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drawing walls

Anonymous

drawing walls

Anonymous
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I just downloaded my 30 day trial of Autocad for Mac however the simple "wall" command is not present. How do I draw a wall in this new version? Is it a different command now versus in windows? I understand I can obviously draw 2d lines, however I am looking for the simplified "wall add" command where you select your wall type and draw from there. Please help.

 

TIA.

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rkmcswain
Mentor
Mentor
Solución aceptada




There is no "wall" command in AutoCAD.





Perhaps you were using AutoCAD Architecture ?





Ref: http://help.autodesk.com/view/ARCHDESK/2018/ENU/?guid=GUID-DD528447-398B-4EDA-9FD6-29663496C451







R.K. McSwain     | CADpanacea | on twitter

Anonymous
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I was using autocad architecture on my windows software however I now have
an OS X operating system. Is Autocad Architecture compatible with Macs?
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rkmcswain
Mentor
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maxim_k
Consultant
Consultant

Hi Krysten,

 

In order to be able to use AutoCAD Architecture on Mac you need to run it on Bootcamp partition, or inside Windows virtual machine using virtualization software, such as Parallels Desktop.

 

Maxim


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Maxim Kanaev
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Anonymous
No aplicable

I have 2017 AutoCAD for Mac  and just downloaded the 2019 version to see if they'd made some good changes (wall tool) that would help. They didn't.  The multiline command is there but I can't find a simple way to assign wall thickness.   

AutoCAD is a slow tedious program to use for 2D architectural drawings.  You can always use Revit to build a set of plans,  that too is a lot of work but better than AutoCAD .  I discovered a good fast program that really works for 2D submittal plan sets.  It's so fast that I can take on Addition/Remodels or residential new construction jobs and get them finished quickly, especially when compared to AutoCAD

I actually gave up on using AutoCAD  for architectural plans and went to a  program by Ashlar Vellum called Graphite.

It has everything you need and works far better than AutoCAD  with the same precise results sans the constant headaches.

 

For instance:

1.  Has a self healing wall tool.  You can draw in any direction,  intersect walls anywhere and they self heal.  You can change the wall thickness instantly by typing it in  a dialog box.

2.  If you want to move an object or text  you just click on a text annotation for instance,  it is surrounded by a red

box  and you simply put the cursor on the box and drag it to the new position.

3.  Setting dimension text style and arrowhead size  and style is in the dimension pulldown menu. You can set your preferences right there without chasing it around like AutoCAD. 

 

4.  Once you do a basic drawing of a floor plan, elevation, section, site plan, or what have you.  you save the 1:1 drawing as a scaled file and assign it a paper size (24x36 for me).  At that point you can collect relevant sections of other plans you've drawn (sections,  code text,  wall , foundation, roof sections/plan views)  and scatter them outside of the paper space where you have quick access to them.  Just copy the relevant parts for the new plan and paste them in.  Moving them to just the right spot is super fast.   Using this method I can sometimes complete a detailed and submittal ready page in as little as 2-4 hrs.   

 

Attached is an elevation I did for an insurance job.  The house had burnt to the ground.  The insurance adjuster needed a full set of construction ready plans so they could accurately figure out the true replacement cost.

Bottom line is everything works well with Ashlar Vellum Graphite V12.   I looked for a long time for a program like this.   

 

At the very least if you like using autocad,   the wall tool alone is worth the program cost.  Graphite makes good DWG export files so it's easy to import your floor plan  to autocad and go from there.

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pendean
Community Legend
Community Legend
AutoCAD and LT for MAC are general drafting tools made for no specific industry: think paper/pen on a computer.

Autodesk will never add a Wall Tool or Electrical Design or HVAC ducting or Topo Grading or much else to a general drafting tool aimed at no industry on purpose.

If you want ARCHITECTURAL features from Autodesk today, you will need to be on a Windows Platform with REVIT or AutoCADARCHITECTURE software packages.
Other software vendors fill that AEC gap on a MAC platform quite nicely as you so nicely advertised.

Know your software and the target audience.

HTH