Auto Cad

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 AutoCAD is a commercial computer-aided design (CAD) and drafting software

application.
 First Drafting systems started in 1957 by General Motors and 1960 by McDonell Douglas
Automation Company.
 Autodesk was founded in 1982 by John Walker.
 AutoCAD was first released in December 1982 as a desktop app running on
microcomputers with internal graphics controllers.
 Since 2010, AutoCAD was released as a mobile- and web app as well, marketed as
AutoCAD 360.
 AutoCAD was derived from a program that began in 1977, and then released in 1979
called Interact CAD, also referred to in early Autodesk documents as MicroCAD, which
was written prior to Autodesk's (then Marinchip Software Partners) formation by
Autodesk cofounder Michael Riddle.
 .dwg is the native file format of AutoCAD.
 .dwf, a format developed and promoted by Autodesk, for publishing CAD data.
AutoCAD’s interface has eight main sections:

 The Application menu: Click the Application button (known informally as “the big red
A”) at the top-left corner of the AutoCAD window to open the AutoCAD Application
menu. It presents mostly file-related commands; from this menu you can create new
drawings, open existing drawings, save files, or print masterpieces. It also gives access to
the important Options command.
 The Quick Access toolbar: This toolbar, in the top-left corner of the screen, includes
buttons for some of the most commonly used functions, such as Save and Undo. You
can add functions that you use all the time and delete unneeded buttons by clicking the
down-facing triangle near the right-hand end of the toolbar.
 The Ribbon: Whereas the Application menu focuses on file management, the Ribbon
holds commands to create and modify drawing objects.
 File Tabs: The series of tabs across the top of the graphic screen, one for each open
drawing, makes it easy to jump from drawing to drawing, compared to earlier releases.
New tabs appear as you open or start additional drawings.
 The graphic screen: It’s the “piece of paper” on which you draw.
 The command line: This window, the chat room between you and AutoCAD, displays
your input to AutoCAD and (equally important) tells you what it needs from you.
 The space tabs: These tabs let you switch between model space and any paper spaced
layouts.
 The status bar: The status bar tells you an awful lot about how many of AutoCAD’s
operating variables are set and in which way. The status bar does more than show you
settings, however. You can set, reset, and change most settings from the status bar. The
application status bar, which appears at the bottom of the Auto- CAD screen, displays —
and allows you to change — several important drawing modes, aids, and settings that
affect how you draw and edit in the current drawing.

The Application menu is divided into ten categories:


1. New: Create a new drawing from a list of templates.
2. Open: Open an existing drawing.
3. Save: Save the current drawing in the current location; if the current drawing hasn’t
been saved, you’re prompted for a filename and a location.
4. Save As: Save the current drawing to a new filename or location or both, and make the
newly named or located file the current drawing.
5. Import: Open drawing files stored in formats other than DWG.
6. Export: Save the current drawing to a large variety of file formats, including Design Web
Format (DWF), PDF, and several other CAD file formats.
7. Publish: Send a 3D model to an outside 3D printing service, or create an archived sheet
set. (AutoCAD LT doesn’t support 3D.) Use eTransmit to create a package that includes
all files referenced by the selected drawings, or email the current drawing by using your
configured email client.
8. Print: Print a single drawing or batch-plot multiple drawings, create or modify named
page setups, and manage plotters and plot styles.
9. Drawing Utilities: Set file properties or drawing units; purge unused blocks, layers, and
styles from the current drawing; and audit or recover damaged drawings.
10. Close: Close the current drawing or close all drawings. If any drawings have changed,
you’re prompted to save them before AutoCAD closes the file.
Line Command - One of the most fundamental geometries of AutoCAD is line. You make a line
by clicking this line icon on draw panel or Home Tab. You can also type L on command line or Li
any shorter line and press enter to initiate line Command. Once your command starts you can
click anywhere on the screen to start this rubber bending line and click at the next point and
you can keep on clicking at successive intervals to make your line to exit this line command you
can press ENTER. The command line is a semitransparent toolbar that can float anywhere on
the screen, allowing drawings to show through it.
WORKSPACE - defines an operating environment including such things as which version of the
Ribbon menu to use and whether or not toolbars are used. In addition to the default Drafting &
Annotation workspace, a few additional preconfigured workspaces are available from the
Workspace Switching button. You can also create customized workspaces. I stick with the out
of-the-box Drafting & Annotation workspace, except in Part 5, which describes 3D modeling.
Located at the right side of the program title bar, InfoCenter serves as Information Central in
AutoCAD. You can:

 Search for information. Type a keyword and then click the binoculars for more
information.
 Sign in to your Autodesk A360 account. Click the Sign In link and log in with your
username and password. Autodesk 360 is a free, web-based file storage and
collaboration service in the cloud.
 Download free or inexpensive add-ons. Click the button that looks like a shopping cart
to open the Autodesk App Store website.
 Connect to Autodesk via social media. Click the triangle button to see a list of links for
product updates and to connect to Autodesk via social networks such as YouTube,
Twitter, and Facebook.
 Find help. Click the question mark button in the InfoCenter area to open the online Help
site.

Zoom: Change the magnification of the display. When you zoom in, you move closer to
the drawing objects so that you can see more detail; when you zoom out, you move
farther away so that you can see more of the drawing area. Zooming does not change
the size of the objects in the file. You can think of zoom in AutoCAD like the zoom
function on your camera: You get closer, but you see less.
Pan: Move from one area to another without changing the magnification. If you’ve used
scroll bars in an application, you’ve panned the display. Panning does not change the
location of objects in the file.

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