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I've come across dozens of threads on this issue from 2005-2018, and it seems like this problem hasn't yet been properly addressed, so I apologize if any of this is redundant but I haven't yet found a satisfying explanation of why this behaviour still exists in AutoCAD after 2 decades.
When I plot to pdf (AutoCAD General Documentation), all of my solid hatches are broken into small triangles. My understanding is that originated as a quirk of printer technology, which could only interpret solid regions as being described by three points. Any more corners or rounded edges, and the solid hatch will be divided into 2 or more triangles. This is of course noticeable as thin white lines when zooming in and out in a pdf reader, but can also make life difficult when using a vector graphics editor to bring a drawing up to a presentation quality. Depending on the conversion process, the lines are visible after converting to raster data.
I've come across a number of threads offering workarounds which include turning solid hatches into gradients with 2 identical colours (which will rasterize the hatch data), adjusting pdf viewer settings (which doesn't help while editing a pdf), and increasing the quality by changing plot settings or selecting a different pdf maker. None of these actually seem to address the core issue which is that AutoCAD seems to be incapable of making pdfs with simple shape fills that other vector graphics software can do without issue.
Is there a way of getting AutoCAD to properly plot solid hatches to pdf as single objects with multiple vertices? If not, why does it still do this, given that the vast majority of CAD work is done through the pdf format?
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.