I would like to set my Mtext to default to MC justification. Anyone know how to do this?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by rkmcswain. Go to Solution.
there is no way to specify a default justification, it will always default to top left unless the Autodesk engineers see fit to give us lowly users that ability.
I used the autolisp code you provided and that solves the justification problem. Thanks. Is there a way to do it so i can see what i'm typing on the screen?
@rkmcswain wrote:
Lisp code: (defun c:mt ()(vl-cmdf "._mtext" pause "_j" "_mc"))
This may come in handy
Is it possible to add extra code to this lisp to set the line spacing to something other than 1 (e.g. 0.85). I personally prefer to run multi line text with a tighter line spacing.
Is it possible to add extra code to this lisp to set the line spacing to something other than 1 (e.g. 0.85).
Sure. Give this a shot.
(defun c:mt ()(vl-cmdf "._mtext" pause "_j" "_mc" "_l" "_e" "0.85x"))
@rkmcswain wrote:Is it possible to add extra code to this lisp to set the line spacing to something other than 1 (e.g. 0.85).
Sure. Give this a shot.
(defun c:mt ()(vl-cmdf "._mtext" pause "_j" "_mc" "_l" "_e" "0.85x"))
Cheers
This is great!
This will still work if the command is mtext, not _mtext, right? I don't like entering my text on the command line.
Thanks!
@srleone wrote:
This is great!
This will still work if the command is mtext, not _mtext, right? I don't like entering my text on the command line.
Thanks!
What do you mean please? the LISP once loaded is called by the abbreviation MT.
Or are you just unsure on how to autoload LISP? And you are now literally typing all of that one line code everytime you need it? Explain please.
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