If you are drawing things like buildings for architectural plans, you want lines that are designated for specific items. You name a layer according to what you draw with it. For instance, you'd have a layer for walls that you call WALL, or A_Wall. When you click on a line, the layer name tells you what the line is a part of. If the name is A_Wall, I know that it is part of a wall. A_Door layer is for, doors. Surprise. The A_Wall layer has a thicker line weight than the A_Door layer, and the A_Wall-Sill layer is a little thinner than the A_Door layer. Each layer is given a different color so you can identify them on sight. AutoCAD allows you to set the color, line weight, and line type, for each layer without modifying the CTB file, and that's what I do. Control layers in the Layers Properties dialog box. That keeps the settings in that ACAD file, and if you want to take a line that you have set up to another drawing file, you can copy paste it in. It will take its properties with it as long as there isn't another line with the same name already in the destination file. In two dimensional work, I have lines for drawing Elevations, Sections, and Details, that are not named for what they represent, but are named for the thickness they have. A2_00 is very thin, A2_70 is very thick. That is basically what he shows in the video. It is appropriate to not designate specific layers for particular objects because the same type of object that is represented as closer, should be drawn with a thicker line than the same type of object that is supposed to be further away.
Thanks for the feedback Steve, much appreciated. .CTB has been around ages but I have not found a better system yet in other software. I use a 'pencil case' analogy when trying to get my students to understand it - thin, medium and thick black pens and then lots of coloured felt tip pens. The fact that it is a separate file means it can be sent or archived with a job, personalized or standardized. Somebody at AutoDesk earned their crust the day they invented it. Best regards from (surprisingly) sunny Scotland.
Please, do the same video for STB! Or some video showing STB vc CTB advantages and disadvantages. I'm about to configure my company Template for Terrain Surveying in AutoCAD Civil 3D and I still can't figure out which one is going to be best. Topograph drawings uses a LOT of colours, so I think that CTB will make things bad as some texts and lines shares the same colour (for example white). As our drawer is really used to associate the line colours that he sees in Model Space with the surveyed elements on terrain, adopting CTB could kill our workflow, because I can control how elements are going to be printed but they are going to be showed differently on screen while working in Model Space. So please, if you could show the STB method I would be really appreciated for that...
THANK YOU SOOOOOOOO MUCH I WAS SEARCHING THIS COMMANDS SINCE ONE WEEK FINALLY I GOT IT BECOZ OF U THANK YOUUU
Very nice and clear voice....👍👍
If you are drawing things like buildings for architectural plans, you want lines that are designated for specific items.
You name a layer according to what you draw with it. For instance, you'd have a layer for walls that you call WALL, or A_Wall.
When you click on a line, the layer name tells you what the line is a part of. If the name is A_Wall, I know that it is part of a wall.
A_Door layer is for, doors. Surprise.
The A_Wall layer has a thicker line weight than the A_Door layer, and the A_Wall-Sill layer is a little thinner than the A_Door layer.
Each layer is given a different color so you can identify them on sight.
AutoCAD allows you to set the color, line weight, and line type, for each layer without modifying the CTB file, and that's what I do.
Control layers in the Layers Properties dialog box. That keeps the settings in that ACAD file, and if you want to take a line that you have set up to another drawing file, you can copy paste it in. It will take its properties with it as long as there isn't another line with the same name already in the destination file.
In two dimensional work, I have lines for drawing Elevations, Sections, and Details, that are not named for what they represent, but are named for the thickness they have. A2_00 is very thin, A2_70 is very thick. That is basically what he shows in the video. It is appropriate to not designate specific layers for particular objects because the same type of object that is represented as closer, should be drawn with a thicker line than the same type of object that is supposed to be further away.
Fantastic explanation, appreciate your time doing this. Cheers
Thanks for the feedback Steve, much appreciated. .CTB has been around ages but I have not found a better system yet in other software. I use a 'pencil case' analogy when trying to get my students to understand it - thin, medium and thick black pens and then lots of coloured felt tip pens. The fact that it is a separate file means it can be sent or archived with a job, personalized or standardized. Somebody at AutoDesk earned their crust the day they invented it. Best regards from (surprisingly) sunny Scotland.
Great info! Thank you for taking the time to post!
Excellent effort and video too! Thank u for sharing
Shame there isn't a stb vid yet as this one is very well explained and really clear. Thanks loads though.
Wonderfully explained, very very good video..........Thanks tonnes
great stuff I have learn what I wanted and was looking for thanks!!!
this video helped me sooo much, it feels like charity.
Great detailed video with good explanations! Thanks!
Great video...learned a lot.
much needed carification! thanks a ton!
I think, for the first time, AutoCAD is working.
Thanks. Very clear explanation.
Please, do the same video for STB! Or some video showing STB vc CTB advantages and disadvantages. I'm about to configure my company Template for Terrain Surveying in AutoCAD Civil 3D and I still can't figure out which one is going to be best. Topograph drawings uses a LOT of colours, so I think that CTB will make things bad as some texts and lines shares the same colour (for example white). As our drawer is really used to associate the line colours that he sees in Model Space with the surveyed elements on terrain, adopting CTB could kill our workflow, because I can control how elements are going to be printed but they are going to be showed differently on screen while working in Model Space. So please, if you could show the STB method I would be really appreciated for that...
Great explanation thank you!
Thanks a lot! Very helpfull video:)
thank you... helped a lot
You need to increase the play speed. 1.25 it;s more natural
Autocad is junk - its like scratching on a cave wall with a rock
What other 2d drawing software do you advocate? I would love to give it a try.
@@emmockladdie download link not working
@@jivart4069 I forgot that video has a link. I will mend that today. Thanks for alerting me.
@@emmockladdie the link still doesn't work!
@@jivart4069 drive.google.com/file/d/1_aEgh4ovjhTS9DxbPq9utXnDUCEfRKmG/view?usp=sharing