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We normally draw in the model, at a 1:1 scale. normal drawing scale, in our civil buildings.
It is said in the house drawing specification that under normal circumstances, the common ratio of our flat section is 1:100 (of course, according to the size of the project, there are 1:150, 200, 300, etc. if the drawings cannot be plugged).
50 scale, node etc. 1:20 etc... For this kind of thing, our current scale can be set according to this.
Then, when it comes to the viewport scale of the layout, you can set the viewport scale according to the same principle, and then the insertion scale of the frame should be converted accordingly ......Here, I would like to recommend a habit of my own, which is easy to get, and has taught our company, and everyone thinks it is easy to ......remember
That is. The current scale of the model drawing is set according to the one you need (for example, the plane is 1:100, the word height is generally 350,500,750, the specification is there, and the look is comfortable), and then the scale of the layout viewport is also set to 1:
1. In this way, you only need to set the scale of the frame according to the scale you want.
For example, if the plane layout viewport is 1:1, then the scale of the inserted frame is 1:100Stairs zoom in layout viewport 1:1, insert frame at a scale of 1:50... Well, it's much easier than converting the ratio.
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I don't know if I understand the question you asked.
The scale is the proportion of the length of the lines you draw, the overall drawing, the annotations, the frame and the drawing. It has nothing to do with the viewport.
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Option 1:
Set the annotation style of the note.
Release. zhi。(tick) dao
Use annotated text to annotate the drawing with markers, and then select all callout objects, text objects, in the viewport with quick answer selection. Annotation ratios are uniformly added.
Switch to the layout, select the viewport, and set the viewport scale and annotation scale.
In this way, the dimension style in the viewport automatically adapts to the viewport scale.
Solution 2: Create a label style corresponding to the global scale for each viewport scale.
For example, for the viewport with a scale of 1:20 in the above figure, set the global scale to 20 and modify the label style to the corresponding scale through quick selection.
Comparison of the two schemes, one scheme is convenient, one annotation style solves all viewport proportions, but there are too many annotations, and when the computer configuration is not good, it will cause the drawing to be very stuck.
There is no card problem in the second plan, but each scale has to create a new style, which is slightly troublesome.
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With the font height not changing, change the global scale to 1 in the Dimension Style Manager
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ToolsCopy Materials: Computer, CAD software.
1.Open the CAD software, enter the layout, and click the Insert Frame tool in the text layout on the left.
2.Select So.
The size and scale of the picture frame required by the DAO, and then click Insert.
3.Place the frame in the right place.
4.After clicking on the model, draw a rectangle and click on the layout.
5.Go to model space and select the shape.
6.Enter Scale 1 and set the scale according to the needs of the drawing.
7.Once you've set the scale, place the viewport inside the frame and adjust the position.
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1. First of all, we open a CAD drawing to demonstrate, and we need to shrink the drawing.
2. Enter "sc" in the command board bar below, press enter, and the right prompts us to select the object, and we click to select the graphic.
3. After clicking to select, the graph becomes a dotted line, and then we click the right button to confirm.
4. After that, we are prompted to specify the base point, we click to select an endpoint of the rectangle, right-click to confirm, you can specify the scale factor, if we want to zoom out, enter a value less than 1, such as I enter, enter.
5. At this time, we found that the original figure was reduced to 50% of the original figure based on the base point we specified, and the effect is shown in the figure below. In the same way, if you want to adjust to magnification, you only need to enter a scale factor greater than 1.
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Adjust the scale system of the label complex in the viewport:
1.Double-click to enter the viewport;
2.Click the label you want to modify the scale;
3.Observe the proportion value in the lower left corner;
4.Modify it to the scale you need.
Modify the scale of the viewport:
Type the ch command, and the command window of "Properties" will pop up;
Select the viewport you want to change the scale;
In the other tabs of the Properties command window, find "Display Lock", "Standard Scale", "Custom Scale".
If the viewport is locked, select No in the Show Lock column, otherwise you cannot modify the viewport scale;
If the mouth is not locked, then modify it to the common scale, which can be modified in the standard scale;
If the scale is not commonly used, then you can modify it in the custom scale.
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Bring up the viewport toolbar bai out, in.
Double-click the viewport to activate the viewport, and then modify the viewport in the toolbar text box.
proportions. Changed the proportions of the graph will allow it to scale as it changes. You can choose the scale you want in it, or you can enter numbers, for example, if you want to be one-to-one, you can enter 1, enter, and if you want to zoom to multiple sizes, enter enter. Give it a try.
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If you use a copy that is higher than the version.
The bottom right of the CADCAD interface is the scale of the viewport. You can see this scale item by selecting the viewport box, or by double-clicking the inside of the viewport to enter the viewport.
For the same image and the same scale, it is impossible to display different sizes in the viewport.
Unless there is a difference in size between the two shapes in the model, then even at the same scale, there will be large and small in the viewport display.
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Step 1: BAI
First, use Tianzheng to mark a size of du, check his characteristics, and see what the back annotation style of the dao he uses is, and take the Tianzheng water supply and drainage I use as an answer example as twt arch.
Step 2: Open the Dimension Style Manager, create a copy of the TWT ARCH style, and change the scale of the unit of measurement in the primary unit to 100.
Step 3: Select the annotation you just want to open the property manager and change the annotation style to a new copy.
The annotation becomes the actual dimension. The rest of the annotations are solved with a format painter.
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Sometimes it is caused by the fact that Tianzheng Fu cannot recognize the content made in the viewport.
It is recommended that you can generate an proportional annotation style on another feasible viewport or a new viewport, and then change the annotation style in the format painter or properties to achieve proportional annotation. I don't understand the specific factors that affect Tianzheng's identification, sometimes he just can't recognize it in a certain area, even if there is nothing in that area!!
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Of course, drawing in the layout space is based on the size of the layout.
You can set the layout scale to 1:1, and you will have the size of the layout object equal to the model space.
Another way to do this is to double-click on your model and go to model space to annotate it.
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I also tried, and this situation seems to be only possible on auto, and Tianzheng's shortcut commands can't be used.
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Dude, I understand your problem very well, I want to solve this problem, let me know if you solve it.
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Ctrl+1 opens the properties window, selects the axis number and size, and in the properties window, changes the plot scale to the same value.
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The default text should be the most appropriate size for each proportion.
Before drawing a diagram of different scales, set the scales and then label or add text.
No matter what the ratio of Tianzheng is, the default word height is unchanged.
The size of the text you printed out is different, which I deduce is because the scale of the printed frame is not the same as the scale of the graphic. Compare the scale of the graph with the scale of the frame. The scale of the text annotation and the scale of the drawing frame are the same as the scale of the drawing in the lower left corner of the CAD interface.
In this way, the frame inserted in the correct scale should be printed, and the printed text should be the most appropriate size (and the height should be the same), regardless of the scale of the figure.
In the final analysis, the scale of the frame should be adjusted correctly, and the size of the frame should be correct. Then when printing, the window selects the frame to print, and it is no problem.
Think about it this way, the size of the words and graphics remains the same, and the size of the printing paper remains the same as A3, and the picture frame is large because of the proportion, so the content of the printed frame will be smaller than the large picture frame; If the frame is smaller because of the scale, the content of the printed frame will become larger than the relatively small frame.
In fact, there is no need to think about such trouble, as long as the proportion of the frame is consistent with the scale of the figure and the annotation when inserting the frame. As shown in the figure below.
As for previewing on the computer screen at the size of an A3 paper, CAD doesn't have this function, but it's not impossible to do it, but it's a bit troublesome. Print this file to EPS or JPG or PDF in scale and A3 size, open it in PS, and view it with the command "Zoom to print size". However, just printing as EPS will take a few screenshots to illustrate, if you really need to talk about it.
If you have any questions, please ask.
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You shouldn't have set the text style well, the annotation style should also be set, and the printing page has been set?
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You have to bury the key points, so long no wonder no one reads, your problem is that there is no active model space viewport, at this time stupid bent ant you want to build a new one, or enter the original , then define the viewport.
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Because the linear scale setting of the annotation is different, let's set it again.
Take CAD2010 operation as an example:
3. Adjust the proportional value, such as 2.
4. Finally, return to the page to see that the current marked value is twice the original value, so that the operation can solve the problem.
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You only need to have the right dimension when the viewport is activated, and if you are annotated when the viewport is not activated, because it is not a scale, of course it is different!!
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The layout is mainly for layout printing, and the diagram of the model space appears in the viewport of the layout space, and the viewport in the layout can be scaled.
If the viewport ratio is not 1:1, the size of the numbers labeled will definitely be different. In the actual CAD version, the annotation and model space in the layout can be consistent, but the annotation needs to be captured or selected by the form of the object, and at the same time, it is necessary to confirm that the DIMASSOC is set to 2 (dimension association state. )
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When a viewport is inserted in paper space, the viewport has a viewport scale that determines the scale at which the sheet is displayed in model space; For example, if a line with a length of 1000 in the model is displayed as 10 in the viewport with a 1:100 scale, if you measure or dimension it with the dist command in paper space, it will be displayed as 10That is, the length displayed in paper space is the actual length in model space * viewport scale.
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It may be that the scale of the annotation in the layout is different from the scale of the viewport, adjust it.