What I'm looking for is auto numbering in multiline text with with aligning the number to the right.
In word you can create your own format, but this isn't possible in Acad as far as I know.
See here the auto numbering as I want it:
Someone here who knows the answer?
Hello TRogers,
That's autonumbering, but not autonumbering with alignment at the right.
The idea is to align the dots of the numbering
I want it like this (but for now it's all single line text)
Hmmm I see my picture of post 1 was not placed as it was imaged in the text edittor here.
But btw, yeah, post 3 is wat I want.
I hope I've some luck left
A Table with two columns would give you the result on paper, but would not be autonumbering.
Possibly build the table in Excel and use data linking to bring it in? Kludgy, I know.
Yes, that's an option
But it's for work and editting should be easy as well.
And if I have to choose between ugly alignment or difficult tables + changing numbers everytime my answer will be ugly alignment.
Now some colleagues always explode the multiline texts to align it
Yeah, but Acad is not a word processor. For that matter, drafting annotation is not word processing (or desktop publishing) either.
The plain and simple fact is:
Lists have been a part of design work for centuries. Nine spaces to insert is not a deal breaker when using lists. You can insert them before the numbers 1-9 instead of after the ".", if that is the format you desire. Most designers use the normal convention for lists. Which has been around longer than what is supplied by auto-numbering. If it were normal protocol to do it any other way, it would be that way.
The possible solution of using a table is an alternative but as stated has its limitations too.
This may not be an answer you want to hear, but just sayin'. You wouldn't change the protocol for dimensioning would you? Maybe a designer feels the arrows should align along the extension lines, instead of the dimension lines? Just becasue you can explode a feature object and change the configuration doesn't always mean it would be good paractice or correct? 😉
There is another slight workaround, but you would have to put the numbers in yourself
When you first draw a Mtext box do you notice that L to the left of the box. That's your tab, you can drag it onto the ruler and a tabstop will appear there.
It can also be changed. click on it until you get the one which looks like an upside down T with a dot to the right. That is your decimal tab.
To put in your decimal number you first need to press tab then put in your number and you will note all the numbers line up on the decimal point.
Howard Walker
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I tried that one as well, it's a good alternative (don't forget to switch off numbering)
But still failure chances with wrong numbering