Changing Views: Interactions with the Project
Changes made to one part of a project frequently influence other parts of the project. The following information
describes the changes you can make to a view and the effects of the changes on other parts of the building project.
■
Adding a new view drawing: When you create a new view drawing, all or most of the referenced constructs
should be present. For quick and comfortable selection of the constructs, place them in categories.
■
Changing the view name and category (location): A view drawing has a number of constructs referenced
into it, and the view drawing itself can be referenced into a plotting sheet. Therefore, any name and location
changes to a view drawing need to be updated throughout the project. To update the path, re-path the project as
described in “
Updating (Re-path) the Project
” on page 292.
WARNING When you re-path a project that was saved in a version of Architectural Desktop prior to 2007, the drawings
are saved in the Architectural Desktop 2007 file format. You will no longer be able to open these drawings in a version
of Architectural Desktop prior to 2007. Synchronizing a project with the project standards will also save the project
drawings in the Architectural Desktop 2007 file format. AutoCAD Architecture 2008 uses the Architectural Desktop 2007
file format so drawings are interchangeable between these releases. For more information, see
“
Updating (Re-path) the
Project
” on page 292
.
■
Changing the content of a view drawing: Any changes made to the content of a view are also made to the
plotting sheets that reference that view.
If you have created model space views and sheet views from the view drawings, they will be updated to reflect the
changed content of the view drawing.
■
Deleting a view drawing: If you delete a view drawing that has been referenced into a plotting sheet, that
plotting sheet is now incomplete and has missing references. Check to see if the view is still used in a sheet before
deleting it.
If you delete a view drawing, all model space views associated to that view are deleted also. Any sheet views that
reference these views will be incomplete and have missing references.
■
Changing a model space view: Changes made to an existing model space view’s view boundaries or scale are
not updated in existing sheet views derived from this view. To change the sheet view, delete it and re-create it from
the updated model space view.
If the content of a model space view changes due to changes in the view drawing, these changes will be updated
in the sheet view.
■
Deleting a model space view: When you delete a model space view, all sheet views created from it remain
intact. For definition, sheet views need only the building model in the view drawing.
Plotting Sheets
Plotting sheets are used to plot plans of your building project.
The plotting sheet system in AutoCAD Architecture consists of these components:
■
Sheet drawing: A sheet drawing is a drawing file containing one or more sheets.
■
Sheet: A sheet is a paper space layout within a sheet drawing. When you create a new sheet, you can either define
an existing sheet layout as a template, or use the sheet layout defined in the project sheet set or sheet subset. A
sheet can contain one or more sheet views.
■
Sheet view: A sheet view is a model space view that has been placed onto a sheet in a sheet drawing.
262 | Chapter 6 Drawing Management
Summary of Contents for 00128-051462-9310 - AUTOCAD 2008 COMM UPG FRM 2005 DVD
Page 1: ...AutoCAD Architecture 2008 User s Guide 2007 ...
Page 4: ...1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ...
Page 40: ...xl Contents ...
Page 41: ...Workflow and User Interface 1 1 ...
Page 42: ...2 Chapter 1 Workflow and User Interface ...
Page 146: ...106 Chapter 3 Content Browser ...
Page 164: ...124 Chapter 4 Creating and Saving Drawings ...
Page 370: ...330 Chapter 6 Drawing Management ...
Page 440: ...400 Chapter 8 Drawing Compare ...
Page 528: ...488 Chapter 10 Display System ...
Page 540: ...500 Chapter 11 Style Manager ...
Page 612: ...572 Chapter 13 Content Creation Guidelines ...
Page 613: ...Conceptual Design 2 573 ...
Page 614: ...574 Chapter 14 Conceptual Design ...
Page 678: ...638 Chapter 16 ObjectViewer ...
Page 683: ...Designing with Architectural Objects 3 643 ...
Page 684: ...644 Chapter 18 Designing with Architectural Objects ...
Page 788: ...748 Chapter 18 Walls ...
Page 942: ...902 Chapter 19 Curtain Walls ...
Page 1042: ...1002 Chapter 21 AEC Polygons ...
Page 1052: ...Changing a door width 1012 Chapter 22 Doors ...
Page 1106: ...Changing a window width 1066 Chapter 23 Windows ...
Page 1172: ...1132 Chapter 24 Openings ...
Page 1226: ...Using grips to change the flight width of a spiral stair run 1186 Chapter 25 Stairs ...
Page 1368: ...Using the Angle grip to edit slab slope 1328 Chapter 28 Slabs and Roof Slabs ...
Page 1491: ...Design Utilities 4 1451 ...
Page 1492: ...1452 Chapter 30 Design Utilities ...
Page 1536: ...1496 Chapter 31 Layout Curves and Grids ...
Page 1564: ...1524 Chapter 32 Grids ...
Page 1611: ...Documentation 5 1571 ...
Page 1612: ...1572 Chapter 36 Documentation ...
Page 1706: ...Stretching a surface opening Moving a surface opening 1666 Chapter 36 Spaces ...
Page 1710: ...Offsetting the edge of a window opening on a freeform space surface 1670 Chapter 36 Spaces ...
Page 1956: ...1916 Chapter 42 Fields ...
Page 2035: ...Properties of a detail callout The Properties of a Callout Tool 1995 ...
Page 2060: ...2020 Chapter 45 Callouts ...
Page 2170: ...2130 Chapter 47 AEC Content and DesignCenter ...
Page 2171: ...Other Utilities 6 2131 ...
Page 2172: ...2132 Chapter 48 Other Utilities ...
Page 2182: ...2142 Chapter 51 Reference AEC Objects ...
Page 2212: ...2172 Chapter 52 Customizing and Adding New Content for Detail Components ...
Page 2217: ...AutoCAD Architecture 2008 Menus 54 2177 ...
Page 2226: ...2186 Chapter 54 AutoCAD Architecture 2008 Menus ...
Page 2268: ...2228 Index ...