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| FBE
AutoCAD Page |
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| This tutorial has been prepared for students at the Faculty of the
Built Environment studying AutoCAD in Communications Seminar 3. It
has been placed on the Web to facilitate access by those students
and because I believe others may find the material of use!
While the tutorial is aimed at people using the Windows version of R13, I have (where possible) given the commands to be typed in addition to the toolbar icon. Note that throughout this document I am using the character
" Stephen Peter, 31 July 95. |
| Introduction |
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| In this first tutorial you will learn how to start AutoCAD, save a drawing, and a range of common drawing commands. | |
| Starting
AutoCAD |
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| If you're using Windows 3, open 'Program Manager' and double-click on the 'AutoCAD R13' icon in one of the Appications groups (there'll probably be an AutoCAD group). | Start AutoCAD by clicking on Start (in the bottom
left corner of the screen), then move the mouse to Programs
then CAD Applications then AutoCAD R13. These instructions
are for the labs at UNSW - if you're elsewhere it'll probably be different.
AutoCAD will take a few moments to load, so be patient.
Once AutoCAD has loaded, move the mouse around until you see a crosshair cursor. The AutoCAD window has a number of important features:
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| Command
Entry |
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| Typically there are three ways of giving a command! | |
| Not all commands are
on the Menus and not all commands are on toolbars! |
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| When I want you to type a command in the command area the AutoCAD command will be written like: | |
type: QSAVE |
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| When I want you to select a command from a menu, it will look like: | |
| select File - Save | |
| When I want you to pick a command from a toolbar, I'll write: | |
| select save |
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| Here I'm trying to cover all the bases by giving you the command to type, the menu options and showing you what the toolbar icon looks like! | Despite all of the above, I'll probably use a combination of the above like: |
select File - Save
QSAVE |
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| Draw
a Rectangle |
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| This will draw a 10x7 rectangle, which should fit comfortably in the AutoCAD graphics area. | Select RECTANG |
| The text typed is displayed in the command area at the bottom of AutoCAD's window. | 1,1 11,8 |
| Saving
a Drawing |
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| The END command is also useful, it saves your drawing and then exits AutoCAD. | To save a drawing, you can type QSAVE
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| Note that if you type SAVE, you actually get "Save As"!! | Select the Save icon S:\arch\u1234567),
type the drawing name (for example TUT1), and
then select "OK". |
| Draw
Some Lines |
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| You can also press
the spacebar instead of the Enter key ( You can also type: |
We will now draw some more graphics and then save and
exit AutoCAD.
Type Move the crosshair to near the bottom-left of the rectangle and click the left mouse button, then move the crosshair to the top-right of the rectangle and again click the left mouse button. |
| Press Draw a line from the top-left to the bottom-right of the rectangle,
and then press |
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| This will save the drawing and exit AutoCAD - don't PANIC! | Now type:END |
| Starting
AutoCAD with an Existing Drawing |
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| To load a drawing, click on "Explorer" - it should be listed on the taskbar on the bottom of the screen, select the appropriate Drive and Directory and then double-click on your drawing. | |
| If you use AutoCAD's File - Open command to open a drawing, make sure that the "Read Only" setting is OFF (not checked). Early releases of R13 had this setting ON by default, which means that you get a "Write Protected" error when you try to save the drawing. | If you can't find your drawing then press F5 (function key 5) this tells Explorer to update the directory display; if you still can't find your drawing then perhaps you saved the drawing in some other directory, in which case you can load AutoCAD (via the Program Manager) and then select the File menu, at the bottom of the File menu is a list of recently opened drawings, select your drawing from the list. |
| Coordinate
Systems |
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| AutoCAD is a three dimensional CAD system, so you can enter XYZ values instead of the XY values shown here. | When specifying positions you can use Cartesian or
Polar Coordinates. Cartesian coordinates are simply a X value, a comma,
and a Y value, for example: 11,11.
10<25. Angles are measured in degrees, with |
| Consider relative coordinates simply as distances! | The positions specified above are "absolute
coordinates", because they specify a particular position.
AutoCAD can also use "relative coordinates" to specify
a position relative to the current position, for example:
@5.6,-3.4 @16.32<62 |
| Draw
a "Diamond" |
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| This should draw a
"diamond (a rotated rectangle) shape.
If you make a mistake, you can undo the last line segment by
typing: |
Select pline 6,1 @5<45 @5<135 @5<225 c |
| Snap
Modes |
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| It is often useful to be able to draw something from (for example) the end of another shape. AutoCAD has a large selection of "snap modes" for this purpose. The most commonly used snap modes are "Endpoint" (which snaps to the end of the selected graphics entity) and "Intersection" (which snaps to the intersection of two graphics entities). | |
| The object snap modes can either be typed or they can
be selected from the standard toolbar |
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| To get AutoCAD to display the Object Snap Modes toolbar, select "Toolbars" from the "Tools" menu and then select "Object Snap". | |
| Draw
an Arc |
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Select ARC MID |
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![]() Figure 2 Arc construction. |
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| Finally... |
|
Draw the rectangle
by selecting
RECTANG |
Lastly, I want you to draw a rectangle in the diamond shape, another diamond inside that rectangle, a circle inside that diamond and a horizontal and vertical line also inside the last diamond (see figure 3)! Each shape should touch the Midpoints of the previous shape... |
| |
To draw the circle, move the mouse over the circle
icon |
| If you use the MIDpoint
Snap Model for each point(!), you should be able to draw the shapes
without much trouble.
If you make a mistake, press "Esc" (the "escape"
key, located at the top-left of the keyboard). Then type If the screen gets messy, then type |
![]() Figure 3 Finished Tutorial 1 drawing. |
| Finishing
Up |
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That's all for tutorial one! Save your drawing and
then exit AutoCAD (or type: end Remember to log off before leaving. |
|
| 2D-R13
Tutorial 2 |
| Last Update : 8 April 2000 Major Revision : 29 October 1997 SEARCH . FBE SITEMAP |
Disclaimer
. Webmasters Page Contact : Stephen Peter Email : s.peter@unsw.edu.au |