Hi,
for me ... tracing lines is the best practical way . just turn off all unwnated layers and with proper osnap to make it easy for work and when you finish ... believe me you will get accepted and elegant work .
>> I have looked at the pick point & gap tolerance options but it takes a long time and often freezes. <<
it's Normal ... especially when you have a lot of details lines and arcs around .
Regards,
Imad Habash
Hi,
for me ... tracing lines is the best practical way . just turn off all unwnated layers and with proper osnap to make it easy for work and when you finish ... believe me you will get accepted and elegant work .
>> I have looked at the pick point & gap tolerance options but it takes a long time and often freezes. <<
it's Normal ... especially when you have a lot of details lines and arcs around .
Regards,
Imad Habash
If you move up to AutoCAD Architecture, spaces and walls are associative and you can control their display style based on display themes that have their own legends.
If you move up to AutoCAD Architecture, spaces and walls are associative and you can control their display style based on display themes that have their own legends.
Create the polyline for the boundary (don't forget to close it) then use the select objects method instead of pick points in the hatch command.
At the Select Objects: prompt, you could type in L as a way of selecting the polyline without having to pick it.
Create the polyline for the boundary (don't forget to close it) then use the select objects method instead of pick points in the hatch command.
At the Select Objects: prompt, you could type in L as a way of selecting the polyline without having to pick it.
@Anonymous wrote:
... is there a quicker/ better workflow than tracing around the room outlines with the polyline command then hatching the polyline.
....
What I typically do is to make a Layer for door- and window-head edges [which I will use in reflected ceiling plans, but turn off in regular floor plans], and draw Lines only across the door and window openings, rather than Polylines all the way around the rooms. Then with just the wall and door/window-head Layers on [plus, of course, the Hatching Layer on and current], Hatching rooms by picking points is easy and quick.
@Anonymous wrote:
... is there a quicker/ better workflow than tracing around the room outlines with the polyline command then hatching the polyline.
....
What I typically do is to make a Layer for door- and window-head edges [which I will use in reflected ceiling plans, but turn off in regular floor plans], and draw Lines only across the door and window openings, rather than Polylines all the way around the rooms. Then with just the wall and door/window-head Layers on [plus, of course, the Hatching Layer on and current], Hatching rooms by picking points is easy and quick.
hi
just for faster action just Ctrl+c the area which you want to do hatch in to a new drawing with paste as original
coordinate and then run hatch command .
in the new drawing its so fast because it is a light file not so heavy
and when you done you can cut hatch and paste it to your original file with paste as original coordinate
i am using this method when my file is to large.
hi
just for faster action just Ctrl+c the area which you want to do hatch in to a new drawing with paste as original
coordinate and then run hatch command .
in the new drawing its so fast because it is a light file not so heavy
and when you done you can cut hatch and paste it to your original file with paste as original coordinate
i am using this method when my file is to large.
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