TheSwamp
CAD Forums => CAD General => Topic started by: Artisan on September 07, 2004, 01:36:44 PM
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Ok, it has been forever since I tried to use the scale factor in the zoom command. (zoom;scale) The surveyor here is using Field Survey from Autodesk and cannot get his drawing to a scale in Paperspace. When he activates a viewport, the only way he could set it's scale to say 1:20 is to use the scale factor in the zoom command. My question is how is that done? I cannot remember how to do this to save my life. I remember something about xp is paperspace and x is model, but I am not sure. I currently use AutoCad Map and I have a toolbar called Viewports that has a drop down box to set the scale of a viewport in paperspace when activated. He doesn't have this toolbar, so there is no way to set the scale. I have never used Field Survey and he's the surveyor, so I'm just trying to be the CAD all here and fix everyone's problem. Thanks
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zoom
1/20xp
You were SOOOO close..
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I cant believe I was taught this method when I first started out!Much easier to just change the scale of the vport in properties.
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I cant believe I was tought this method when I first started out!Much easier to just change the scale of the vport in properties.
Only if the PROPERTIES window is already open. I keep the screen-eatin' PITB closed unless I really need it.
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With 2004 its just a moments click away :) .PITB?Punjab Information Technology Board is the nearest I can find for that. :lol:
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:lol: that would be
Pain In The Butt
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:lol: Aha! I was trying to think of some technical CAD term!
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This is what I use for scaling VP's.
(defun c:zx (/ zf)
(if
(= (caar (vports)) 1)
(progn
(prompt "\nYour not in an active viewport....")
(exit)
); progn
(setq zf (strcat "1/"(itoa (getint "\nEnter Scale Factor :"))"XP"))
); if
(command "_zoom" zf)
(princ)
); defun
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Umm, I keep that properties tool bar open on my left monitor.. :D
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The problem with the VP toolbar in acad is that it's not setup for scales like we civil people use. i.e. 1:500, 1:1000, etc.........
>Umm, I keep that properties tool bar open on my left monitor
that's a good idea. :D
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:lol: Aha! I was trying to think of some technical CAD term!
Around here it is a technical term. :)
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Umm, I keep that properties tool bar open on my left monitor.. :D
Not enough desktop for two monitors, the second would have to be on top. We're squeezed for space right now. Maybe next year we'll add a new building and we can spread out a little.
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At least with 2004 and up, you can set the properties window to autohide. Then you only have a long vertical strip covering the screen. I have some toolbars on the left side of my screen, and put the properties strip right next to them; it takes up only as much space as a vertical toolbar, and is easily accessible (just mouseover to expand it).
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At least with 2004 and up, you can set the properties window to autohide. Then you only have a long vertical strip covering the screen. I have some toolbars on the left side of my screen, and put the properties strip right next to them; it takes up only as much space as a vertical toolbar, and is easily accessible (just mouseover to expand it).
We have 6 contracts in house that started with R2002, three of them will run another 18-24 months, so R2007 may be our next upgrade.
:cry:
:horror:
:sot:
:rip:
:crazy:
:choke:
(:fart: + solids)
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You don't have anough room for dual flat screens?? That's gotta be one SMALL desk.. and here I thought everything was BIG in Texas.. heheh..
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You don't have anough room for dual flat screens??
Nope, not enough room in the budget either.
That's gotta be one SMALL desk..
As a design lead, I get 2- 30"X60" tables in a corner (everyone else gets one), one for the computer the other for the 300,000 pounds of paperwork involved in running a bleeding job. Half the time I have to put my coffee cup on the floor with the rest of my reference material.
and here I thought everything was BIG in Texas.. heheh..
5 years ago we had a lot of room to spread out, but then we had less money to invest. Now we have plenty of money, but no room. We have two guys sitting at tables setup in the drawing vault. We took in half the front lobby and added space for two more engineers. We even have several guys scattered out in 3 conference rooms. When we need those for meeting, the guys have to figure out who's in the meeting and go use their machines. Even with all these new guys, we're a little short-handed, but short of setting them up in the men's room stalls, we don't have any more space available.
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If anyone is interested, I created this little addition to my custom pulldown menu. In paperspace, tiled to model, just click your desired scale and viola. Of course you can add on to this if you like ie ---->
[1/20]^C^Cz;1/120xp;
Mark
ID_SCALE [->Scale Drawing]
[1/16]^C^Cz;1/192xp;
[--]
[1/8]^C^C_z;1/96xp;
[--]
[1/4]^C^Cz;1/48xp;
[--]
[<-1/1]^C^Cz;1/1xp;
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zoom
1/20xp
You were SOOOO close..
ACTUALLY....if you are in floating paper space the command is...
zoom;s;1/20xp
OHHHH...you were so close! 8)
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zoom
1/20xp
You were SOOOO close..
ACTUALLY....if you are in floating paper space the command is...
zoom;s;1/20xp
OHHHH...you were so close! 8)
The "S" is unnecessary
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Actually I am perfectly correct
If you were doing 1" = 10' then your scale factor would be 1/120xp
1" is representing a foot (12")
12X10=120
As far as the macro is concerned you do not use the S
It is zoom (Z) enter (;) 1/120xp enter (;)
Did you see the pulldown menu I posted? It works perfect.
I thought that the person that started this post could make use of it
Mark
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They were suppose to be semicolons in the above macro but I got smileys instead :)
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They were suppose to be semicolons in the above macro but I got smileys instead :)
Quote this message then follow below.
See the little code box above the message pane
If you wrap posted code in square brackets [ ] around the word CODE and /CODE it won't do that.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
<square bracket>CODE<square bracket>
code stuff
<square bracket>/CODE<square bracket>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Like this:
code stuff
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Hummm
Not sure I understand
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when you're posting code. after you've typed it, select it, then hit the CODE button right above where you're typing ~ it will automatically wrap your selection in
[ code ] your code stuff here [/ code ] (but with no spaces)
like
your code stuff here
simple, no ?
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;;;;;
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I see, thank you
I just disabled smileys and it worked well also
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If you're really confused about scale factors and how big 1/8th inch text should be when the scale is 1:20, take a look at the CadCARD. Just do a search on Autograph technical services.
The CadCARD is a slide rule card, printed on both front and back with one side having all kinds of drawing scale settings on it and the other having dimvars settings.
My card sits right next to my Nostromo N52 and goes with me wherever I do Cad work. I even have a second one for my home computer. I't around $12.00 and worth ten times that much. I've been using one I bought way back in R11 and it's still goin strong..
Check it out, it's worth a look.
http://www.cadcard.com/
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LOL
This is pretty elementary CAD
Listen, if you have 1/8" = 1'
Then take the 8, times it by 12 (as there is 12 inches in a foot), this equals 96
96 is your scale factor
Likewise 1/4"= 1' ( 4 X 12) 48 is your scale factor
Now, what I was referring to earlier was 1" = 10' (Architectural Units)
Not 1:20 which is engineering units
So, once again, if you take 12 as 1 inch is representing a foot, then you simply times 12X10 and 120 is your scale factor
Of course it can get complicated if you want.
Pop Quiz:
Can anyone tell me what the scale factor would be for 4" = 5680' :P
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Hey PD
I see where the confusion started LOL
I originally put [1/20]^C^Cz;1/120xp;
OK, that is how I display it on The Pulldown we use in work, it is short for 1"=20' not 1/20 Perhaps I shouls say 1/20'
Sorry about that
Mark
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15840
4" = 1 mile
1'= 3 miles
1'=15840'
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I mile is 5680' I believe
Assuming that,
If 1" = 5680'
Then
12 X 5680' = 68,160
If you divide 68,160 by 4
Then
I believe you will have 4" = 1 Mile
Scale Factor 17,040
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4" = 5280'
1" = 1320'
1" = 15840"
15840
~~~~~~~~~
3/8" = 1'-0"
3" = 8'
3" = 96"
1" = 32"
32
~~~~~~~~~
1/4" = 1'-0"
1" = 4'
1" = 48"
48
~~~~~~~~~
1" = 1'-0"
1" = 12"
12
~~~~~~~~~
3/4" = 1'-0"
3/4" = 12"
3" = 48"
1" = 16"
16
~~~~~~~~~
1" = 300'
1" = 3600"
3600
~~~~~~~~~
1" = 20'
1" = 240"
240
~~~~~~~~~~
1/8" = 1'-0"
1" = 8'
1" = 96"
96
~~~~~~~~~
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OK, next topic :)
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Test it
IN MS draw a line 5280 feet long
Go to PS, zoom the viewport to 1/15480XP
Measure the line, it'll be 4"
zoom the VP to 1/17040xp
measure the line.
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Well, I did something almost exactly like that
I had drawn grids within grids, all on different layers with different colors.
One grid was 100 yards per square and the other grid was a mile per square, it was cool.
So, when I plotted, I had to go to 4" = 1 mile in order to plot to a D size sheet and still be able to scale with a scale rule
Hey, draw a rectangle, whatever size, then put this little macro I created into a custom button and try it
^C^Chatch;Ansi37;\45;
It utlizes Hatch pattern Ansi37 to draw a grid.
After you initiate the macro, you will be prompted for a scale factor, enteer the scale factor at the command line then pick the rectangle. You can use these scale factors below -----> Hope you like
Grid Size Scale Factor
1/8" 1
1/4" 2
1/2" 4
1" 8
3" 24
6" 48
1' 96
1 Yard (3') 288
1 Mile (5,280') 506880
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Ps
You were right about the feet per mile 5,280'
Sorry about that. it is rhe correct scale factor above that I posted with the macro
Mark
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Also, your above scale factor was written 15480xp
I believe you meant 15840 which is
12 X 5,280' (1mile) / 4 = Scale factor 15840 (4" = 1 Mile)
It works great for scaled site plans
Mark
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Last thing,
The Scale Factor is 63360 for a mile. Sorry again
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Also, your above scale factor was written 15480xp
I believe you meant 15840 which is
12 X 5,280' (1mile) / 4 = Scale factor 15840 (4" = 1 Mile)
Mark
Typo, I can type faster than I can think.. and I type real sloooowwww.
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I made a few also as you can see LOL
Did you try the little grid macro? It works great!
I think my brain is cooked at the moment
If we were doing 1" = 1mile, wouldn't the scale factor be 63360?
Mark
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One more correction LOL
OK, 1 mile X 12 = 63360 if we are doing 1" = 1mile however
If you are using my above macro, keep in mind that the grid by default is 1/8" therefore, you need to do 63360 X 8 to get your grids to equal 1 mile each square. Therefore the scale factor is 506880
All scale factors i posted with that macro are correct because of the grid defaulting to 1/8"
Mark
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Or, you create your own partial menu.
Example -------->
***MENUGROUP=Scale
***POP1
[->&Scale Viewport]
[1/1]^C^Cz;1/1xp;
[--]
[1/4"=1']^C^Cz;1/48xp;
[--]
[1/8"=1']^C^C_z;1/96xp;
[--]
[1/16"=1']^C^C_z;1/192xp;
[--]
[1"=10']^C^C_z;1/120xp;
[--]
[1"=20']^C^C_z;1/240xp;
[--]
[1"=30']^C^C_z;1/360xp;
[--]
[1"=40']^C^C_z;1/480xp;
[--]
[1"=50']^C^C_z;1/600xp;
[--]
[<-1"=60']^C^C_z;1/720xp;