Huh? Your drawing needs work. There is no object data residing in your drawing. Yes, you have Object Data tables but that doesn't mean you have object data 'attached' to any entities.
You have taken a single letter, the letter G and made it a block. Your G block is not attributed. Why? It's just a letter G (yaaawn). What's the point? You should've used plain ol' mtext. At least you can change the G to a Q or a V.
Your block is not annotative. This means your block's appearance, the height of your G, will vary when your viewport zooms in and out. I don't think you want the height of the G to vary, you want the height to remain constant regardless of your viewport scale. Correct?
Your drawing units are in feet but your sheet size is metric. Why? If you use VP scale 1:250 this means one foot modelspace equals 250mm? That kind of math doesn't compute, it's wrong.
You have blue lines on a layer named Proposed Center Line but the lines aren't in the middle of the street, they're touching the curb or on the sidewalk. Maybe change the layer name to Off-Centered Line?
The 4Mtr wide road is 3 meters wide and the 8Mtr wide road is 5 meters wide. I could ask why but won't. I give up.
You have a closed polyline named Area Survey Boundary. If you have a certified survey, start with that and go forward without embellishing. Use a metric template, not imperial. Draw in meters not feet.
Next, create an annotative block with at least one attribute. You may, or may not, wish to attach Object Data to the block, it's up to you.
If you want your annotative block to be 5mm tall when you print on A3 sheet, open a new drawing and create a block 0.005 meters tall (5mm=0.005meters). Save the block in your block library. If you don't have a block library, create one.
If you create your annotative block correctly, your new block, when inserted into your drawing, will magically adjust to the correct height relative to your VP scale. This means it will print 5mm tall on your A3 sheet regardless of the VP scale.
If you don't want to create an annotative block you can use use annotative mtext instead. You can create a legend that explains each letter of mtext.
- G: definition 101
- Q: definition 102
- V: definition 103
If you are ambitious, create a MapBook to print your layouts. Watch this >>VIDEO<< by Jerry Bartels to see how it's done.
Chicagolooper
