That would indeed be great, if "Select associated constraints" would work on points as well. It could show all coincidences, point-to-point tangencies, orthogonal, point-on-object and the dimensions. To find the coincidences the constraint filter could be used.jdawg wrote: ↑Thu Jan 27, 2022 8:13 pm Just to clarify on what I am talking about: From what I can tell there is no way to click on a vertex and see what constraints exist on it(I assume that is because it is not "real" piece of geometry). If you click on the 2 lines that form the coincident constraint you get ALL the other irrelevant constraints associated with those lines
For now showing the "Extended information" for the constraints may help, it shows the numbers minus 1 of the geometric elements involved.