What does the asterisk indicate at the drawing name?

tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

What does the asterisk indicate at the drawing name?

tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

Why is this asterisk in the name of the drawing? Please see below

Asterisk.jpg

Also, I try 'closing' out one of the drawings and I get an error message that says: "Command _CLOSE is not available under SDI mode."

 

SDI is set = 1... How am I supposed to negotiate between drawings? 

 

0 Likes
Reply
3,678 Views
12 Replies
Replies (12)

user181
Mentor
Mentor

Hi @tor3B3UK,  the asterisk after the drawing name means changes have been made since it was last saved.  SDI = 1 turns on the single drawing interface. If you are opening multiple drawings you want SDI = 0 

EESignature


tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

... means changes have been made since it was last saved.  

 

The asterisk appears when first opening up a drawing before any edits have been made.  

0 Likes

user181
Mentor
Mentor

Thats how it works. Once you save it will go away but all you have to do is pan or zoom and it will come back. 

EESignature


0 Likes

tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

Is there any point to this 'feature' except to stymie productivity? 

0 Likes

cadffm
Consultant
Consultant
stymie productivity? 
Rofl. How can this stymie your productivity? 
If it isn't a profit for you to see if a file state is saved or not, ok.

Or do you mean that pan or zoom etc. set your file state to non-saved?
Easy answer, the current view is part of your stored data in your file.
If you have change the view, you changed the content.

Sebastian

tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

The wasted time is in not being able to negotiate between two drawings (SDI = 1 not working) and having to 'fix' all the problems that keep coming up over and over again due to this finicky program that is extremely unstable. I have gotten *dozens* of FATAL ERRORS over the last week from things that are completely out of my control. AutoCAD is a time-sink and it makes me very frustrated that it is so prone to problems despite paying tens-of-thousands of dollars for it. the asterisk is a brand-new 'thing' that just showed up this morning that I had no idea what it meant. Now you say it really doesn't 'do' anything except remind you that the drawing isn't 'saved'. Is this a 'feature' that just started this morning? 

0 Likes

pendean
Community Legend
Community Legend
You seem to be talking about way more than a simply asterisk in a tab: it has been around for ever, did you just move to a new version from a very old version?

Do you need to follow trough with one of your other posts in this forum?

What is your AutoCAD/LT version?
What is your Windows version?

tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

Okay, sorry. It appears CAD has changed quite a bit with this forced SDI=0 thing that's new for me since the 2018 version.  CAD is doing their customer base a great disservice by changing many core features without legacy options.  

0 Likes

cadffm
Consultant
Consultant
As it has been said, this change has arisen from necessity because there are problems that could not be solved.
I tried using SDI on Win8.1 and have no problems (only because of some User questions i tried that) Maybe there is still an update? I don't no.
I am glad that SDI still existed in 2000-2018 😉
With MDI in 2000(?) and removing the documentation of SDI few years ago, it was ever possible that Adesk removes this old feature in the future.

Sebastian

0 Likes

pendean
Community Legend
Community Legend
See your other duplicate posts.
0 Likes

tor3B3UK
Advocate
Advocate

The asterisk is a brand new 'feature' that didn't occur on any drawing I have ever worked on in AutoCAD which creped up at random about a week ago right after I asked about docking my command line when someone had me do something to my system that radically changed its appearance by messing with the CUI which is apparently an *irreversible* option.  This question is not related to any other question I've asked. 

0 Likes

pendean
Community Legend
Community Legend
See your other duplicate posts, all of these same questions have been answered over and over again.
0 Likes