Printable Version | Subscribe | Add to Favourites
New Topic New Poll New Reply
Author: Subject: Autocad help
chrisg

posted on 23/3/06 at 01:39 PM Reply With Quote
Autocad help

I'm trying to learn Autocad.

Anyone know any good online tutorials?

One thing I can't work out is why my imported drawing has some lines in green and some in red.

what does it all mean?

Cheers

Chris

[Edited on 23/3/06 by chrisg]

View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
Guinness

posted on 23/3/06 at 02:38 PM Reply With Quote
The different colours usually represent different layers.

In interior design you tend to have a drawing for flooring, decoration, electrical works, mechanical works, ceilings etc.

In olden days, when I started, each drawing was done on a seperate sheet of tracing paper. Now you draw on the building fabric (i.e. the structural bits) on one layer, then the flooring on another layer, the ceiling on another layer etc etc. Idea is you can turn layers on and off so you just look at the bit you are interested in. Also should highlight conflicts better, i.e. air-conditioning cassette can't go in the same bit of ceiling as a light fitting.

When I left interior design, everyone had drawing boards, pens and set squares. When I came back everyone had mice and TV's on their desks.

I took a course at my local college, was free and in the evenings and now it's dead easy.

HTH

Mike






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
chrisg

posted on 23/3/06 at 05:46 PM Reply With Quote
Can you merge layers like you can on photoshop?

cheers

Chris

View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
Aboardman

posted on 23/3/06 at 06:26 PM Reply With Quote
you can move a objects to any layer,

if you think as layer as a piece of blank tracing paper, you can move onjects on to any layer, add layers, turn off layers, rename layers.

Colours are used to make drawings more readable and also most plotters use colours as a way of line thickness so if the line was red it would plot out thick, if green it could be thin.

if you are stuck you can also u2u me, 20 years using Autocad

these may help

http://apex.vtc.com/autocad-2000.php
http://www.3d-cadcea.co.uk/html/task1.htm
http://www.cadtutor.net/

you may to view all the autocad pages on the last link to show a lot of the commends.

this looks quite good

http://www.fbe.unsw.edu.au/Learning/AutoCAD/

[Edited on 23/3/06 by Aboardman]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member

New Topic New Poll New Reply


go to top






Website design and SEO by Studio Montage

All content © 2001-16 LocostBuilders. Reproduction prohibited
Opinions expressed in public posts are those of the author and do not necessarily represent
the views of other users or any member of the LocostBuilders team.
Running XMB 1.8 Partagium [© 2002 XMB Group] on Apache under CentOS Linux
Founded, built and operated by ChrisW.