AutoCAD For Dummies. Ralph Grabowski
as for Windows 7 (in the preceding list).
Windows 10 and 11
1 In File Explorer, choose the View tab.
2 In the Show/Hide panel, turn on the Hidden Items option.
Now you can see what’s happening in your private folder.
AutoCAD stores drawing templates and many other support files under your Windows user folder. To discover where your template folder is hiding, open the Options dialog box. On the Files tab, choose Template Settings and then Drawing Template File Location, as shown in Figure 4-8.
FIGURE 4-8: Seek and you shall find your template folder.
You don’t have to keep your template files where that bossy Mister Gates told you. Create a folder that you can find easily (for example,
C:\Acad-templates
or F:\Acad-custom\templates
on a network drive), put the templates that you actually use there, and change the Drawing Template File Location setting so that it points to your new template folder. How many Microsoft employees does it take to change a light bulb? None. Dark simply becomes the new standard.
In an office environment in particular, the template folder should live on a network drive so that everyone starts from the same set of templates.
Once you get everything set up properly, you don’t need to do the setup again. Setting up a drawing requires about 20 minutes, on average, but this time drops to almost zero if you configure your templates properly. By using templates, you can save enough time in a year or so to pay for a tropical vacation.
Chapter 5
A Zoom with a View
IN THIS CHAPTER
Zooming and panning
Naming and restoring views
Zooming and panning in paper space layouts
Regenerating the display
One advantage that AutoCAD has over manual drafting is its capability to show you different views of drawings.
You move the viewpoint in, or zoom in, to see a closer view of objects in the drawing; you move the viewpoint out, or zoom out, to see a more expansive (not expensive) view. If you watch TV or movies or own a camera, you should understand zooming.
Panning refers not to looking for gold but to looking at a different part of a drawing without changing the magnification of the view. If you zoom in so that part of the drawing is no longer shown onscreen, you’ll pan around in the drawing to see other parts, without zooming in and out. Think of the monitor as a window through which you look at part of the drawing. Now reach through the window and slide the drawing around until you see a different portion of it through the window.
Panning and zooming do not change the size or position of objects in the drawing. The actions change only how you see them.
In fact, you not only can zoom and pan in the drawing but also, in most kinds of drawings, you must zoom and pan frequently to be able to draw and edit effectively.
Why do you need to pan and zoom often? For starters, though many architectural drawings plot out at 3 feet by 2 feet, you probably aren’t fortunate enough to own a monitor of that size with sufficient resolution to be able to see every little detail.
Early releases of AutoCAD came with a sample drawing of the solar system done to scale. When first opened, it showed circles for each planet’s orbit. Zooming in revealed the moon’s orbit around Earth, then a crater on the moon, then the lunar landing module, and finally writing on the plaque mounted on a leg of the lunar lander.
In addition, technical drawings are jam-packed with lines, text, and dimensions. As discussed in Chapter 8, drawing with precision is essential to following best practices for AutoCAD drawings. Frequent zooming and panning enables you to better see detail, to draw more precisely because you can see what you’re doing, and to edit more quickly, because object selection is easier when the screen isn’t cluttered with objects. This chapter describes the most useful display control features in AutoCAD.
Panning and Zooming with Glass and Hand
AutoCAD makes panning easy, by offering scroll bars and real-time panning. In real-time panning (as opposed to pretend-time panning?), you can see objects moving on the screen as you drag the mouse upward and downward or back and forth with the middle button held down. Of course, the viewpoint is moving, not the objects.
Both panning and zooming change the view — the current location and magnification of the AutoCAD depiction of the drawing. Every time you zoom or pan, you establish a new view. You can give names to specific views so that returning to them is easy, such as a title block or a bill of material, as I demonstrate in the later section “A View by Any Other Name.”
You can gain a better sense of panning and zooming in a drawing when you’re looking at a drawing. Draw some objects on the screen, or open an existing drawing, or launch a sample drawing in AutoCAD.
If you haven’t done so already, you can download sample files from www.autodesk.com/autocad-samples
. (You can ignore the version numbers.) The AutoCAD LT sample files are also online at www.autodesk.com/autocadlt-samples
. Note that LT drawings can be opened by standard AutoCAD and vice versa.
The wheel deal
Later in this chapter, I cover in detail various commands and options in AutoCAD for panning and zooming — if you have a wheel mouse, however, you’ll rarely need to use the other methods, especially when working in 2D drawings. If you don’t have a wheel mouse, run out and buy one now because the small cost will be more than offset by your increased productivity. The following three actions usually suffice for almost all panning and zooming needs:
Zoom in, zoom out: Roll the scroll wheel forward and backward.
Pan: Hold down the scroll wheel (or middle button) as you move the mouse. (The scroll wheel is also considered a button.)
Zoom to the extents of the drawing: Double-click the scroll wheel. This method is particularly useful when you accidentally press Enter at the wrong time during a Move or Copy operation, as described in Chapter 11.
Using the scroll wheel (or middle button on a mouse that has three buttons)