Autocad Learning Notes In Hindi

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Course Info

  • Duration:8h 40m 23s
  • Skill Level:Beginner
  • Released:March 21, 2016
  • Viewers:32,506
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  • Course details

    Learn everything you need to know to create precise 2D and 3D drawings with AutoCAD 2017. These tutorials provide AutoCAD beginners (and pros who want to learn more) with the skills required to use AutoCAD 2017 effectively in any industry—architecture, engineering, construction, manufacturing, or product design.
    Autodesk Certified Instructor Shaun Bryant reviews the user interface and leads you step-by-step through all of AutoCAD's tools, menus, and features. Learn how to create and modify geometry, layers, blocks, dimensions, and layouts. Find out how to draw more accurately with AutoCAD's snapping and coordinate model, and add text and annotations that help others understand your drawings. Ready to share your work with others? Discover how to output your drawings in a variety of formats. Even experienced AutoCAD pros can find something new to learn.

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  • Welcome

    - [Voiceover] Welcome to this AutoCAD 2017 Essentials course. What we're going to do in this course is take you all the way through AutoCAD 2017. So if you're a complete beginner, you'll be able to walk away from this course as a competent user of AutoCAD 2017. However, intermediate and advanced users could also use this course to allow themselves to be refreshed of certain features, tools, and methodologies within AutoCAD, itself. We will be using the latest version of AutoCAD, AutoCAD 2017, and what we'll be doing is we'll be working through exercises and videos to teach you all the methodologies and concepts behind AutoCAD 2017 so that you can become a competent user.

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    Download the files the instructor uses to teach the course. Follow along and learn by watching, listening and practicing.
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This site provides great AutoCAD tutorials for new students of AutoCAD. They are designed to be as compatible with as many versions of AutoCAD as possible. They are based on AutoCAD 2016, but will apply to older versions as well as the newer AutoCAD 2017. The lesson format was used in my CAD classes I have been teaching previously.

Course Contents

By Seth Cohen

Learning

Almost every day someone asks me an annotation-related question. Some are easy to answer, and some involve a little more thought. And of course, there are just some really cool tips that help when annotating objects. In this Tuesday Tip, let’s go through some of the common annotation questions I get.

Hey AutoCAD, Where’d My Hatch Go?

At some point, everyone who uses AutoCAD will have to hatch something. Hatching is a great and robust command, and it uses the annotative system. Although the annotative system has been around since AutoCAD 2008, there are people who still have a hard time grasping the concept.

I try and explain to them that AutoCAD’s annotative system is simply a system that helps you control what I call, “scale-dependent” objects (i.e., Text, Dimensions, Multileaders, Hatching, Blocks, and Attributes). These are objects that, when plotted, would look a different size in viewports with different scales if the annotative system did not exist. The annotative system automates the “scaling” of those objects in all viewports so that you don’t have to. The only requirement of the user is to a) know the one-to-one scale of the object when measured on a piece of paper, and b) tell AutoCAD which viewport scale(s) he/she would like applied to that annotative object. That’s it!

Autocad Learning Notes In Hindi Youtube

AutoCAD provides many tools to apply annotative scales globally or individually to annotative objects through the Ribbon: Annotate tab > Annotation Scaling panel, as well as within the Properties palette when you select an annotative object.

Annotation Scaling panel in the Annotate ribbon tab

So, with that little bit of background on annotative objects in your back pocket, let’s figure out why a particular hatch object won’t plot. In the example below, I have some riprap. If you look, we’re in model space, and the hatching looks fine:

Free

However, when I go to my layout, the riprap does not show up, just the outline:

So, keeping in mind what I said earlier, annotative objects need to be told what scales to show in. In this case, what’s happening is that these hatching objects simply don’t have the current viewports scale associated to them.

Let’s navigate back to model space and select all the hatches. Next, open the Properties palette (CTRL+1 to toggle it). Locate the Annotative scale property and click the browse button:

Simply add the viewport scale in question, and that is it:

Now the riprap will appear in your plot:

I Put Labels in Paper Space and Now I Need To Shift My View

There are many companies that still put all their labels in paper space. The advantage to this is that you don’t have to worry about annotative functionality and your labels will always appear. However, one of the major disadvantages is that if your view needs to shift, your labels stay where they are and won’t be in the correct location.

What to do? One trick is to use the old PAN command with a dash (“-”) in front of it and type the distance that your view has shifted by. First, while in paper space, measure the distance in the X and Y direction from a known object in model space to a paper space object; multi-leaders or dimensions work the best.

FYI: You may need to run the CHSPACE command and temporarily put a paper space object into model space to get the correct distance)

Next, activate your viewport, and unlock it. Type –PAN in the command line, click anywhere in space, and type in the X and Y distances that you measured previously. Make sure you note the appropriate signs as well.

Autocad Learning Pdf

Lock your viewport, and now your view is lined up with your labels. Very cool!

Since everyone who uses AutoCAD annotates, I hope these tips make your annotation workflows a little easier.

More Tuesday Tips

Check out our whole TuesdayTipsseries for ideas on how to make AutoCAD work for you. Do you have any favorite AutoCAD tips? Tell us in the comments!