variants to create a kind of freehand "swoosh" but I'd go the Pen Tool / Convert Anchor Point Tool route for greater accuracy.