Module01 AutoCADBasics

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 54

NOTES

Module 1
AutoCAD Basics

In this module, you learn about the AutoCAD graphic environment. Whether
refreshing your knowledge or learning for the first time, these exercises will
help you develop familiarity with basic entity creation and modification, entity
properties, layers, blocks, layouts, and template files. A strong knowledge of
these basics will enable you to work with the AutoCAD Civil 3D lessons and
software more efficiently.

Objectives
After completing this module, you will be able to:

‰ Navigate the AutoCAD graphic environment, zoom and pan to view


objects, use the command window, use the help system, and explore
environment settings and function keys.

‰ Configure fundamental drawing settings and options such as scale, grid,


Snap, Object Snap, file paths, and display colors.

‰ Create basic AutoCAD objects such as lines, polylines, circles, arcs, and
polygons using menus, palettes, keyboard commands, mouse controls,
coordinates, and object snaps

‰ Modify AutoCAD objects using multiple techniques including grip editing


and object properties.

‰ User layers to control object display.

‰ Navigate and view objects in 3D.

‰ Create reusable blocks.

‰ Use externally-referenced drawings in the current drawing.

‰ Draw objects in paper space (layouts) and configure one or more


viewports in a layout.

‰ Create a properly formatted layout with required map elements such as a


title block, north arrow, border, and scale.

‰ Configure the page setup and plot layouts to an engineering scale.


AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

Notes
This module introduces you to the fundamentals of the AutoCAD
environment. Prior to working with the advanced design environment of
AutoCAD Civil 3D, you need to feel comfortable navigating, creating and
modifying objects and blocks, and plotting to scale.

Faculty should emphasize that while some of these exercises are drafting
oriented, they are necessary to ensure that you are ready to work with Civil 3D
in a design-oriented environment.

Data for this module resides in the ..\AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education
Curriculum\Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics\ folder. You create your own
drawings in Exercises 1 to 4.

The drawing data for this module is independent of units. You will find the
required drawings in both the\Imperial and \Metric folders.

Student Exercises

The following exercises are provided in step-by-step format. For this opening
module, your goal is to become familiar with the basic AutoCAD environment
and to be able to use the fundamental tools. For this reason, instead of using
the AutoCAD Civil 3D program icon, you use the Civil 3D as AutoCAD 2008
icon on your desktop.

This module highlights the differences and similarities between straight


AutoCAD and AutoCAD Civil 3D. In general, AutoCAD can be described as
a drafting program; AutoCAD Civil 3D is a design program that includes all of
the features of AutoCAD.

1. Navigate the AutoCAD Graphics Environment

2. Review Drawing Settings and Environment Options

3. Create Objects

4. Modify Objects

5. Navigate the 3D Graphics Environment

6. Create Blocks and Use External References

7. Work with Layouts and Viewports

8. Plot an Engineering Drawing to Scale

01-2
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

AutoCAD Basics
AutoCAD is the graphical drafting environment used by the AutoCAD Civil
3D design software. Therefore, it is critical for you to learn the basics of
AutoCAD prior to continuing through the rest of this curriculum.

In the early years of CAD, design was performed separately from the drafting
and production of final drawings. AutoCAD Civil 3D has changed this
paradigm so that design and production are performed simultaneously.
Understanding the AutoCAD environment is crucial to design using the
intelligent objects of AutoCAD Civil 3D.

Key Terms
Template Files Template files contain standard AutoCAD settings, layer definitions,
linetypes, symbols, paper space layout definitions, dimension styles, and
text style definitions. In addition, template files can include Civil 3D
drawing information in either the Settings tree (including Civil 3D
settings, object styles, label styles, tables, description keys, and point
import/export formats) or the Prospector tree (including any Civil 3D
object, such as point groups).

Grips Small squares and triangles that appear on selected objects. After
selecting the grip, you edit the object by dragging it with the pointing
device instead of entering commands.

UCS Icon An icon that indicates the orientation of the UCS (User Coordinate
System) axes. (UCSICON).

Grid and Snap A grid is an area covered with regularly spaced dots or lines to aid
drawing. The grid spacing is adjustable. The grid dots are never plotted.
Snap settings relate to an invisible grid that locks the pointer into
alignment with the grid points according to the spacing settings. Snap
grid does not necessarily correspond to the visible grid.

Object Snap Methods for selecting commonly needed points on an object while you
(Osnap) create or edit a drawing. Examples of object snaps include endpoint,
midpoint, and center.

Layer Layers are used to organize drawing data. Every drawing object is
assigned to a layer. Objects can adopt the layer visibility settings,
including on/off, freeze/thaw, color, and linetype.

Selection Window A selection window is used to select one or more objects that a
command can act upon at the same time. Implied windowing means

01-3
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

using a right to left window to select items the window touches and a left
to right window to select items entirely within the window.

Named Views A view, or graphical orientation, that can be saved and restored.

Block A generic term for one or more objects that are combined to create a
single object.

External A drawing file referenced by another drawing.


Reference

Layout The environment in which you create and design paper space layout
viewports to be plotted. Multiple layouts can be created within each
drawing. Contract drawing borders are usually created on layouts.

Viewport A bounded area that displays some portion of the model space of a
drawing. A viewport is created on a layout.

Paper Space One of two primary spaces in which objects reside. Paper space is used
for creating a finished layout for printing or plotting, as opposed to
doing drafting or design work. You design your model using the Model
tab.

Model Space One of the two primary spaces in which objects reside. Typically, a
geometric model is placed in a three-dimensional coordinate space
called model space. A final layout of specific views and annotations of
this model is placed in paper space.

01-4
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

EXERCISE 1: NAVIGATE THE AUTOCAD GRAPHICS ENVIRONMENT

In this exercise, you navigate in the AutoCAD graphics environment. There


are many tools available for viewing, creating, and modifying objects.
Recognizing these tools and knowing how to use them quickly will help as you
move into the later modules.

1. On your desktop, double-click the Civil 3D as AutoCAD 2008 icon.

Note that by using this icon, you are opening just the AutoCAD
component of AutoCAD Civil 3D.

AutoCAD opens with a wide variety of objects on the screen. Examine the
names of each area of the program interface. When AutoCAD opens, the
program automatically opens a drawing file named Drawing1.dwg as seen
in the title bar of the program.

2. Click File > New.

It is common to use a drawing template file (*.dwt) when creating a new


drawing (*.dwg) file. Template files contain pre-defined layers, blocks,
styles, and settings to give the new drawing consistency with a company or

01-5
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

client standard.

3. Click the acad.dwt file in the list of templates. Click Open.

A second drawing named Drawing2.dwg is opened and has inherited any


items from the acad.dwt file.

4. Click Window on the menu bar.

Notice that two drawings are open at the same time. You can switch
between them using this menu.

5. Click Draw > Line.

6. Click anywhere in the drawing area to begin the line. Move the mouse and
click again to end the line.

AutoCAD treats individual lines as single entities, but will automatically


begin the next line where the previous line ended. The line is created on
the current layer.

7. Press ENTER to end the Draw Line command.

01-6
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

8. Click on the line.

Blue grips are shown on key geometric locations, different for each type of
entity. These grips show you that one or more objects are selected in a
selection set. You can perform commands on the selection set in a
noun/verb sense where the selected objects are the noun(s) and the
command is the verb.

The line is now selected.

9. Click Modify > Properties, or click the Properties icon on the toolbar .

The Properties palette opens, showing the properties of the selected entity.
Examine the properties in the palette. All of the properties with a white
background can be edited in the palette by clicking in the cell and
changing the value. The shortcut key for opening this palette is CTRL-1.

10. Close the Properties palette. Press CTRL-1 to reopen.

11. Click in the Start X value cell.

12. Highlight the existing value and enter 4. Press TAB.

The starting X position of the line changes to 4.000. Notice the two small
icons to the right of the cell. Clicking on the calculator icon allows you to
use a calculator to enter a formula for the property. Clicking on the pointer
icon allows you to click in the drawing area with your mouse.

01-7
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

13. Close the Properties palette.

14. Press ESC.

The grips disappear from the line.

15. Draw a second line crossing the first line.

16. If you have a mouse wheel, roll the wheel forward and backward. Hold the
wheel down and move the mouse.

Rolling the wheel automatically uses the Zoom function and moving the
mouse with the wheel pressed uses the Pan function. There are several
methods to accomplish the same task using AutoCAD.

17. Click Pan on the toolbar .

18. Click and drag the mouse to pan the drawing.

19. Right-click and click Exit to end the command

You should always look at the command window to see the command
options or to see what the program is expecting you to do. Be sure to
expand the command window to be able to view at least three lines.
During the Pan command, the command window told you that you could
use the ENTER key, the ESC key, or right-click for a shortcut menu to end
the command.

20. Enter P on the keyboard. Press ENTER.

The keyboard shortcut for the Pan command is the letter P. Many
commands have keyboard shortcuts that are very handy.

21. Click and drag the mouse to pan the drawing. Press ESC.

22. Click on the Zoom Window button on the toolbar.

You need to click one corner, move the mouse around the lines to click the
opposite corner of a bounding rectangle. The keyboard shortcut for Zoom
is Z. The command window shows a number of options. You enter the
capital letter of the option desired to start the command. Your keyboard
entry is not case sensitive.

23. Click one corner, move the mouse, and then click the opposite corner of
the window.

24. Enter Z, and press ENTER. Enter P, and press SPACEBAR.

P is the key for the previous option of the Zoom command. The view prior
to the Zoom command is restored. Notice that the SPACEBAR does the

01-8
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

same thing as the ENTER key.

25. Enter Z, and press SPACEBAR. Enter E, and press SPACEBAR.

This executes the Zoom Extents command. AutoCAD automatically


zooms to include the extents of all visible objects. In Civil 3D (not
AutoCAD), there is a shorter keyboard method for the zoom commands.
You can enter both letters at the same time, and then press ENTER. For
example, Enter ZP and press ENTER to Zoom Previous. Another way to
use the zoom options is to click and hold Zoom Window on the toolbar
and use the other icons on the toolbar flyout.

To select entities, you either click on them or click a box around or


touching them.

26. Click to the left of the lines, and drag a box entirely around both lines.

27. Click again.

When you drag a selection box from left to right, all entities that are
entirely within the box are selected (window selection). When you drag a
selection box from right to left, any entity touched by the box is selected
(crossing selection). Try this feature to see how it works. This is called
Implied Windowing.

01-9
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

28. Press ESC.

The Cartesian (X,Y) coordinate system is represented in the drawing area


by an XY axis icon, called the UCS (User Coordinate System). This icon
can be turned on and off.

29. Enter UCSICON. Enter Off. Press ENTER.

30. Enter UCSICON. Enter On. Press SPACEBAR.

Pressing ENTER or SPACEBAR repeats the last command.

31. Press SPACEBAR again.

Notice the command window presents options for the UCSICON


command.

32. Enter Off. Press SPACEBAR.

Most commands are available with menus or keyboard shortcuts. The


UCSICON command is available by clicking View > Display > UCS Icon.

33. Click Help > Help.

AutoCAD Help is thorough and context sensitive.

The Help window opens with Contents, Index, Search, and Favorites tabs.
F1 also opens the Help window.

34. Keep the drawing open as you will work with it in Exercise 2.

01-10
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

EXERCISE 2: REVIEW DRAWING SETTINGS AND ENVIRONMENT OPTIONS

In this exercise, you explore the various settings and options to customize
AutoCAD.

You continue working with the same drawing from Exercise 1.

1. Right-click anywhere in the Drawing Area. Click Options.

2. Click the Files tab.

Each of the listed names and paths can be modified. To get more
information on any of the options, click to highlight a tree and look at the
bottom of the dialog box. You can also click Help at the lower right for
help on the entire page.

01-11
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

3. Click the Display tab.

4. Click the Colors button in the Window Elements section.

5. Click 2D model space under Context and click Uniform background under
Interface element. Click the down arrow under Color: and select White.

6. Click Apply & Close.

7. In the Crosshair size section of the tab, drag the slider bar all the way to
the right so the size is 100.

Many other colors can be modified using the Colors button. Review the

01-12
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

other options in the Display tab.

8. Click the Open and Save tab.

Review the various sections on the tab that can be modified. There are
many tabs and settings as part of the Options dialog box. You should
review these because the settings affect your drawing environment.

9. Click the Drafting tab.

The AutoSnap and AutoTrack settings are frequently modified by users.

10. Drag the Aperture Size slider bar slightly to the right.

11. Click the Selection tab.

You can modify the grip size and color, turn them on or off, and modify
many other options for selecting entities.

12. Click the Profiles tab.

All of the settings that you make can be saved to a particular profile that
can be used anytime. To do this, click Add to List, assign the profile a
name and description, and then click Apply & Close.

13. Click OK to close the Options dialog box.

14. Click Tools > Customize > Interface.

01-13
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

The Customize User Interface dialog box enables you to modify menus,
keyboard shortcuts, and many other items. Modifications are generally
done by advanced users; however, it is a powerful tool used by many. As
an alternative, Autodesk has designed Workspaces as a set of pre-
formatted menus, palettes, and toolbars.

15. Click Cancel.

16. Click Tools > Workspaces > 2D Drafting Annotation.

A new palette opens that holds many commonly used controls.

17. Click Tools > Workspaces > AutoCAD Classic.

A tool palette opens. Try some of the other workspaces.

18. Close the tool palette.

19. Right-click on any open space in the toolbar area. Click ACAD.

01-14
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

Here you can turn on various toolbars. The check marks indicate that
these toolbars are currently open.

20. Click Text.

The Text toolbar opens and presents tools that can be used for working
with text.

21. Close the Text toolbar.

Toolbars that are currently docked can be undocked.

22. Click and drag the Layers toolbar to the Drawing Area.

You can also do this by double-clicking the double vertical bar on the left

01-15
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

end of the toolbar. You can either double-click the title bar to
automatically dock the toolbar, or you can drag the toolbar to the toolbar
area for docking.

23. Dock the Layers toolbar.

Drafting Settings include several important features to help you be more


accurate and efficient in creating objects. Using snap and grid settings can
be helpful.

24. Click Tools > Drafting Settings.

25. Click the Snap and Grid tab. Click the Snap On check box and the Grid
On check box.

26. Click OK.

The grid is a series of dots set at the specified spacing interval over the
area of the drawing limits. If you are unable to see the grid, click Format >
Drawing Limits. Press ENTER to accept the bottom left corner as 0,0.
Enter 100, 100, and then press ENTER to set the upper right bounding
corner of the drawing limit.

The snap setting only allows the crosshair to locate on the unit increments
set in the previous dialog box. The grid and snap settings are independent
of each other.

27. Move the mouse and watch the coordinates of the crosshair as reported in
the lower left corner of the status bar.

Notice that the coordinate values only change in 0.5 unit increments. The
Snap and Grid settings can be turned off and on in the status bar also.

28. Click Snap on the status bar to turn it off.

There are many other settings that can quickly be turned off or on using

01-16
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

the status bar as well as the function keys. You can also right-click on
these buttons to turn them on or off or modify the settings. The Snap
toggle is the F9 key. Other function keys are programmed to toggle
settings on and off.

F1 Displays Help
F2 Toggles Text Window
F3 Toggles OSNAP
F4 Toggles TABMODE
F5 Toggles ISOPLANE
F6 Toggles UCSDETECT
F7 Toggles GRIDMODE
F8 Toggles ORTHOMODE
F9 Toggles SNAPMODE
F10 Toggles Polar Tracking
F11 Toggles Object Snap Tracking
F12 Toggles Dynamic Input

29. Press F9.

Notice the message in the command window turning Snap off.

30. Right-click on Grid. Click Settings.

31. Click the Grid check box off. Click OK.

Another important setting is drawing units.

32. Click Format > Units.

01-17
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

It is typical to work in decimal length and decimal degrees for angles, but
these settings may be modified. The precision setting controls only the
reported number of decimal places, not the number of places stored in
AutoCAD. Review the options by clicking the down arrows on these
settings.

33. Click Cancel.

34. Keep the drawing open, as you will work with it in Exercise 3.

01-18
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

EXERCISE 3: CREATE OBJECTS

In this exercise, you create basic objects using menus, toolbars, mouse
techniques, and keyboard shortcuts.

You continue working with the same drawing from Exercise 2.

1. Click Line on the Draw toolbar.

2. Click to begin a line. Move the mouse and click to end the line. Press
ENTER.

3. Press SPACEBAR.

The Draw Line command starts again.

4. Move the mouse near the line just drawn.

Notice the orange object snap boxes when your mouse is near the end of
the line.

Object snaps, or osnaps, are specific important geometric points of entities


to which you can snap for the purposes of creating or modifying entities.
Their positions are similar to the grip positions. If you cannot see the
Osnap box, click the Osnap button in the status bar to turn it on.

5. Click when you see the Osnap box.

The line starts at the Osnap position.

6. Move the mouse and click to finish the line. Press ESC.

7. Click the Circle button on the Draw toolbar.

Always watch the command window for messages, instructions, and


options during a command. You need to designate the center of the circle.

8. Move the mouse near the end of a line. Click when the Osnap box
appears.

01-19
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

9. Move the mouse to expand the diameter. Click to draw the circle.

You can control which Osnap types are automatically detected in the
Drawing Area.

10. Right-click the Osnap button in the status bar. Click Settings.

These Osnap types can be modified at any time.

11. Click OK.

Osnaps are also available during a drawing command using the SHIFT-
Right-click combination.

12. Enter L, the shortcut key for drawing a line. Press SPACEBAR.

13. Hold SHIFT and right-click. Click Nearest.

14. Move the mouse close to the edge of the circle.

The Osnap symbol appears and tracks along the edge of the circle as the
mouse moves.

01-20
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

15. Click to start the line.

16. Enter cen. Press SPACEBAR.

17. Move the mouse near the edge or the center of the circle.

Notice that the Osnap at the center of the circle is on.

18. Click to draw the line. Press SPACEBAR.

You can also enter coordinates while drawing or modifying objects using
the keyboard. There are two types of coordinate input methods: absolute
and relative.

19. Click the polyline button on the Draw toolbar.

A polyline is a single object that has multiple vertices, whereas a line is


one object with only start and endpoints.

20. Enter 10,10. Press ENTER.

Notice the rubberbanding effect from the start point of 10,10 (x,y) to the
crosshair. Roll the mouse wheel to zoom if you cannot see the start of the
polyline. 10, 10 are the absolute coordinates of the starting point.

21. Enter 20,20. Press ENTER.

The first segment of the polyline is drawn and AutoCAD is waiting for
coordinates for the next vertex. You will enter these using relative
coordinates, the x and y distance away from the current vertex.

22. Enter @10,-5. Press ENTER.

The @ symbol means the coordinates are relative. Notice that negative or
positive coordinates can be entered.

23. Press ESC.

AutoCAD can create objects in 3D using the z axis. The line command
can be 3D, but the polyline command cannot. You must use the 3D
polyline command.

24. Enter L. Press SPACEBAR.

01-21
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

25. Click to begin a line.

26. Enter 10,15,10. Press SPACEBAR twice.

27. Click Views > 3D Views > Front.

The view shifts to the front of the objects.

In the following steps you learn about layers. Objects are organized by
placing them on different layers.

28. Click Layer Properties Manager in the Layers toolbar.

The layer named 0 is the default layer for this drawing.

29. Click the New Layer button.

30. Enter Test as the Layer Name.

31. Click the Color value for the Test layer.

32. Click Red on the Index Color tab in the Select Color dialog box. Click
OK.

Any object drawn while this layer is current is red.

33. With the Test layer highlighted, click Set Current.

34. Click OK.

35. Click Draw > Rectangle.

01-22
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

36. Click to set one corner of the rectangle. Move the mouse and click to draw
the rectangle.

The rectangle is drawn on the Test layer and appears red. Drawings
frequently use many layers to organize features. For example a storm
sewer layer contains the storm sewer pipes, manholes and catch basins.
Layer naming standards are used by all companies to give consistency to
their drawings. Layer visibility is controlled in the Layer Properties dialog
box.

37. Click Layer Properties Manager in the Layers toolbar.

38. On the 0 layer, click the Freeze icon.

All objects on the 0 layer will not be visible.

39. Click OK.

View the graphic area to notice which objects are visible. Other layer
settings can be modified in the same manner.

40. Click Text on the Draw toolbar.

41. Use Osnaps on the rectangle to click one corner, then the opposite corner.

42. In the Text Input box, enter Manhole.

43. Highlight the text by dragging your mouse.

Change the size of the text.

44. On the Text Formatting toolbar, Enter 5 in the size box. Click OK.

45. Close the drawing and do not save the changes.

01-23
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

EXERCISE 4: MODIFY OBJECTS

In this exercise, you modify basic objects using menus, toolbars, mouse
techniques, and keyboard shortcuts.

1. Create a new drawing using the acad.dwt template file.

2. Add a second layer named Road to the drawing. Change the layer color to
blue.

3. Draw several lines, polylines, circles, and add text to the drawing.

Put some of these objects on the 0 layer and the Road layer.

4. With the 0 layer current, click the line icon in the Draw toolbar.

5. Click to start the line. Move the mouse and click again to end the line.
Press SPACEBAR.

6. Press SPACEBAR again to start the line command again.

7. Draw another random line.

8. Click the circle icon on the Draw toolbar.

9. Click to set the center of the circle. Move the mouse and click again to
complete the circle.

10. Click the down arrow on the Layer toolbar and select the Road layer to set
it as current.

11. Repeat the previous steps to draw objects on the Road layer. Include a text
object.

12. Use a right to left selection window to select several objects.

01-24
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

Grips appear on the objects. You can add to the selection set by holding
the SHIFT key and clicking on other objects.

13. Enter erase. Press SPACEBAR.

The selected objects disappear from the screen. Actions in AutoCAD are
logged and can be undone. You can also use E as the keyboard shortcut
for erase.

14. Enter U. Press SPACEBAR.

The Undo command is frequently used.

15. Click on one of the lines.

Grips appear on the line. Grip editing is a powerful method to graphically


modify objects.

16. Click on one of the grips. Move the mouse.

The grip changes color and becomes the active grip. Editing commands
use this grip as the focus. The line is stretching from one point to the
active grip on the crosshair. Review the command window. You have
automatically initiated the Stretch edit command, the default command for
grips.

17. Click to stretch the line.

18. Click the grip again.

19. Press SPACEBAR. Move the mouse.

The spacebar changed the active grip command to Move. As you move
the mouse the line moves.

20. Move the mouse until an Osnap from another object is highlighted.

21. Click to move the line.

01-25
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

22. Click the grip again. Press SPACEBAR twice. Move the mouse.

The Rotate command is active. There are five grip editing commands
available: Stretch, Move, Rotate, Scale, and Mirror that toggle as you
press SPACEBAR. Another commonly used method is to select the
object(s), then right-click and use the You should experiment with these
editing commands.

23. Click to rotate the line. Press ESC.

24. Click to select an object on the 0 layer.

25. Click Properties on the Standard toolbar.

The Properties palette for the selected object(s) is displayed. Any property
value with a white background can be modified.

26. Click in the Layer value cell. Click the down arrow.

27. Click Road. Press ESC. Close the Properties palette.

The object’s layer changes to Road and the color changes.

Objects are also easy to copy and paste.

28. Click to select a text object. Right-click and click Copy Selection.

Always watch the command window for messages.

29. Click to select the base point.

30. Move and click the mouse. Press ENTER.

01-26
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

A copy of the text object is inserted.

31. Press ESC to end the Copy command.

32. Click on a polyline. Enter list. Press SPACEBAR.

An AutoCAD text window opens, showing you the results of your query
about the polyline’s properties. This window is a larger view into the
command window and can be toggled on and off with the F2 key.

33. Press F2.

34. Create two lines that cross each other.

35. Click Modify > Trim.

The message in the command window asks you to select cutting edge(s).

36. Click one of the crossing lines. Press ENTER.

The next prompt asks to select the object(s) to trim.

37. Click the line you want to trim on the side that you do not want to keep.

38. Click Offset on the Modify toolbar.

39. Enter 5 as the offset distance. Press ENTER.

40. Click to select a line.

41. Click to the right of the line. Press ENTER.

42. Enter PEDIT. Press SPACEBAR.

43. Click on a polyline.

The command window shows the options.

44. Enter W to alter the width. Press SPACEBAR.

01-27
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

45. Enter 2 as the width. Press SPACEBAR twice.

There are several important editing commands, many of which have a


button on the Modify toolbar. The Modify menu, keyboard shortcuts, and
the right-click menu are other methods for finding the right command.
You can use the Help menu to discover new tools.

46. Close the drawing and do not save the changes.

01-28
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

EXERCISE 5: NAVIGATE THE 3D GRAPHICS ENVIRONMENT

In this exercise, you learn the basic commands and views for interacting with
AutoCAD in 3D.

1. Click File > Open. Open SitePlan.dwg.

2. Click View > 3D Views > SW Isometric.

Your crosshair adds a third line and the drawing is shifted so it appears
that your view is in the southwestern sky.

3. Use the mouse wheel to zoom and pan.

4. Right-click in the toolbar area. Click ACAD > 3D Navigation.

5. Click Constrained Orbit on the new toolbar (3rd from the left).

6. Click (and hold) and drag the mouse.

You can adjust the view position while you are also zooming and panning.

01-29
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

7. Right-click. Click Exit.

8. Click Swivel on the toolbar.

9. Click and drag the mouse.

Note the difference in navigation.

10. Right-click. Click Exit.

11. Click and hold the Constrained Orbit button. Click Free Orbit.

A green circle appears as a navigation aid.

12. Click and drag both inside and outside of the circle.

Carefully examine how the view is moved.

01-30
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

13. Right-click. Click Other Navigation Modes > Continuous Orbit.

14. Click and drag a direction. Let go of the mouse.

The model is continuously orbiting around the direction you supplied. Try
other commands on this toolbar.

15. Right-click. Click Exit.

16. Click View > Named Views. Click New.

17. Enter House 3D as the name of the view.

18. Click OK.

The current view is saved as House 3D.

19. Click OK.

20. Enter PLAN on the command line. Press ENTER twice.

The plan view is restored.

21. Click View > Named Views.

22. Click on House 3D. Click Set Current. Click OK.

The previous view is restored.

23. Click View > Visual Styles > 3D Hidden.

Objects are hidden depending on the view perspective.

01-31
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

24. Click View > Visual Styles > Conceptual.

Other visual styles are useful to view different features.

25. Click View > Visual Styles > 2D Wireframe.

26. Enter PLAN. Press the SPACEBAR twice.

27. Close the drawing without saving.

01-32
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

EXERCISE 6: CREATE BLOCKS AND USE EXTERNAL REFERENCES

In this exercise, you create your own blocks and modify existing blocks. You
also use external references to help visualize.

Blocks are an efficient method to group a set of objects together and can be
reused within one or many drawings. It is convenient to create custom
symbols by drafting objects to form the desired shape, and then create a block.
Internal block definitions are stored in the DWG file in which they were
created. The Writeblock (WBLOCK) command can be used to save a
selection set to a separate DWG file.

You start creating a block by drawing various objects. In this case, a drawing
is provided.

1. Open FireHydrant.dwg.

The objects making up this shape are all individual lines, arcs, or circles.

2. Click an arc. Enter LI (or LIST). Press ENTER.

The Text window describes the arc.

3. Press F2.

4. Click Draw > Block > Make.

01-33
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

5. Enter Fire Hydrant as the block name.

6. In the Base point section of the dialog box, click Pick point.

The base point is the point used for placing the block in the drawing.

7. Hold SHIFT and right-click for Osnap options. Select Center.

8. Click at the center of the hydrant object.

9. In the Objects section of the dialog box, click Select objects.

This allows you to select the objects that will be used to make the block.

10. Use a window to select all of the objects. Press ENTER.

There are 82 individual objects that will be incorporated into a block. The
radio buttons named Retain, Convert to block, and Delete indicate how the
current objects will be handled after creating the block.

11. Click OK.

12. Click the block. Enter LI. Press ENTER.

The Text window identifies the object as a block.

13. Press F2.

14. Click the block. Press DELETE.

The definition of the block is retained in the DWG file and can be recalled
and inserted at any time. Note that using blocks saves file space. The
block definition is stored only once and each subsequent insertion stores
only the insertion point coordinates.

15. Click Insert > Block.

Because Fire Hydrant is the only block in the drawing, it appears in the
Name box. If other blocks were available, they would appear in the drop-
down list. Review the settings in the box.

01-34
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

16. Click OK.

17. Enter 10, 10. Press SPACEBAR.

18. Zoom in or out to view the fire hydrant.

19. Repeat the above steps to insert a second block graphically, placing it next
to the previous block.

Block definitions can be edited graphically and the changes will be


updated for all blocks.

20. Click the block. Right-click and select Block Editor. Click NO to the
demonstration message, if it appears.

The Block Editor screen opens.

21. Use editing commands to remove the objects pointing towards the middle
of the hydrant.

22. Click Close Block Editor. Click Yes to save changes.

Notice that both blocks have been updated to the new definition.

23. Click Explode on the modify toolbar.

24. Click one of the hydrant blocks. Press SPACEBAR.

Use the mouse and the list command to verify that the block has been
exploded back into its original objects. The other block remains
unexploded.

25. Close FireHydrant.dwg without saving.

26. Create a new drawing using the _Autodesk Civil 3D (Imperial) NCS
Extended DWT file.

01-35
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

27. Click Insert > Block.

28. Click the down arrow under Name and select Gas Valve.

Notice that the template file used to create the new drawing has embedded
blocks.

29. Click OK. Click to pick an insertion point.

30. Zoom Extents.

31. Enter WBLOCK.

The Write Block command allows you to choose objects in the drawing
and save them to a separate DWG file.

32. Click Pick point. Click the Base point for the objects.

33. Click Select objects. Click the block. Press ENTER.

34. Click Navigate and choose a folder.

35. Choose a file name and path to save the new DWG file.

01-36
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

36. Click OK. Click No to the Export AutoCAD Map Data query.

37. Close the drawing without saving.

There are frequently times when you are working on a drawing and have a
good reason to want to view another drawing at the same time, either to
put the first drawing in context, or to view additional information when
objects are not available in the first drawing. External Referencing (XRef)
is the method to use for this purpose.

38. Open Subdivision.dwg.

39. Click Insert > External References.

The External Reference palette opens.

01-37
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

40. Click Attach DWG.

41. Navigate to House.dwg. Click Open.

42. Click OK.

43. Move the mouse over lot 19 in the northeast section of the subdivision.

44. Click to place the Xref.

01-38
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

It appears that the architect and the engineer need to talk about lot size
versus house size. There does not appear to be sufficient setback from the
lot lines to the house. You can now detach the drawing.

45. Right-click on the House Xref in the palette. Select Detach.

46. Close the External References palette.

47. Close the drawing and do not save the changes.

01-39
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

EXERCISE 7: WORK WITH LAYOUTS AND VIEWPORTS

In this exercise, you work with model and layout tabs, add and modify
viewports, and prepare a layout.

In general, model space (Model tab) is used for designing and working, while a
Layout tab (paper space) is used for plotting. Although it is possible to plot
from model space, it is most common to plot from a layout.

Viewports are a window into model space and are created in paper space on a
Layout tab. You can control the number, size, and scale of the viewports on
any layout.

1. Close any open drawing files. Open StorePlan.dwg.

Look closely at the bottom of the drawing area and notice the Model tab
and the two default Layout tabs.

2. Click on Layout1.

If the Page Setup Manager dialog box does not appear, right-click on the
Layout tab and select Page Setup Manager. You can store your favorite
page setups in this dialog box. You can also select one if it has been
previously saved. In this example, no page setups have been saved.

There is only one current page setup named Layout1 and the details are
shown in the bottom of the dialog box. Without a plotter specified, the
layout will not be plotted.

3. Click Modify.

The Page Setup dialog box allows you to specify items like paper size,
printer or plotter name, drawing orientation, and scale. The page setup can

01-40
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

be different for each layout.

4. Click the down arrow under Printer Name and select DWF6 ePlot.pc3.

The available paper sizes are dependent upon which printer is chosen. The
default paper size for the selected printer is ANSI A (8.50 x 11.00 Inches).

5. Click the down arrow under Paper size to inspect the available sizes.
Select ANSI A, the default.

Note that metric sizes are included in the list.

6. Ensure that Layout is selected in the Plot area section.

7. Click the down arrow for Scale to inspect the options.

8. Select 1:1 as the scale.

This setting applies to the paper scale, not the scale of the drawing. The
1:1 settings means that 1 inch on the paper is equal to 1 AutoCAD unit in
the layout (paper space).

9. Click OK to accept these settings. Click Close on the Page Setup Manager

01-41
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

dialog box.

The layout is displayed. The dashed lines indicate the printable area for
the selected printer. The solid rectangular frame is an automatically
generated viewport. A viewport is a layout object that windows an area of
model space. When you are in paper space, a viewport can be moved,
resized, or deleted. You can also change the scale of a viewport.

The current mode is paper space. You can tell by inspecting the icon in
the lower left corner of the drawing area or by looking at the setting
buttons in the status bar (note that the PAPER button appears active).

You can draw additional objects and text, zoom, and pan while in paper
space. You also can get into model space from the layout tab.

10. Click the Line command from the Draw toolbar.

11. Click on the left side of the paper, move the mouse to the right side of the
paper, and click again to draw a line crossing the viewport.

While in paper space, the lines drawn are only in paper space, not in model
space.

01-42
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

12. Double-click inside the viewport.

You have now changed to model space while on a layout tab. Notice the
button in the status bar and the UCS icon inside model space.

13. Pan the drawing within the viewport.

Notice that the line does not move. You can zoom and pan, and run any
other command as you would in the Model tab. If you try to select the line
across the viewport, you cannot because it is not in model space.

14. Double-click outside of the viewport.

You are now in paper space. Try to pan and zoom.

15. Click on the viewport frame to select it.

01-43
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

16. Press DELETE.

The viewport disappears, but the line stays.

17. Click on the line and press DELETE.

You can create your own viewports. You can use the View > Viewports
menu; enter VPORTS at the command line; or open the Viewports palette.

18. Enter VPORTS and press ENTER.

The viewports dialog box enables you to choose one or more viewports in
several different configurations. View the different options by selecting
them.

19. Select Single viewport. Click OK.

The command line has several options. You can click a rectangle on the
paper or choose to fit the viewport to the printable area

20. Press ENTER.

The single viewport appears.

21. Select the viewport and press DELETE.

22. Right-click in the toolbar area. Click ACAD and click Viewports.

The Viewports toolbar opens.

23. Click the Polygonal Viewport icon on the Viewports toolbar.

01-44
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

24. Click an irregular shape on the paper. Enter C and press ENTER to close.

Add a second viewport.

25. Click Single Viewport on the Viewports toolbar.

26. Click on the paper, move the mouse, and click again to outline the new
viewport.

Viewports are powerful layout objects that can have different shapes and
scales, and can show different visible layers based on settings in the Layer
Properties Manager dialog box.

27. Close the drawing and do not save the changes.

01-45
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

EXERCISE 8: PLOT AN ENGINEERING DRAWING TO SCALE

In this exercise, you use a template for a new layout; create a scale bar; insert a
north arrow; set the viewport scale; and preview and adjust the drawing and
layout prior to plotting. While this exercise uses only one viewport, realize
that you can use more than one viewport, and that each viewport can have its
own scale and shape.

1. Open StorePlan.dwg.

There are a number of drawing elements that should be included on every


plotted sheet. Examples include a title block, north arrow, border, legend
(if desired), drawing name, date, and etcetera. One of the easiest methods
to put a title block into a layout is to use a drawing template that already
contains a title block. Another method is to insert a DWG file of a title
block as a block into paper space.

2. Click Insert > Layout > Layout from Template.

3. Navigate to the ANSI A -Named Plot Styles.dwt template file. Click OK.

4. Click OK to accept the Layout tab name.

The new layout tab ANSI A Title Block is added.

5. Click on the new Layout tab.

This layout contains a preformatted viewport.

6. Double-click in the viewport to enter model space.

7. Enter Z and press SPACEBAR. Enter E and press SPACEBAR to zoom


extents. Pan the drawing to place it as shown.

01-46
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

Now you draw a line of known length to verify the scale on paper. This is
a simple scale bar. You can add some additional vertical lines and hatch to
make it fancy.

8. Enter L and press SPACEBAR.

9. Click in the drawing to start the line.

10. Enter @100,0 and press SPACEBAR twice.

This draws a line 100 units in length.

One of the required elements of a drawing is a north arrow.

11. Click Insert > Block.

12. In the Insert dialog box, click Browse.

13. Navigate and select NorthArrow.dwg.

14. Select the check boxes to specify both the Insertion Point and Scale on-

01-47
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

screen. Click OK.

15. In model space, click in the graphics area to place the north arrow to the
right of the line you drew. Enter 20 for an X scale, press ENTER twice.

It is good practice to add these two elements in model space, not paper
space. That way, the scale bar will adjust to the scale of the viewport. And
the north arrow will rotate if the drawing is rotated. Most of the other
drawing elements such as a title block, drawing name, company name, and
legend should be added in paper space.

16. Double-click outside the viewport to enter paper space.

Now you change the scale of the viewport. First explode the title block.

17. Click to select the title block. Enter LI to view the information about the
block.

Notice that the block contains a viewport.

18. Press ESC when you are done reviewing the block objects.

19. Select the title block again. Click Explode on the Modify toolbar.

The Explode command reverses the Make Block command. All of the
original objects are restored for that particular block.

You now change the viewport scale. However, the viewport object is
drawn below some border lines. Click to select a line. Right-click and
select Draw Order > Send to Back. That should allow you to select only
the viewport.

20. Click to select the viewport. Right-click and click Properties.

Note that if you selected more objects than the viewport, you need to click

01-48
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

the down arrow and select Viewport (1) from the choices.

21. In the Misc section of the Properties palette, click in the Standard scale
cell. Click the down arrow and select 1:100. Close the Properties palette.

AutoCAD does an automatic conversion in the Imperial system for inches


to feet. The 1:100 scale means that 1 inch on the paper in this viewport
will be 100 feet (units) in the drawing. This is checked when the layout is
plotted.

Another method to set the viewport scale is to use the down arrow for VP
scale on the status bar.

22. Double-click inside the viewport. Pan the drawing so you can see the line
and north arrow you drew.

01-49
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

Do not zoom while in model space after you set the scale or the scale will
change.

23. Double-click outside the viewport to enter paper space.

At this point, you are ready to plot the drawing. You can add text inside
the title block boxes if desired. It is important to notice that the layout
shows dashed lines inside the border. This means the edges will be cut off.

24. Click File > Plot.

Notice that no printer has been selected.

25. Click the down arrow and select the DWF6 ePlot.pc3 printer.

26. Click the down arrow under Scale and select 1:1.

27. Under Plot Area, select Layout.

28. Click Apply to Layout. Click the Preview button.

01-50
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

Notice that both sides appear to be cut off. Your layout may appear
different.

29. Press ESC and click Cancel.

In this case, the DWF printer and the ANSI title block will not work
together. You can choose another printer that has a larger printable area;
large enough so the viewport and border are on or inside the dashed lines.
Another choice is to build the title block and viewport back into a block
and then try scaling the block to be slightly smaller to fit inside the dashed
lines of the active printer. Try different printers first. This is what it
should look like prior to plotting.

01-51
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

At this point, you can continue with the Plot command.

30. Right-click the ANSI A Title Block layout tab. Select Plot.

31. Make sure all the settings are correct and click Preview.

32. Again, make sure everything looks correct, then click the printer button.

33. Check the paper copy with your engineering scale to make sure the line in
the viewport is 1 inch long.

34. Close the drawing and do not save the changes.

01-52
Module 01 - AutoCAD Basics NOTES

Questions
1. What type of object snap would be used to find the point where two lines
cross each other?

2. What are the five grip editing commands?

3. True or False: A template file can be directly used to set up a layout tab.

4. The plotting scale of a drawing is controlled by which setting?

5. What command is used to change the background color of the model


space?

6. Can objects drawn in model space be selected and edited while in paper
space?

7. What is a block and why are blocks useful?

8. Layers are turned on/off or frozen/thawed in what dialog box?

Answers
1. The Intersection (int) osnap would find the point where two lines cross.

2. Stretch, Move, Rotate, Scale, and Mirror.

3. True.

4. The plot scale is controlled by the viewport scale.

5. The Tools > Options command, on the Display tab, Colors button.

6. No. Model space objects must be modified while in model space.

7. A block is made of one or more objects that are combined to create a


single object. Blocks give consistency to objects that are used multiple
times in one or more drawings and save file space by saving the
definition only once.

8. The Layer Properties Manager dialog box.

01-53
AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 Education Curriculum NOTES

Module Summary
This module introduced you to the basics of AutoCAD. The interface was
explained and drawing settings were explored. New objects were created and
modified. You navigated in three dimensions and created blocks and external
references. Finally, you learned about layouts, viewports, and plotting issues.
Completion of these exercises is critical to a good working knowledge of the
AutoCAD Civil 3D environment.

01-54

You might also like