S.NO. Particu LA RS 01. Abstracts 02. Chapter-1 Autodesk 03. 04. 05. 06. Chapter-2 Autocad 07. 08. 09
S.NO. Particu LA RS 01. Abstracts 02. Chapter-1 Autodesk 03. 04. 05. 06. Chapter-2 Autocad 07. 08. 09
S.NO. Particu LA RS 01. Abstracts 02. Chapter-1 Autodesk 03. 04. 05. 06. Chapter-2 Autocad 07. 08. 09
Vikash Sihara
192085
CONTEN
S.NO. PARTICUTLAS RS PAGE NO.
01. ABSTRACTS 8
02. CHAPTER-1 AUTODESK 9-12
03. 1.Introduction 9-10
04. 2.History 10-11
05. 3.Products 11-12
06. CHAPTER-2 AUTOCAD 12-27
07. 1.Introduction 13
08. 2.AutoCAD Window 14-17
09. 3.Selecting The Workspace 17-18
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10. 4.Filing and Data Input 18-20
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students and let students know the technical knowledge and
professionalism. During industrial training at
INTERNSHALA, most of the theoretical knowledge gained
during the course of studies was put to test. Various efforts
and processes involved in designing of a component was
studied and understood during the training. In my training, I
take course of AUTOCAD. The training gave me good
experience from the view of implementing my theoretical
knowledge in practical aspects. It gave me first-hand
experience of working as an engineering professional.
Overall , it is a great experience to have industrial training in
such a reputed firm and I believe that it will help me in
building a successful career.
C
HAPTER-
1
INTRODUCTION
Autodesk, Inc. is an American multinational software
corporation that makes software for the architecture,
engineering, construction, manufacturing, media, and
entertainment industries. Autodesk is headquartered in San
Rafael, California, and features a gallery of its customers' work
in its San Francisco building. The company
has offices worldwide, with U.S. locations in Northern
California, Oregon, Colorado, Texas and in New England in
New Hampshire and Massachusetts, and Canada locations in
Ontario, Quebec, and Alberta.
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The company was founded in 1982 by John Walker, a coauthor
of the first versions of AutoCAD, the company's flagship
computer-aided design (CAD) software. It’s AutoCAD and Revit
software is primarily used by architects, engineers, and
structural designers to design, draft, and model buildings and
other structures. Autodesk software has been used in many
fields, from the New York Freedom Tower to Tesla electric cars.
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The company makes educational versions of its software
available at no cost to qualified students and faculty through the
Autodesk Education Community, and also as a donation to eligible
non-profits through TechSoup Global. Autodesk's digital
prototyping software, including Autodesk Inventor, Fusion 360, and
the Autodesk Product Design Suite, are used in the manufacturing
industry to visualize, simulate, and analyse realworld performance
using a digital model during the design process. The company's
Revit line 5 of software for building information modelling is
designed to let users explore the planning, construction, and
management of a building virtually before it isbuilt.
HISTORY
Autodesk's first notable product was AutoCAD, a computer-aided
design application designed to run on the systems known as
"microcomputers" at the time, including those running the 8-bit
CP/M operating system and two of the new 16-bit systems, the
Victor 9000 and the IBM Personal Computer (PC). This tool
allowed users to create detailed technical drawings, and was
affordable to many smaller design, engineering, and architecture
companies.
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Subsequent to AutoCAD Release 13, the company stopped
supporting the Unix environment and the Apple Macintosh platform.
After AutoCAD Release 14 (R13 was last DOS & Unix release),
first shipped in 1997, Autodesk discontinued development under
DOS, and focused exclusively on Microsoft Windows. AutoCAD
has grown to become the most widely used CAD program for 2D
nonspecialized applications. The native file formats written by
AutoCAD, DXF and DWG, are also widely used for CAD data
interoperability.
PRODUCTS
Architecture, engineering and construction – AutoCAD
Architecture
• AutoCAD MEP
• AutoCAD Civil 3D
• AutoCAD Map3D
• AutoCAD P&ID
• AutoCAD Plant 3D
Manufacturing-The Company’s manufacturing software is
used in various manufacturing segments, including
industrial machinery, electromechanical, tool and die,
industrial equipment,
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automotive components, and consumer products
• Fusion 360
• Autodesk Product Design Suite
• Autodesk Factory Design Suite
• Autodesk Inventor Suite
• Autodesk Inventor Professional Suite
• AutoCAD Mechanical
• Autodesk Vault
• Simulation Mechanical
Media and entertainment - Autodesk Media and Entertainment
products are designed for
digital media creation, management, and delivery, from film
and television visual effects, color grading, and editing to
animation, game development, and design visualization.
• Maya
• Softimage
• 3ds Max
• Mudbox
• Smoke
• Flame
• Lustre
C
HAPTER
1. INTRODUCTION
AutoCAD is a commercial computer-aided design (CAD) and
drafting software application. Developed and marketed by
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Autodesk, AutoCAD was first released in December 1982 as a
desktop app running on microcomputers with internal graphics
controllers. Prior to the introduction of AutoCAD, most
commercial CAD programs ran on mainframe computers or
minicomputers, with each CAD operator (user) working at a
separate graphics terminal. Since 2010, AutoCAD was released
as a mobile- and web app as well, marketed as AutoCAD360.
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1. Application Menu
This provides the user with file options like save, open, print.
2. Menu bar
The menu bar appears just below the title bar of the
AutoCAD 2016 window. It has such tabs as home, solid,
surface, mesh and view among others for the case of 3D
workspace. If you switch to 2D Drafting & Annotation you
find other tabs relevant to 11 that workspace. Depending on
which tab you are on, you will see a collection of tool icons
just below it which are organized into panels. The entire
collection of tool icons is referred to as the ribbon. As a
result the tabs on the menu bar are called ribbon tabs.
3. Ribbon
This is a collection of tool panels representing groups of
tools and features where you will be selecting tools to iii.
draw, edit, or perform other functions. It occurs
immediately below the menu bar. Clicking on any of the
tabs on the menu bar will give you a different ribbon.
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4. Drawing Area
This is a virtual sheet or modelling environment where
your designs appear. It is a boundless area on which
your designs are created on a 1:1 scale regardless of
their actual life size.
7. UCS
UCS stands for User Coordinate System. In the lower-left corner
of the drawing area, you see an L-shaped arrow. This is the
UCS icon, which tells you your orientation in the drawing. This
icon becomes helpful as you start to work with complex 2D
drawings and 3D models. The X and Y arrows indicate the Xand
Y-axes of your drawing. The little square at the base of the
arrows tells you that you’re in what is called the World 12
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Coordinate System (WCS. Whenever you launch AutoCAD you
will be in the world coordinate system (WCS).
8. Command Line
It’s located just below the drawing area. As you type in
commands on the command line, or pick commands on the
ribbon panels, a message is displayed on the command window
telling you what to do next. When you issue any command it
may also display a list of options related to that command. By so
doing it prompts you on your next move. Thus it is also known
as the command prompt. The command window and the ribbon
complement each other i.e. you can type commands on the
command line or click on the ribbon icons. However the
command prompts that appear on the command window prevent
the user from getting confused.
9. Status Bar
The status bar is a thin strip of the AutoCAD window found
between the command window and the taskbar. To the
extreme left it carries the coordinate readout which indicates
to the user the current position of the cursor. Towards the
right next to the coordinate readout is the drawing aids panel
which carries such tools as object snap, object snap tracking,
dynamic UCS and polar tracking among others. These aids
assist the user in managing snap and tracking actions. They
are activated or deactivated by switching them on or off
respectively. To the extreme right of the status bar we find
another panel which contains the model and layout tabs,
annotation scale and workspace switching tool (gear wheel
icon) among others
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3. SELECTING THE WORKSPACE
A workspace is a task-oriented drawing environment
oriented in such a way as to provide you with only the tools
and interface elements necessary to accomplish the tasks
relevant to that environment. You can switch between
workspaces by using the Workspace Switching Tool. You
can also customize the workspace the way you want and
then save it. It will be appearing on the list of workspaces
during switching and you can select it as an option.
Workspace switching tool takes the form of a gear wheel located
at the bottom right hand corner of the active window. Clicking on it
produces a drop down list of other alternative workspaces. Clicking
on either changes the workspace to the selected choice.
Alternatively you can switch the workspace by clicking on the
downward arrow besides the name of the current workspace on
the quick access toolbar.
4. FILING AND DATA INPUT
AutoCAD 2014 file operations are similar to the file operations in
any other Windows program. The general file handling
commands include file saving, file opening, file closing and
printing of drawings.
I. OPENING FILES
There are three ways to open a drawing inAutoCAD.
Using Application Menu
• Click on Application Menu> Open
• On the select file dialogue box that appears, browse
through the folders in the Look in slot. This enables you
to navigate to the folder where you’ve saved your
drawing.
• Clicking on a file allows you to look at a preview of the
drawing.
• Select OPEN.
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Using the Quick Access Toolbar
• Click on File pull down menu> Open
• At the Select file dialogue box, browse through to the
folder in the Look in slot.
• Clicking on a file allows you to look at a preview of the
drawing.
• Now you can click Open in the select file dialoguebox.
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Using the command line
• At the command prompt on the command line, type Open
and enter.
• At the Select file dialogue box, browse through to the
folder in the Look in slot.
• Clicking on a file allows you to look at a preview of the
drawing .Select OPEN
II. FILE SAVING To save a drawing for the first time
The Save Drawing dialogue box appears when you are saving
a drawing for the first time. You are the required to navigate
through the folders in the save in slot to select the folder in
which you want to save your drawing. Type in the file name and
then click save.
If you modify a drawing you may wish to save it again but
retaining the original template. In this case select save as from
the file pull down or the application menu. Give it a name that
signifies its current status i.e. taking into account the changes.
Click save.
Making Changes
Coming up with certain drawings may not take place in one
pass. Some will require modifications at virtually every stage.
Others involve a series of iterative stages before settling on the
final copy. In these circumstances, AutoCAD offers the
required flexibility as opposed to manual drawing. To keep
track of all the modifications, the Save As tool is very essential.
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III. CLOSING A FILE
Simply click on the X button on the top right corner of the
AutoCAD window to close a drawing. A dialogue box
appears asking whether to save the changes on the drawing.
Select yes to save the changes and no if you don’t want to
effect the changes. However it’s usually a good practice to
save your files before closing them.
5. COORDINATES ENTRY
1. OVERVIEW.
When a command prompts you for a point, you can use the
mouse to specify a point, or you can enter a coordinate
value at the command prompt. If the dynamic input is
switched you can enter coordinate values in tooltips near
the cursor.
Two-dimensional coordinates can be entered as either
Cartesian (X, Y) or Polar coordinates.
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III. Absolute and Relative Coordinates i. Absolute
coordinates
Represents a specific point in the current work plane
relative to the origin point (0,0). To enter an absolute
coordinate, type the values as a Cartesian coordinate (X,Y)
or Polar coordinate (distance, angle).
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I. Overview
When drawing in both 2D and 3D, you may wish to:
a. Get a closer look (magnify your drawing).
b. View hidden details
c. Bring the whole drawing into focus.
d. View the hidden details of your 3D drawing.
For a, b and c use the zoom and pan tools as follows:
i. Zoom in to magnify and zoom out to minimize the size.
Zooming out enables you to see the details that are
currently spilt out of the screen or make the object smaller in
readiness to add details.
ii. The pan tool allows you to drag your drawing to a
convenient location on the screen.
iii. For d use the orbit tool. It is the tool that enables you to view
the objects in your drawing from different angles. It is very
essential, when drawing in 3D.
II. Accessing the tools A. Zoom
a. To zoom a view with a single click.
i. Display a wheel.
ii. Right-click the wheel and click Steering Wheel Settings.
In iii.the Steering Wheels Settings dialog box, under Zoom
Tool, select Enable Single Click Incremental Zoom.
iv. Click OK.
v. Display one of the Full Navigation Wheels or the mini View
Object Wheel.
vi. Click the Zoom wedge. The magnification of the model is
increased and you are zoomed in closer to the model. If you
hold down the Shift key while clicking the Zoom wedge, the
model is zoomed out or you can hold down the Ctrl key to
zoom in.
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vii. Click Close to exit the wheel.
b. To zoom a view in and out by dragging.
i. Display the 2D Navigation wheel, one of the Full
Navigation wheels, or the mini View Object wheel.
ii. Click and hold down the Zoom wedge. The cursor changes to
the Zoom cursor.
iii. Drag vertically to zoom in or out. iv. Release the button on
your mouse to return to the wheel.
B.Pan
a. To pan the drawing with the pan tool.
i. Display the 2D Navigation wheel, one of the Full
Navigation wheels, or the mini View Object wheel.
ii. Click and hold the Pan wedge. The cursor changes to the
Pan cursor.
iii. Drag to reposition the model. iv. Release the button on
your pointing device to return to the wheel.
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ii. Click and hold down the Orbit wedge. The cursor
changes to the Orbit cursor. iii. Drag to rotate the
model. iv. Release the button on your mouse.
NB: To navigate to the zoom, pan or orbit tools, go to:
a. View tab> navigate panel> zoom or
b. View tab> navigate panel> pan or
c. View tab> navigate panel> orbit.
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• Limits:
When you start a new drawing, and then decide how much
space I need for my drawing. Think of it as the size of your
drawing area. Then you can define drawing limits correctly.
Type LIMITS enter. Type 0,0 as lower left corner then type or
click the coordinate for upper right corner based on the units
which is in Inches or mm.
□ Command: LIMITS
Reset Model space limits:
Specify lower left corner or [ON/OFF] <0.0000, 0.0000>: 0, 0
Specify upper right corner <100.0000, 100.0000>: 300,200
8. COMMANDS
1. OVERVIEW AND DEFINITIONS.
You communicate with AutoCAD by using tools and Menu options.
These devices invoke AutoCAD commands.
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I. What is a command?
It’s a single-word instruction you give to AutoCAD telling it to do
something such as draw a line (the line tool in the Draw Ribbon Panel)
or erase an object (the Erase tool in the Modify Ribbon Panel).
Whenever you invoke a command, by either typing it or selecting a
menu option or tool, AutoCAD responds by presenting messages to
you in the Command Window and the Dynamic Input display or by
displaying a dialogue box. By right clicking during the drawing process,
a context-sensitive short cut menu is displayed; i.e. if you are in the
middle of a command, this menu displays a list of options specifically
related to that command.
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2. Draw Command Tools
corners.
v. Polygon: The Polygon command can be used to draw any regular polygon from 3
sides up to 1024 sides. This command requires four inputs from the user, the number of
sides, a pick point for the centre of the polygon, whether you want polygon inscribed or
circumscribed and then a pick point which determines both the radius of this imaginary
circle and the orientation of the polygon. The polygon command creates a closed
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circle. The default method is to pick the centre point and then to either pick a second
point on the circumference of the circle or enter the circle radius at the keyboard.
vii. Arc: The Arc command allows you to draw an arc of a circle. There are numerous
ways to define an arc; the default method uses three pick points, a start point, a second
ix. Ellipse: The Ellipse command gives you a number of different creation options. The
default option is to pick the two end points of an axis and then a third point to define
the eccentricity of the ellipse.
x. Hatch: Hatch is used to add shaded patterns to objects and shapes. You can pick:
Pattern, Scale, Angle, Points
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3. MODIFY COMMANDS
Offset
Fillet
Explode
9. DIMENSIONTOOLBAR
You can create several types of dimensions for a variety of object types in many
orientations and alignments.
The basic types of dimensioning are linear, radial, angular, ordinate, and arc length. Use
the DIM command to create dimensions automatically according to the object type that you
want to dimension.
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You can control the appearance of dimensions by setting up dimension styles, or by
editing individual dimensions in special cases. Dimension styles allow you to specify
your conventions quickly and maintain industry or project dimensioning standards.
Dimensions
Dimensions
iv. Ordinate v. Arc Length Dimension vi.
Dimensions Baseline and continued
dimension
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10 TEXT COMMAND
. 1. Multiline Text - For longer notes and labels with internal formatting, use multiline text
2. Single-line Text - For short, simple notes and labels, use single-line text.
11. TABLE
A table is a compound object that contains data in rows and columns. It can be
created from an empty table or a table style. A table can also be linked to data in a
Microsoft Excel spreadsheet.
12 LAYER
. Layers are the primary method for organizing the objects in a drawing by function or
purpose. Layers can reduce the visual complexity of a drawing and improve display
performance by hiding information that you don’t need to see at the moment. You gain
this level of control by organizing the objects in your drawing on layers that are
associated with a specific function or a purpose. It might be helpful to think of layers as
clear plastic sheets:
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layer
13 ISOMETRIC DRAWINGS
. A 2D isometric drawing is a flat representation of a 3D isometric projection. This
method of drawing provides a fast way to create an isometric view of a simple design.
Distances measured along an isometric axis are correct to scale, but because you are
drawing in 2D, you cannot expect to extract other 3D distances and areas, display
objects from different viewpoints, or remove hidden lines automatically.
By using the ISODRAFT command, several system variables and settings are
automatically changed to values that facilitate isometric angles. The standard
isometric planes, Right. Aligns snap called isoplanes, are asand grid along
30- and follows:90-degree axes.
• Left. Aligns snap and grid along 90- and 150-degree axes.
• Top. Aligns snap and grid along 30- and 150-degree axes.
Choosing one of the three isoplanes automatically causes the crosshairs cursor, and
precision drawing and tracking tools to be aligned along the corresponding isometric
axes. Therefore, you can draw the top plane, switch to the left plane to draw a side,
and switch to the right plane to complete the drawing.
You can use the Isometric Drafting tool on the status bar to select the desired
isoplane. Alternatively, you can press F5 or Ctrl+E to cycles through the isoplanes.
14 3D MODELING
. 3D solid primitives are standard shapes which are provided among the ribbon options on the
3D modeling workspace. They include box, wedge, cone, cylinder, sphere, pyramid
and torus. The principles of drawing them are similar.
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Box Cylinder Sphere
e s id
BOOLEAN
OPERATIONS:
• Union
• Subtract
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15 PRINTING AND PLOTTING
. Output a drawing layout to a printer, a plotter, or a file. Save and restore the printer
settings for each layout. Originally, people printed text from printers and plotted
drawings from plotters. Now, you can do both with either.
For convenience, you can save and restore collections of these settings by name. These are
called page setups. With page setups you can store the settings that you need for different
printers, printing in gray scales, creating a PDF file from your drawing, and soon.
The plot style table provides information about processing colors.
CHAPTER-3
CONCLUSION
Well, for the moment we arrived at the end of this course, clearly
AutoCAD not end there, there would be lots more to explain more about
the design in 2D, but what about the basic functions of the program, we
have already treated several topics on which you have to practice a lot
and once you master you will be able to create and print your designs
using this program. Practice a lot with the commands you have learned,
try then to create something more elaborate, such as Plant, a furnished
room or a technical drawing of an object, a brand etc.. according to your
preferences and needs, you can draw in Autocad just about anything.
When you start the designs calculate from the outset the scale factor
with which they print, and scale the size of the template, the text and
basic dimensions in according to this and the paper size you wish to use.
Attempts to draw the tables that are easy to understand and generally
follow the rules that use hand drawing.
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Please note that AutoCAD is only a tool, we can compare it to know
how to use the pencil and set squares, and clearly does not draw on its
own.
With this course I hope to have transmitted the use of basic commands,
through the combination of which will acquire the ability to put into digital
form (that in the case of CAD drawing is called "vectorial" format ), what
in theory would be able to draw on paper, but using the advantages that
the use of the computer makes available to us.
From this starting point, you can deepen more the potential of Autocad
and manage even very complex designs, and then perhaps move to 3D
design and three-dimensional graphics.
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