AutoCAD Freestyle is built on the AutoCAD platform
and is compatible with AutoCAD’s DWG file format. This means that in
AutoCAD Freestyle you can open a file created in AutoCAD or AutoCAD LT
add sketches, notes, and drawing enhancements and save completing
workflow and round-trip with other DWG-based applications.
But
while AutoCAD requires quite a lot of training most anyone can get
started using AutoCAD Freestyle right away thanks to its Integrated
learning tools.
When a DWG file from another application is opened in
AutoCAD Freestyle, the original objects cannot be edited. That is, all
geometry and text are on a locked layer.
AutoCAD
Freestyle only opens one paper space layout at a time. If a DWG file
created in another application contains multiple paper space layouts,
the user can select a single layout to use.
DWG
files created in other applications that contain 3D views may be
somewhat limited in their functionality when opened and viewed in
AutoCAD Freestyle.
All text, geometry, and fill
elements added to a file using AutoCAD Freestyle are automatically
placed on new, AutoCAD Freestyle-specific layers.
If
you are an AutoCAD (or other DWG-based software application) user, and
you plan to send a DWG file to a user who is unfamiliar with DWG
drawings, the best approach is to create a DWG file with a single
viewport in a paper space layout.
There is no way
to add new symbols (blocks) to the library within the application. But
the ToolPalette file AcTpCatalogacadfs.atc can be manually edited to
achieve this. Dynamic blocks are supported.
AutoCAD
Freestyle saves to AutoCAD 2007 DWG file format but can open AutoCAD
2010 DWG file format files. It looks like this first release is based on
AutoCAD 2010 as 18.0 is the interval version number and not 18.1 as in
AutoCAD 2011.
AutoCAD freestyle Exercise 1:
AutoCAD freestyle Exercise 2:
AutoCAD freestyle Exercise 3:
AutoCAD freestyle Exercise 4:
AutoCAD freestyle Exercise 5
:
No comments:
Post a Comment