Hi,
as seen below ... try to tick Prompt for name option .
Imad Habash
Thank you for your help. But My Autocad is LT version, so don't have that option.
@imadHabashwrote:Hi,
as seen below ... try to tick Prompt for name option .
Anyway, your solution only for multi-sheet. For single-sheet can't.
I ask again very carefully so that we do not get us wrong:
You start publish command, not plot command.
You select only one sheet to publish.
The "Entire Name" Option is disabled now, thats fine.
Are you useing the [PDF] option or are you using the the printer from your pagesetup (which one is it?)
Curios, Standard is only DWGname=PDFname for publishing only one sheet.
Please answer my question and write down your exact Version (command _VERNUM)
Had you migrate your setting from older version?
Sebastian
@cadffmwrote:I ask again very carefully so that we do not get us wrong:
You start publish command, not plot command. >>CorrectYou select only one sheet to publish. --> I select single-sheet file
The "Entire Name" Option is disabled now, thats fine.
Are you useing the [PDF] option or are you using the the printer from your pagesetup (which one is it?) --> I use the printer at my page setup (DWG to PDF).
Curios, Standard is only DWGname=PDFname for publishing only one sheet.
Please answer my question and write down your exact Version (command _VERNUM)
Had you migrate your setting from older version? --> I don't.
Please check my answer and photo attached. Thank you.
We all know, the standard naming action for any file exporting tool it's to make the new file name as the old file name but with a different extension, This is not how CAD to PDF does it.
Batch plotting CAD to PDF files must at all cost contain the Layout name.
There is even an option to not include your own file name in the new file, but you have got to have the Layout name...
Apparently it's very important that Layout name it's included in the PDF, this is no accident for the looks of it.
So, no there is no way in standard CAD to not include the "Layout" name when you batch plot.
The only option you have it's to rename manually each file either in the "sheet name" window or in the folder of destination after exporting.
Makes sense because you can have 20 Layouts in one file.
Or?
The programmer need to choose one simpke rule and the best one (mostly fit) is, use Layoutname or Filename+Layoutname.
Just my 2ct for this fact
Sebastian
Having 20 layouts is just crazy to me. I've worked in a company where they would use multiple layouts and would name the dwg file some long file name. The layouts would have the proper company standard name.
Why not just create a separate file for every layout? When I would ask the dept lead about it, he never could give me an answer that satisfied me. I mean, would you accept "That's just how we've always done it." as a satisfying answer?
so this forces you to open a multi sheet file . Ugh! I've done it both ways and it is not any quicker to have it all in one file.