I am building a land use plan. The plan displays a specific parcel style (hatch) for each land use.
How would I go about making a parcel table which will display land use areas as a percent of the total?
For example:
Residential 44%
Road R/W 10%
Commercial 36%
Open Space 10%
Total 100%
THANKS and Merry Christmas!
If you use hatches instead of parcels an AutoCAD Table could use fields to get the hatch areas and compute the percentages.
John Mayo
You can't do all of what you want. But you CAN create a Parcel Tabel based upon Label Style (not object style).
So, make sure that you have a specific Label Style to match your Object Style. At that point, you can create multiple Tables for each type of Parcel.
This won't total it up, or give you percentages. But hopefully, this will at least help you get the data more easily.
Hi Justin
If you click on the link provided it will take you to a add on for Parcels that will have a table already programmed for you to use. It will let you set the area ranges you want to have for your subdivision and then it will give you the Number of Lots, Average Area & total percentage of that stage. This add on is free, so please feel free to have a look and see if it does what you require.
http://www.civilsurveysolutions.com.au/software/extra-utilities#Lot
I have also attached to pics for you to have a look at to see what the outcomes will be.
Cheers
Jason
To add to all the great ideas; if each land use were in it own site the totals would be listed in the site vista.
Oh this may be of interest: you can export parcels to sdf, then create queries and calculations and the table you wish.
Joe Bouza
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One more idea.
You can also extract the area of an AutoCAD Hatch into a Field within an AutoCAD Table's cell. The table can compute all of the land use percentages.
John Mayo
AutoCAD may not be able to compute the Hatch area if the underlying geometry has gaps, overlapping segments, duplicate segments or varying Z values.
With clean and flat geometry you can create very large, complex hatches with disconnected areas and holes
John Mayo
You know I'm a big fan of Data Extraction
Joe Bouza
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