Autocad Core Notes

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FACULTY OF ENGINEERING

DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING

AUTOCAD
CORE NOTES

Lecturer: I. Ebrahim

Student Name & Number


COURSE OBJECTIVES

After completing this course, you will be able to:

 Navigate the interface, open and close files, and use the Zoom commands to adjust
the display of objects on the screen.
 Describe units, function keys, and coordinate systems and create basic objects, using
different data input techniques, object snaps and object snap tracking.
 Select, modify, and adjust the properties of objects using object grips and the Move,
Copy, Rotate and Mirror commands.
 Create and manage layers and linetypes and obtain geometric information from
objects in the drawing.
 Modify objects by changing their size, shape, orientation, or geometric composition
using Trim, Extend, Offset, and other commands.
 Create layouts, and create and manipulate viewports on the layouts.
 Create and edit annotation objects.
 Create, edit, and manage dimensions and dimension styles.
 Enhance the drawing's appearance with hatch patterns.
 Create blocks and reuse them in your drawings using the Insert command.
 Create and use page setups, and plot your designs from layouts and model space.

PREREQUISITES

This guide is designed for the new user who needs to know the essential commands
necessary for professional 2D drawing, design, and drafting using AutoCAD. No
previous computer aided
design (CAD) experience is required.
It is recommended that you have a working knowledge of:
 Microsoft Windows
 Technical & Civil Drawing
NAVIGATING THE WORKING ENVIRONMENT

This lesson describes the working environment and the types of interface elements that you must
become familiar with if you are to become proficient in AutoCAD.
Before you begin creating drawings, you should familiarize yourself with the interface.
After completing this lesson, you will be able to start the application, activate the appropriate
workspace, and identify key parts of the interface.

The following image identifies key interface elements:

1. Application Menu
2. Quick Access Toolbar
3. Info Center
4. Title Bar
5. Ribbon
6. Drawing Area
7. Crosshairs
8. Command Window
9. Status bar
Workspaces Defined

When you launch the application, the interface elements displayed are only those associated with
the active workspace. A workspace is a task-oriented drawing environment oriented in such a
way as to provide you with only the tools and interface elements necessary to accomplish the
tasks relevant to that environment.

By default, AutoCAD has four workspace configurations:


1. 2D Drafting & Annotation
2. 3D Modeling
3. AutoCAD Classic
4. Initial Setup Workspace

AutoCAD is shown here with the 2D Drafting & Annotation workspace active.

AutoCAD is shown here with the 3D Modeling workspace active.


AutoCAD is shown here with the AutoCAD Classic workspace active.

After you start the program you can switch to the desired workspace. The application will open
with the last workspace used. The Workspace Switching dropdown list is accessed in the lower
right corner of the AutoCAD window on the Status Bar.

Keyboard Input

Using the keyboard is familiar to everyone who works with computers. For much of the work that
you do in AutoCAD you use the keyboard, but you use a few keystrokes more often than others.

Special Keys

You use the following keys most often. These keys have special meaning to the software.
 Use the ESC key to cancel all current actions and return to the Command: prompt.
 Press the ENTER key following all keyboard input. You also complete many commands
by pressing ENTER.
 Pressing the SPACEBAR is equivalent to pressing the ENTER key and is often easier to
use.
 Pressing the SPACEBAR or ENTER at the Command: prompt repeats the last command
used.
 Pressing the UP and DOWN arrow keys will cycle through previous commands used.
 The TAB key is especially useful to navigate in a dialog box. You should use the TAB key
to move from field to field. Be careful not to press ENTER.
Function Keys

The use of each of the function keys can be duplicated in other ways with the exception of F2.
You may find that the on-screen equivalents to the function keys are easier and allow you to keep
your eyes on the screen.

F1 Displays Help
F2 Toggles Text Window
F3 Toggles OSNAP
F4 Toggles TABMODE
F5 Toggles ISOPLANE
F6 Toggles UCSDETECT (Not available in AutoCAD LT)
F7 Toggles GRIDMODE
F8 Toggles ORTHOMODE
F9 Toggles SNAPMODE
F10 Toggles Polar Tracking
F11 Toggles Object Snap Tracking
F12 Toggles Dynamic Input

Application Menu

You can use the Application Menu to access several key commands such as New, Open, Save,
Print, and Close. Most of these commands lead to submenus that give you more detailed options.
Panels
Status Bar

The status bar is located at the bottom of the application window.


The left end of the status bar displays the coordinates that show the numerical position of the
Crosshairs in the drawing. Click this area to turn the coordinate display off or on. In the on
position, there are two possibilities. The readout displays the X,Y,Z values, or the distance and
polar angle of the crosshairs as it is moved in the drawing window.

Coordinates Display

Drafting Settings

To the right of the Coordinates Display, there are buttons that activate features to facilitate
drawing construction. Collectively, these features are termed drafting settings.

Model Space and Layout Settings

In the middle-right of the status bar are buttons to display the drawing model or the drawing
layout views.

Pan and Zoom

To the right of the Model Space and Layout buttons are the real-time Pan command and the
Zoom
command.

Annotation Settings

Towards the right side of the status bar are the Annotation options for the display of annotative
objects such as text and dimensions. When you create annotations with the annotative property
selected, the Annotation Scale displayed in the status bar represents the scale in which the new
objects are created.
Layouts (Drawing Sheets)

Model space (the Model tab) is the area where you create your drawing. Layouts (drawing
sheets) are for annotation, borders, title blocks, and plotting.
When you draw, you should always draw at full scale. The model space environment offers an
unlimited amount of space to create your designs. Use layouts to create drawing sheets that
represent an area equal to the actual size of the paper.
You can switch between Model space and the Layout by selecting the button located in the
Status Bar at the bottom of the AutoCAD window.

Layer List

The Layer list displays the drawing's layers. Using this list, you can switch the current layer,
assign selected objects to a layer, turn layers on and off, freeze layers, and lock layers.
Command Window

The command window is normally located at the bottom of the application window and docked
between the drawing area and status bar. Whether you enter a command manually at the
command line or click a command tool on a toolbar, all commands are passed through and
evaluated by the command line.

It is important that you monitor the activity that occurs in this area. At each stage of the command
process, the software either provides you with a series of options to choose from or requires that
you input values relevant to that stage of the process.
In normal operation, the command window contains three lines of text. The first two lines list
the immediate command history and display the settings or options available within the current
command. The bottom line is the command line. You should focus your attention here during the
majority of commands.

You type at the cursor position on the command line, that is, the Command: prompt.
Note: Always press ENTER after you type values on the command line.

Working with Files

Drawings are created and saved in the DWG drawing file format. To access this data, you must
learn how to create a new drawing, save a drawing, and open these file types.

Use the Quick Access toolbar to create, open, and save new drawings.

Open a Drawing

To open a drawing, use the Open command and select the files that you want to open.

Command Access

Open

Command Line: OPEN


Application Menu: File > Open
Open File Dialog Box

Use standard Windows CTRL+ and SHIFT+ selection methods to select and open
multiple files at once.

Create a New Drawing

To create a new drawing, use the New command. Select a template or select Open with no
Template (Imperial or Metric). Drawing Templates are drawings that are saved in template format
(.dwt) and that can contain information such as a title block, layers, text styles, dimension styles,
and settings relevant to your specific drawing needs.

Command Access

New
Command Line: NEW
Application Menu: File > New
Select Template Dialog Box

Saving Your Drawings

Use the Save command to save your drawing. The first time you save a drawing, the Save
Drawing As dialog box appears. Navigate to the folder where you want to store the drawing, enter
a file name, and select Save. To save a drawing with a different name, select Save As.

Command Access

Save; Save As

Command Line: SAVE; SAVEAS


Application Menu: File > Save; Save As
Save Drawing As Dialog Box

Save First and Save Often

As a new user, you should get in the habit of saving your drawing as soon as you
create it and save often as you work on your drawings. This is a habit that can be
easily learned and could prove to be very valuable in the event of unexpected system
failures. A quick way to save your work is to use the shortcut keys: Ctrl + S.
DISPLAY OBJECTS

When you use the software, you draw all objects at full scale. Sometimes you need to view the
whole drawing, sometimes just smaller details. To assist you in viewing different areas of the
drawing, there are a number of zoom and pan tools. You can easily magnify small areas of your
drawing to provide a closer view or shift the view to a different or larger part of the drawing. You
can save views by name and restore them later.

Many of the zoom and pan options operate transparently. This means that you can use the
options while you are in another command.
In large drawing, it would be nearly impossible to work on if it were on a sheet of paper that was
the size of common computer monitors. Using the display tools, you can magnify any portion of
the drawing to fill the available space on your monitor.

OBLECTIVES

After completing this lesson, you will be able to:


 Identify tools that control the drawing view display.
 Use the Pan Realtime command to perform real time pan operations in the drawing.
 Use the Zoom Realtime command to perform real time zoom operations in the drawing.
 Use different Zoom commands to control the view magnification.
 Use a wheel mouse to zoom and pan in the drawing.
 Use the Regen command to regenerate the drawing.

DISPLAY TOOLS

Most of the time you will use the wheel on your mouse to zoom in and out of display views in your
drawing. Additional zoom tools are located on the Navigate panel in the View tab on the toolbar
ribbon.

Command Access

Display Tools

Command Line: Zoom, Z or Pan

Status Bar: Pan or Zoom


Pan

You can reposition the center of your view on the drawing by using the Pan command. Just like
panning with a video camera, panning your drawing changes only the position of your view of the
drawing, not the location or magnification of objects in the drawing.

Command Access

Pan

Command Line: PAN, P

Shortcut Menu: Pan

When the Pan command is active, the cursor changes to a hand icon as shown above. Click and
drag the cursor to pan the drawing view.
Command Options

While in the Pan command you may access other Pan and Zoom options when you right-click in
the drawing window to display a shortcut menu.

Zoom Realtime

The Zoom command increases or decreases the magnification of the objects displayed in the
drawing area. When you zoom out, you see more of the overall drawing. When you zoom in, you
magnify parts of your drawing to view them in greater detail.
Just like zooming in and out with a camera, using Zoom does not alter the actual size of the
object. It simply changes the relative magnification of objects displayed in the drawing area.

Command Access

Zoom

Command Line: Zoom, Z Press ENTER on the keyboard for Realtime option

Status Bar: Zoom

Note: If the Zoom realtime icon is not readily available, select it from the drop down list.
When the Zoom Realtime command is active, the cursor changes to the icon above. Click and
drag the cursor up to increase magnification or down to decrease magnification.

Zoom Command Options

The Zoom command has multiple options available to customize the Zoom.

Command Access

Following are the most frequently used Zoom command options for viewing different areas of the
drawing.

Note: Not all Zoom command options are discussed.

Zoom Command Options

Command Line: Zoom, Z (see the Command Line option for the Zoom commands listed below)

Zoom Window

ZOOM, Z;

Pick 2 points to define the window in the drawing area To use the Zoom Window option, use any
method listed above to start the command, click
in the drawing to specify the first corner of the window (1), and then click to specify the
second corner of the window (2). As a result, the drawing view is magnified and fills the
drawing space with the area defined by the zoom window.

Zoom Extents

Use the Zoom Extents option to zoom to the extents of the drawing, that is, the area of the
drawing in which objects are placed. When you zoom to the drawing extents, you magnify
the drawing view so that all geometry in the current space (model space or paper space) is
visible.
ZOOM, Z; > E then press ENTER

Zoom Previous

Use the Zoom Previous option to return to the previous view.

ZOOM, Z; > P then press ENTER

Wheel Mouse Features

The wheel mouse is a variant of the standard pointing device that is modified with a small wheel
between the left and right buttons. You can rotate this wheel in small increments. You can use the
wheel to zoom and pan in your drawing without using any commands. When zooming in, the
location near your cursor is the focal point of the zoom and thus remains on the screen.

The ZOOMFACTOR system variable controls the incremental change, whether forward or
backward. The higher the number of the variable, the greater the zoom.

How to Use the Wheel Mouse

Do this... To…
Roll the wheel forward Zoom In
Roll the wheel backward Zoom Out
Double-click the wheel button Zoom Extents
Hold down the wheel button and drag the mouse Pan
Press and hold the SHIFT key and the wheel button and drag
the mouse Constrained Orbit
Press and hold the CTRL key and the wheel button and drag
the mouse Pan (Joystick)

Regen

Use the Regen command to regenerate all the geometry in the drawing. Use theRegenall
command to regenerate all the geometry when there are multiple drawing viewports. When you
regenerate the drawing, the screen coordinates for all objects in the drawing are recomputed and
the drawing database is reindexed for optimal display performance.

Command Access

Regen

Command Line: RE, REGEN, REGENALL


Guidelines When Regenerating Large Drawings

 Because regeneration recalculates the screen coordinates for all objects in the drawing, it
usually takes longer to regenerate large drawings than smaller ones.
 If you experience performance decreases on larger drawings, consider setting REGENMODE =
0 to prevent automatic regeneration. You can manually regenerate the drawing when you need
to.

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