TheSwamp

CAD Forums => CAD General => Topic started by: enderprime on October 16, 2013, 03:59:25 PM

Title: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: enderprime on October 16, 2013, 03:59:25 PM
Now that I've crossed the 10 year mark in CAD experience, one of my office mates jokingly asked me to compile a list of 10 quick tips / hints / secrets / shortcuts every new user should know (we use AutoCAD and Civil 3D for survey / pipeline work). I tried to think of the simplest but most essential and time-saving things that changed my drafting life, and this is what I came up with.

Feel free to add your own list.

Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: dgorsman on October 16, 2013, 05:59:35 PM
Sing it with me: nanananananaBATTMAN!!!!!   :lmao:

Right-click context menus.

BYLAYER.  BYLAYER.  BYLAYER.

Rule of One: LTSCALE = 1, MSLTSCALE = 1, PSLTSCALE = 1

Did I mention BYLAYER already?  Yes?  Good.

IT/CAD support will NOT let you borrow or sign out a license for home use.  Leave work, at work.

Software changes.  Plan for it.  Live with it.  We're just along for the ride.

Backups are not just for DWG files.  Back up the support files and installers as well.

Draw to an appropriate level of detail.  Those cool curved louvers and internal details on the heater only make the file bigger and will never be seen at 1:30.

I put down BYLAYER, right?
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: Daniel J. Ellis on October 17, 2013, 02:46:29 AM
Sing it with me: nanananananaBATTMAN!!!!!   :lmao:

Draw to an appropriate level of detail.  Those cool curved louvers and internal details on the heater only make the file bigger and will never be seen at 1:30.

Often easier said than done, unfortunately  :evil:

dJE
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: ronjonp on October 17, 2013, 09:41:08 AM
1. Learn how to write code.  ;D
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: enderprime on October 17, 2013, 09:41:34 AM
Rule of One: LTSCALE = 1, MSLTSCALE = 1, PSLTSCALE = 1

We actually do LTSCALE = 1/2 plot scale

The right-click context menus are a common topic of debate also. Me and most of our faster drafters don't use them, because the speed increase from Right-click = Enter or Repeat last command are immense. It's one of the first things I turn off on a new workstation. On the other hand, Civil 3D and other things like to hide certain things in those menus that can't be easily found elsewhere, so sometimes we are looking for something that people with context menus see all the time. It's a tough call, ultimately I turned on time-sensitive right-click and it's sort of the best of both worlds after some adjustment.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: enderprime on October 17, 2013, 09:42:06 AM
1. Learn how to write code.  ;D

My #10 was simply going to say LEARN LISP lol
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: JNieman on October 17, 2013, 10:12:04 AM
I don't use right click menus to repeat commands or finish them; I use spacebar/enter.

I use right click contextual menus for some things though.  I find it easier/faster to shift+rt-click to pull up snaps, to use things like "Perpendicular" because I don't want that /always/ running, but I use it semi-often.  shift+rightclick, 'p' and it's done.  I'm hitting the hotkey for the snap I want before I even realize the menu has appeared.  May as well not even have the menu - I use it for keyboard shortcuts mostly and don't actually use it as a GUI.  It's like contextual keyboard hotkeys.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: Krushert on October 17, 2013, 10:19:48 AM
Software changes.  Plan for it.  Live with it.  We're just along for the ride.
Read up on the new features with each version and then distribute to your coworkers. 

However I have found that you can lead a whole herd of horses to water but the only ones that drink are the ones that want to drink.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: NOT SURE on October 17, 2013, 12:19:07 PM
Point Filters
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: NOT SURE on October 17, 2013, 12:20:31 PM
IT/CAD support will NOT let you borrow or sign out a license for home use.  Leave work, at work.

Yes I will, and no I won't. Respectively.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: Krushert on October 17, 2013, 12:27:31 PM
IT/CAD support will NOT let you borrow or sign out a license for home use.  Leave work, at work.

Yes I will, and no I won't. Respectively.
It sure is nice to work at home when you have a sick kid or waiting on a freakin Repairman to show up.   Just saying.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: JNieman on October 17, 2013, 12:29:55 PM
IT/CAD support will NOT let you borrow or sign out a license for home use.  Leave work, at work.

Yes I will, and no I won't. Respectively.
It sure is nice to work at home when you have a sick kid or waiting on a freakin Repairman to show up.   Just saying.
Word.

We use standalone licenses anyways, so it's moot for me as far as licensing goes.  But yea, sometimes I can't be at the office.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: dgorsman on October 17, 2013, 01:21:05 PM
Can be nice.  Until somebody takes that license home and uses it to moonlight for a competitor who is submitting a competing bid for the same project we are working on.  Some people have NO sense of conflict of interest.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: rkmcswain on October 17, 2013, 01:29:41 PM
Quote from: ender.prime

We actually do LTSCALE = 1/2 plot scale

Same here. Not sure exactly how that got started, but at one time (over 20 years ago) someone created a LIN file to match some local government standards, but of course where the spec called for a 1/2" dash, the LIN maker made it 1", etc. etc. --- so all these years LTSCALE = 0.5 (or 1/2 plot scale)
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: rkmcswain on October 17, 2013, 01:31:01 PM
Quote from: ender.prime
10. QSELECT : select drawing objects by using query-like filtering such as Layer = 0, etc. Learn it. Love it.

10a: FILTER. Use it with QSelect. They each can do things the other can't.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: NOT SURE on October 17, 2013, 02:08:28 PM
Can be nice.  Until somebody takes that license home and uses it to moonlight for a competitor who is submitting a competing bid for the same project we are working on.  Some people have NO sense of conflict of interest.

Personally, I'd be shooting myself in the foot if I did that, but I know it does happen... somewhere.
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: ronjonp on October 17, 2013, 03:45:40 PM
Quote from: ender.prime
10. QSELECT : select drawing objects by using query-like filtering such as Layer = 0, etc. Learn it. Love it.

10a: FILTER. Use it with QSelect. They each can do things the other can't.


10b:http://www.theswamp.org/index.php?topic=35028.msg402471#msg402471 (http://www.theswamp.org/index.php?topic=35028.msg402471#msg402471)
Title: Re: 10 tips for 10 years
Post by: jumpy on November 06, 2013, 09:37:57 AM
Just a few off my quicknote clipboard:


In addition to QSELECT and FILTER, use the FIND command to edit repetitive text like circuit references, when someone decides to change a distribution board reference in a large office floor plan...
FIND also works on attributes definitions iirc.

Also,

GRIP EDITING - copy, rotate, scale, move, mirror etc etc add and remove vertices by cycling CTRL when a grip is hot.

ATTSYNC - update attributes in existing blocks.

IMAGEFRAME - sysvar - plot/no plot boarder around inserted images.

CTRL+SHIFT+U - with highlighted text forces upper or lower caste.
CTRL+SHIFT+L

TAB - to cycle through active osnaps when drawing.

PKFSTGROUP - group manager, soooo useful. Use CTRL+H to toggle group selection

In single line text use
%%d - degrees symbol
%%u - underline text (end text with %%u to stop underline)
%%c - diameter symbol
%%p - plus/minus symbol

editing dimension text via properties dialog text override (or double click and use text editor):
\X will drop the remaining text below the dimension line.
\P will create a paragraph line break. You can use more than one \P as needed