Autocad For Mac Set Up Plot Style Or Page
Unlike AutoCAD/LT in Windows, AutoCAD/LT for MAC have no CONVERTPSTYLES or CONVERTCTB commands to convert named plot styles to color plot styles (or vice versa) 'on the fly'. Can I set the mouse middle button in the MAC versions to behave like the Windows version? 3) Also why does the page set-up that is named after the layout you are working in not show up as a selection option under page set-up tab in the plot dialog box? Is it the default? For example if I have 2 layout tabs in a drawing, layout A and layout B and go through page set up and create a page set up for each named A and B. Best screen capture for mac.
This tutorial assumes that you're drawing is set up in millimeters (in model space, 1 unit represents 1 mm). Please make sure you're drawing and are set up correctly! Layout: Model Space v.s. Paper Space Drawings are constructed in Model Space, visible in the Model tab in AutoCAD. There is also one or more Layout Tabs. These display the contents of a Layout, also referred to as Paper Space.
As the name suggests, these are to create layouts intended for plotting (printing) your drawings on paper. Switch to the Layout 1 tab which should be present by default in new drawings: By default, AutoCAD creates a white sheet with one viewport that displays the contents of your model space. More on that a little further on. First you have to setup your paper: Page Setup Click right on the Layout tab and choose Page Setup Manager.: The following dialog will display: AutoCAD selects the active Layout by default, so you can proceed by clicking Modify for the selected Layout. The Page Setup dialog will be displayed: Here you can set paper sizes, the type of printer that will be used, etc. In this example we're creating an A3 Layout to be printed to PDF using the Adobe PDF Plotter.
• Select the Adobe PDF plotter (or other printer that suits your specific goal) • Set the Paper Size to the desired format; A3 in this example • Make sure the Plot Scale is set to 1 mm = 1 unit • Choose the desired Drawing orientation That's all for now. We will make the final (very important) configurations a little later on. Viewports Your drawing should display one or more parts of your drawing that you've created in Model Space.
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This is done by means of viewports, which are literally a view port into your Model Space. By default AutoCAD creates one viewport for you.
You can move, scale and transform this viewport just like any other AutoCAD object in Model Space. It's recommended to place your viewport object(s) in a separate.
Creating viewports You can create a new viewport through the menu View > Viewports > 1 Viewport You're asked to pick both opposite corners for a rectangular viewport. Activating a Viewport When you double click inside a viewport it becomes active. The border is displayed as a thick line and the Paper-/Model Space indicator in the bottom switches to MODEL: When you double click outside a viewport (somewhere on your paper), the viewport is deactivated and you're back in Paper Space. Set viewport scale When a viewport is active, you can use the regular navigation and zoom tools to select the part of the Model Space that is displayed and at which zoom level (scale). To get your scale accurate, for instance at 1 to 200 (1:200), you can use the zoom command. We assume your drawing is set up in millimeters in Model Space. • Type z [enter] for zoom • Enter the scale: 1/200xp for a scale of 1:200.
Don't forget the suffix xp which tells AutoCAD to relate the zoom scale to Paper Space units. If your drawing was set up in meters instead of millimeters, i.e: one modelspace unit represents 1 meter, you should use 1000/200xp in the example above! Hide the viewport border from the plot When you plot your layout, it will also plot the border of the viewport (the lines of the viewport object). If don't want the borders to be plotted, you can use the Plot setting of the layer your viewport is in. It's assumed you've created a separate layer for your viewport(s). Open the Layer manager and click the small plotter icon in the Plot column for the layer your viewport is in. A red line will appear through the icon indicating that the layer will not be plotted; the contents of the viewport will still be plotted though.