If you are a mouse dialog, ribbon, or toolbar user, I encourage you to consider the command line versions to increase your productivity. Some of these commands have dialog and command line options, so depending on your productivity style, you have options.
A few of the tools that you may find useful are “Purge,” "Audit," "Selectsimilar," AND Wblock.Ī brief outline of what you would use each command for and then a more detailed description of how they can be used for your cleanup purposes follows, as well as some example scripts on how to automate their use for drawing cleanup. These tools can be used individually to handle certain cleanup tasks, or they can be used in conjunction with others to handle larger cleanups. And when dealing with outside users, cleanup is a lot more likely.ĪutoCAD has some built-in tools that can help make the drawing cleanup process much easier. Sometimes, even with good drawing practices, files will need to be cleaned up. Automate your drawing standards, and object insertion processes verses copying one job to create another. Use polylines, and polygons when creating objects, use explode as a last resort and use blocks/dynamic blocks to represent your drawing data. Use standard layers, linetype, and text styles. Start by keeping your drawings lean and efficient. As we all have experienced, issues tend to hit on deadline day.Įverything starts with good habits and procedures. By keeping the cleanup process simple and automating as much as possible, it is more likely to get done on a regular basis. Many times, users will clean up drawings only when they have to, such as for errors (crashing drawings, inability to import in to other applications), or files being too big to email, etc.
Not all users set up their drawings with your use in mind, and sadly some don't set it up with anybody's use in mind. Back February 19th, 2014 Cleaning Up AutoCAD DrawingsĪ necessary part of many AutoCAD® users’ day is cleaning up drawing files.