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You should be able to locate a main script that is named after the add-in itself. Mostly like it will consist of folder named, say, ‘Whatever’ that contains a bunch of files, including a script called ‘Whatever.py.’ The exact names will vary, and the file extension will vary if the script isn’t written in Python, but the general idea is the same. Installing add-insįirst, download the add-in code to your local computer. There is also a nice collection of add-ins available on Github. (I use a Mac and haven’t tested this on a PC.) Finding add-insĪutodesk has provided an extensive catalog of third-party add-ins, which can be browsed by platform and type. Installing and running Fusion 360 add-insĪutodesk provides some gratuitously confusing instructions for installing add-ins, but there seems to be a much simpler way than trying to locate the necessary installation directories.
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