
In Blender 2.79 and earlier, Blender used right click for selection.

If you do not have a mouse with three buttons, enabling this setting will let you perform MMB -related actions with ALT + LMB Keymap Input → Emulate 3 Button Mouse īlender makes significant use of all three buttons on a standard computer mouse. If you are working on a laptop or if you find the numberpad inconvenient, you can select Emulate Numpad to reassign the 3D View controls to the ordinary numeral keys. Input → Numpad Emulation īlender uses numberpad keys (such as NUM7 ) to control the 3D View and ordinary numeral keys (such as 7 ) to change layers. In case you're not too worried about memory, you can set the Undo Memory Limit field to 0 to remove the memory limit. You can also use the Undo Memory Limit slider to specify the amount of RAM (in megabytes) used for storing the undo levels. However, you can change the number of Undo Steps stored to remember more or less actions, in case you want to conserve memory or simply stay on the safe side. System → Undo Steps īy default, Blender remembers your last 32 actions and allows you to undo them one at a time by either pressing Ctrl + Z or by selecting a frame under Edit → Undo History. You can also adjust the amount of time between each save, by adjusting the "Timer (Minutes)" field. You can turn this on and off using the checkbox labelled "Auto Save".


If you ever need to restore Blender to its factory settings, click File → Defaults → Load Factory Settings Save & Load → Auto Save Īs the name suggests, Auto Save automatically saves the current. In order to get to modeling and rendering sooner, this tutorial will cover only a few of the many user-settable preferences. In Blender 2.79, you will find it under File → User Preferences. To open the Blender Preferences window click Edit → Preferences.
