Now follow these steps.
You can practice dragging grips to change the size and shape of the cube, and while you do, make the following observations.
In this case the diameter of the hole is the d4 parameter.
Before you finish practicing, be sure to try to adjust the cube by dragging an edge or face that is adjacent to the fixed node on the sketch profile. The edge that cannot be adjusted is the edge that is formed by the extrusion. It is perpendicular to the sketch profile, and one end of it is on the Fixed node.
Why is this example important?
This is a very good example of why you need to fully constrain all of your sketches. If the node on the corner of the sketch profile was not constrained to the origin of the sketch you can drag the edge away from the origin. If this was a more complicated part, the effect of doing this may not be obvious, and you would not know that the profile is no longer on the origin.. So an under-constrained sketch may change without you knowing it.
As a rule, I always suggest that you fully constrain all your sketches, and locate them on projected geometry.
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