Community
Civil 3D Forum
Welcome to Autodesk’s Civil 3D Forums. Share your knowledge, ask questions, and explore popular AutoCAD Civil 3D topics.
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

convert feature line to alignment

16 REPLIES 16
SOLVED
Reply
Message 1 of 17
basman12
22051 Views, 16 Replies

convert feature line to alignment

 

hello everybody
i know we can convert aligment to feature line , but can we convert feature line to alignment ???

any suggestion

thanks

16 REPLIES 16
Message 2 of 17
Jeff_M
in reply to: basman12

Out of the Box, no.

 

If you use third party tools, such as Sincpac-C3D, then yes. (CAPFEATURE - Create Alignment/Profile from Featureline)

Jeff_M, also a frequent Swamper
EESignature
Message 3 of 17
wfberry
in reply to: basman12

You Can:

Offset the Feature Line (say 1') Explode it. (Changes to a polyline).

Offset the Polyline back, define it as an alignment.

 

Bill

 

 

Message 4 of 17
nyloncrack
in reply to: basman12

If it's a corridor feature line you want to convert...

 

Make Alignment

select corridor

corridor contextual tab - launch pad panel - alignments from corridor

cmd line> Select a corridor feature line: pick the feature line to convert

Create Alignment dialog box - Name the new alignment, uncheck Create Profile (make next with more flexibility).

New Alignment will be indicated in corridor.


Make Profile of Alignment

select corridor

corridor contextual tab - launch pad panel - profile from corridor

cmd line> select a corridor feature line: select same feature line (may want to freeze the layer the new alignment is on, making it easier to pick feature line, or use the draworder command and move the alignment back).

Create Profile - Draw New dialog box - Name the Profile  and set Profile Style/Label Set as desired.

New Profile should appear in the Profile of the base line alignment used in the corridor

 

Does that sound reasonable?

Message 5 of 17
ksmart1975
in reply to: Jeff_M

Has this been changed in the 2.5 years since your last post Jeff? Can a figure be converted into an alignment?

 

Also, another suggestion was to offset the figure then explode it to convert it to a polyline. Then offset it back into place and make an alignment out of that. When I explode the figure, it converts to a 3D polyline, and I can't make an alignment from a 3D polyline, right?

Message 6 of 17
jmayo-EE
in reply to: ksmart1975

No but there is a command to convert the 3d pline to a 2d pline.

 

Convert3DPolys

 

Also noe that you may want to flatten the feature line of survey figure to a constant Z value prior to exploding. This will produce a 2d pline vs a 3d pline after the explode. It will also keep the arc segments.

John Mayo

EESignature

Message 7 of 17

Does not work on 3d poly or feature lines though, right?

Message 8 of 17

I believe to convert featureline to alignment we must have the elevation on the vertices too.

Message 9 of 17

Alignments appear to 2D objects. You do not need vertex z information

Christopher Stevens
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature

Message 10 of 17
rl_jackson
in reply to: basman12

SMH!


Rick Jackson
Survey CAD Technician VI

Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature

Message 11 of 17

If we can have vertex z information to make a profile out of the featureline it would be easier than creating it all over again I guess.
Message 12 of 17


@Yazan.SalamehBXQ2D wrote:
If we can have vertex z information to make a profile out of the featureline it would be easier than creating it all over again I guess.

The suggested process does leave the vertex z information untouched, so it remains available.

  1. Make a copy of the feature line at the same location. (use snaps.)
  2. Make sure that the copy is 'flat', that is all at the same elevation. FLATTEN does not work is arcs are present; arcs become tessellated.
    The only way I know of is to use the Constant Elevation option of Flatten Garde or Elevation button in the Elevation Editor. Much faster than manually editing each vertex elevation.
    ChrisRS_0-1649643426553.pngaa
  3. Explode this 'flat' feature line. You will now have a 2D polyline with any arcs intact.
  4. Click Create Alignment from Objects and select the 2D polyline.
    ChrisRS_1-1649643622924.png
  5. The original 3D feature line is still available.
    1. You can project the feature line to a profile view, based on this alignment.
      This is shown in red in the upper illustration.
    2. You can add the 3d feature line to a new surface. (Add to Surface As Break line.)
      Then create a surface profile as shown in the lower illustration.

ChrisRS_2-1649644291689.png

Note: This just an illustration. Legibility is not the main point.

 

Good Luck!

Christopher Stevens
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature

Message 13 of 17

Thanks a bunch for this explanation. I know this already and I do kinda same thing, but what I was asking for is that Autodesk creating a built-in tool to convert from Featureline to Alignment and to provide the profile to the alignment from the featureline Z vertices values. This would be a great help where you can find some doesn't like to deal with featurelines at all.
Message 14 of 17

You might want to post this in the Civil 3D Ideas sub-forum. That is the place to suggest improvements. There seems to be more I am told that Ideas is monitored by the C3D team. It is just my opinion, but I think it more likely that issues without workarounds might generate more interest.

 

Suggestions:

  1. Post this in the Ideas forum.
  2. This is a pretty straight foreword process. There may be a LISP or Dynamo solution. I am not proficient in either. I suggest that you start a new post in the Civil 3D or Customization forum. I don't which is more appropriate.
    "I want to create an alignment based on an existing Feature Line, while keeping a copy of the feature line, with 3D intact. Manually I would make a copy of the feature line, flatten the copy. explode it and use it to make an alignment".       

 

Christopher Stevens
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

EESignature

Message 15 of 17

CTC Software has a free tool in their Project Manager Suite of tools (Feature 2 Align) that will convert feature lines, and/or survey figures to alignments using native C3D create settings. They also have many other time saving tools within the suite for a modest price point that will pay for itself. They offer a free 14 day trial to get to know the tools along with many support videos and a responsive support team if you need more help.

Message 16 of 17
tcorey
in reply to: basman12

As was posted earlier, there are a number of third-party solutions to this problem. SincPac and Kobi Tools both do. DotSoft probably does, but I'm not sure. @TerryDotson  will know.



Tim Corey
MicroCAD Training and Consulting, Inc.
Redding, CA
Autodesk Gold Reseller

New knowledge is the most valuable commodity on earth. -- Kurt Vonnegut
Message 17 of 17
TerryDotson
in reply to: tcorey

Thanks for the mention.  Yes, we convert a selection set of linear objects (including FeatureLines, 2D/3DPolys and more) to alignments in a single process.  At a glance it looks like one could acquire all three of the products @tcorey mentioned for the price of the previously mentioned package, and that 3x priced product is per seat per year.

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Rail Community


Autodesk Design & Make Report