Please post an example (dwg), what you want to do.
cadder
Jürgen Palme
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Edwin Prakoso has a CADNotes article on creating dimstyles for Isometric Dimensions >>here<<. Is this what you are looking for? If you are looking for examples do a Google image search for "Isometric dimension".
Nancy
The real object shown in first picture has a angle of 45°, and I know that my drawing is correct because I used the triangle and trigonometry to calculate the length. But when I'm trying to create the angular dimension about that angle, the dimension shown is 30° instead of 45°. How to fix this? I tried to change the text of that angle, but it doesn't work.
The real object shown in first picture has a angle of 45°, and I know that my drawing is correct because I used the triangle and trigonometry to calculate the length. But when I'm trying to create the angular dimension about that angle, the dimension shown is 30° instead of 45°. How to fix this? I tried to change the text of that angle, but it doesn't work.
The real object shown in first picture has a angle of 45°, and I know that my drawing is correct because I used the triangle and trigonometry to calculate the length. But when I'm trying to create the angular dimension about that angle, the dimension shown is 30° instead of 45°. How to fix this? I tried to change the text of that angle, but it doesn't work.
@Anonymous
From your posts it is not clear whether or not you realize that you are creating a 2D isometric drawing and not a 3D model. I come to this conclusion because:
It is possible to create the 45° dimension as it appears in the original drawing but it takes some fudging. First set the iso plane with isodraft to left. Now add an iso ellipse i and then trim it. Copy and explode an existing dimension line and move the arrowheads to the ends of the arc. Use MTEXT to add the 45°. Very clumsy!
A more important question to ask is why are you creating a 2D isometric? Are you doing this as part of an assignment for a course or are you trying to teach yourself how to use AutoCAD and thought this would be a good exercise. If you are doing this to teach yourself AutoCAD I would recommend creating the block in 3D with AutoCAD and then dimension the 3D object. If this is an assignment for a course and you were asked to create a 2D isometric I suggest you look for another course.
Unfortunately you didn't post a dwg as I asked above. So we don't know if you did draw a 3D-Model or only a 2D-geometrie in an isometric grid.
To answer your question: in a 2D drawing you can only measure the dimensions (and angles) as you have drawn. If you need the real dimensions (without a lot of calculations) you must build a 3D-Model and create the needed dimensions in the model space of this model.
Based on the given informations I added an example dwg ...
cadder
Jürgen Palme
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