Hello everyone. In my drawing I have encontered a problem with the diameter symbol because there are two different shapes apearing depending in the way I generate the dimension. The problem can be found in the atachment.
Have looked into the font but it is the same, it seems when the diameter is autogenerated by inventor it has a "o" shape and when I add afterwards in the text box it apears as a "0". Thank you.
Hello everyone. In my drawing I have encontered a problem with the diameter symbol because there are two different shapes apearing depending in the way I generate the dimension. The problem can be found in the atachment.
Have looked into the font but it is the same, it seems when the diameter is autogenerated by inventor it has a "o" shape and when I add afterwards in the text box it apears as a "0". Thank you.
You are right, inventor has 2 diameter symbols for some reason.
The first symbol is the grey one from the top, that looks like the 0.
The second is the one a few places down, that looks like the O.
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
You are right, inventor has 2 diameter symbols for some reason.
The first symbol is the grey one from the top, that looks like the 0.
The second is the one a few places down, that looks like the O.
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
Sorry for the wrong image. Thanks very much for the quick reply it solved my problem.
Sorry for the wrong image. Thanks very much for the quick reply it solved my problem.
Hi,
Symbols in the first row (grey) are using current font used by dimension style. All other symbols below (light grey) are using AIGDT font. That's the difference.
Hope this helps,
Oto Kaleja
Autodesk
Hi,
Symbols in the first row (grey) are using current font used by dimension style. All other symbols below (light grey) are using AIGDT font. That's the difference.
Hope this helps,
Oto Kaleja
Autodesk
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
Niels van der Veer
Inventor professional user & 3DS Max enthusiast
Vault professional user/manager
The Netherlands
In the attached picture, the top dimension is for holes and the bottom is for diameter. The top is using RomanS and the bottom is using the AIGDT. They don't look very good next to each other (printer doesn't like AIGDT either).
Any way to prevent Inventor from using the AIGDT for the diameter? This character is automatically added with the diameter. I know I could turn that option off in the style and add it manually, but that is not a good solution, just a work around.
In the attached picture, the top dimension is for holes and the bottom is for diameter. The top is using RomanS and the bottom is using the AIGDT. They don't look very good next to each other (printer doesn't like AIGDT either).
Any way to prevent Inventor from using the AIGDT for the diameter? This character is automatically added with the diameter. I know I could turn that option off in the style and add it manually, but that is not a good solution, just a work around.
@skatzY7HV8 wrote:
In the attached picture, the top dimension is for holes and the bottom is for diameter. The top is using RomanS and the bottom is using the AIGDT. T
Can you provide your drawing file or more detail?
When I use the "Hole and Thread" dimension tool to create a dimension for a hole and then use the regular "Dimension" tool to create a dimension for an extruded circle (diameter) my symbols are exactly the same (AIGDT font for the symbol and Arial font for the text after it)
Maybe you used different symbols when setting up your dimension style and used the blue instead of the red circled one from this image..
@skatzY7HV8 wrote:
In the attached picture, the top dimension is for holes and the bottom is for diameter. The top is using RomanS and the bottom is using the AIGDT. T
Can you provide your drawing file or more detail?
When I use the "Hole and Thread" dimension tool to create a dimension for a hole and then use the regular "Dimension" tool to create a dimension for an extruded circle (diameter) my symbols are exactly the same (AIGDT font for the symbol and Arial font for the text after it)
Maybe you used different symbols when setting up your dimension style and used the blue instead of the red circled one from this image..
I did use the one circled in blue (symbol in chosen font, RomanS). Is my best option to just use the one circled in red (AIGDT)? I would prefer to use RomanS if possible.
I did use the one circled in blue (symbol in chosen font, RomanS). Is my best option to just use the one circled in red (AIGDT)? I would prefer to use RomanS if possible.
@skatzY7HV8 wrote:
I did use the one circled in blue (symbol in chosen font, RomanS). Is my best option to just use the one circled in red (AIGDT)? I would prefer to use RomanS if possible.
You want consistency..
Pick and adjust as needed to ensure consistency..
@skatzY7HV8 wrote:
I did use the one circled in blue (symbol in chosen font, RomanS). Is my best option to just use the one circled in red (AIGDT)? I would prefer to use RomanS if possible.
You want consistency..
Pick and adjust as needed to ensure consistency..
Thanks for confirming my fears. Perhaps Autodesk will fix this at some point.
Thanks for confirming my fears. Perhaps Autodesk will fix this at some point.
@skatzY7HV8 wrote:
Thanks for confirming my fears. Perhaps Autodesk will fix this at some point.
@skatzY7HV8 I may not be understanding.. Consistency in a drawing is 100% possible today... It simply involves using the proper diameter symbol in each dimensional scenario..
You currently are using a mix.. Nothing to really be fearful of.. Just use the same one at all times..
@skatzY7HV8 wrote:
Thanks for confirming my fears. Perhaps Autodesk will fix this at some point.
@skatzY7HV8 I may not be understanding.. Consistency in a drawing is 100% possible today... It simply involves using the proper diameter symbol in each dimensional scenario..
You currently are using a mix.. Nothing to really be fearful of.. Just use the same one at all times..
Hi! Brian is right. If you want to use a specific diameter symbol, the key is to make sure you pick the same one. We have heard some feedback on the various diameter symbols available in Inventor. The issue is not that simple. First, we have to support some AutoCAD standards. And, we also have to conform with the font and industry standards (with region difference). Not one symbol can dictate. As a result, there are variations.
Many thanks!
Hi! Brian is right. If you want to use a specific diameter symbol, the key is to make sure you pick the same one. We have heard some feedback on the various diameter symbols available in Inventor. The issue is not that simple. First, we have to support some AutoCAD standards. And, we also have to conform with the font and industry standards (with region difference). Not one symbol can dictate. As a result, there are variations.
Many thanks!
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