Sure. Most popular for professional drawings is the Adobe Suite of software (Illustrator, Photoshop, etc). Getting more common are getting drawings out of 3D models (SolidWorks, Fusion360, etc). When I do this I usually end up augmenting them with markups in Illustrator, etc. For most things I find PPT the simplest and most accessible.
Hi. You don’t. Build it in PPT for a transparent background, then highlight and save as PNG. Import the image and it will have a transparent background. :)
@@ahmedbadral-dean4273 Ahh, now I understand your query. Sadly PPT does not support parametric drawings so the images are non-interactive sketches. Cheers,
Thank you professor. Do you have any idea of the tools that book publishers use to make the drawings ?
Sure. Most popular for professional drawings is the Adobe Suite of software (Illustrator, Photoshop, etc). Getting more common are getting drawings out of 3D models (SolidWorks, Fusion360, etc). When I do this I usually end up augmenting them with markups in Illustrator, etc. For most things I find PPT the simplest and most accessible.
Is there a way to insert an image and automatically move everything down if it is overlapping what is already in the worksheet?
As best I am aware, not automatically, but to create the space needed for the image is a fairly simple process.
@@PatJHeffernan All right, it's just rather annoying having to push everything down when rearranging a document or copying in something fairly large.
Thank you sir for your videos.... Could you teach us how to integrate PTC MathCAD with PTC Creo? Thanks in advance
Sorry, I don’t use Creo. Maybe someday…
thank you sir
"Thank you, sir. However, how can I set the grid in PowerPoint to match the scale in Mathcad?"
Hi. You don’t. Build it in PPT for a transparent background, then highlight and save as PNG. Import the image and it will have a transparent background. :)
@@PatJHeffernan THANKS FOR REPLAY No problem for background but my concern is matching the scale between PPT and PTC
@@ahmedbadral-dean4273 Ahh, now I understand your query. Sadly PPT does not support parametric drawings so the images are non-interactive sketches. Cheers,