Now I've been aware of the Deskers recommending a "Clean installation of
Land Desktop 2007" on the Knowledge Base to get things back to a hunky-dory
state.
I just checked the KB to see whether there was the same type of advice for
C3D 2K7:
http://tinyurl.com/yu86wn
And so now may I suggest that you follow through with that Tech Support
article jstew, so that you can get things back on track, as it were?
HTH
--
Don Reichle
"The only thing worse than training your staff, and having them leave is -
not training your staff, and having them stay." 😮
A reminder taken from Graphics Solution Providers' Calendar page
-------------------------- ------------------------------------------
!! Please discuss whatever we tell you with your SysMgr !!
!! They appreciate staying in the loop 🙂 !!
LDT-2K4
AMD Athlon64 2.2GHz 2GB RAM
XPPro 32bit SP2
WD Raptor 10K-rpm 37GB HD
Nvidia GeForce FX 5200 128MB
"The only Constant is Change".
"R.K. McSwain" wrote in message
news:5543670@discussion.autodesk.com...
jstew said the following On 4/5/2007 4:56 PM:
> Here are the files.
>
> It just seems like the shx files are purged after closing the drawing.
> ???????????????
>
> I've never seen this before.
Never seen this either.
I was able to load your drawing, and reload the linetype and get the
"X-WATER" linetype to display OK, then save the drawing and reopen it
and it was still OK.
If you open the unaltered drawing that you posted and run this bit of
lisp code:
(cdr (assoc 340
(entget (tblobjname "ltype" "x-water"))))
..it will return the entity name to the style (a loaded SHAPE file is
stored as a TEXTSTYLE table object). But in your unaltered drawing this
"STYLE" is invalid (entity name of "0")
To me, it looks like the STYLE (shape) was somehow purged even though a
dependent linetype still exists. Why your system is doing this over and
over is beyond me....
See attached image for a view of the "STYLE" that is really the
referenced shape file. Th
is is in a 'copy' of your drawing after I
reloaded the linetype and saved, closed, and reopened the drawing.
--
R.K. McSwain
http://rkmcswain.blogspot.com