MikeB Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 Hello all! Just converted to mac and have installed autocad 2013. I am quite shocked to find no option for 'smooth display' or anti aliasing for 2D drafting. Am I missing an option, I am very new to mac! Thanks for your help. Mike Quote
MikeB Posted August 17, 2012 Author Posted August 17, 2012 I have had a look. Cant see anything, although as I said I am very new to the Mac OS I did have a similar problem with SketchUp but found a ruby script which solved the problem. Wondered if there was a similar fix for Autocad?! Quote
f700es Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 What hardware do you have? What video card does your mac have? Also Mike why did you switch? What was the reason to do so? Not being a jerk just wanting to know why. Thanks Quote
MikeB Posted August 17, 2012 Author Posted August 17, 2012 Its a mid 2012 Macbook Pro with: 2.7gh i7 1GB NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M 8GB Ram Its a very good question! I previously worked on a desktop and needed to switch to a laptop as I am returning to university to do a Masters in Architecture. Needed portability and the macbook pro seemed to tick all the boxes, its a great desktop replacement with pretty good battery life. Plus its such a lovely machine to work on! Just a little disappointed with the Mac version of autocad vs. windows. Quote
ReMark Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 You Mac users (with AutoCAD) have my deepest sympathies. Not. Quote
MikeB Posted August 17, 2012 Author Posted August 17, 2012 Yes! Well I am also feeling rather sorry for myself at the min. Where's that violin? Quote
ReMark Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 That 1GB graphics chip might give you some problems down the road. Can't be sure though as a Mac may handle differently than a PC when it comes to parceling out resources (memory). Good luck. Quote
f700es Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 Seems like the hardware should be enough to handle it. I know some Macs have Intel video cards and I am still skeptic about them. You can always install Windows on it and roll that way. Sure it will cost more $ for that Downside of Macs in Architecture is not being able to have "real" AutoCAD and Revit. Sure there are other BIM solutions on OSX but Revit runs the show. If you want to run Windows on it look into BootCamp. Good luck Sean Its a mid 2012 Macbook Pro with: 2.7gh i7 1GB NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M 8GB Ram Its a very good question! I previously worked on a desktop and needed to switch to a laptop as I am returning to university to do a Masters in Architecture. Needed portability and the macbook pro seemed to tick all the boxes, its a great desktop replacement with pretty good battery life. Plus its such a lovely machine to work on! Just a little disappointed with the Mac version of autocad vs. windows. Quote
MikeB Posted August 17, 2012 Author Posted August 17, 2012 Thank you very much for the advice. Thinking I might have to get back into Vectorworks! Quote
vicburman Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 MikeB dont no wether this is any use to u but if u look in modify go to bottom mesh editing it has smooth in there hope this helps Quote
tzframpton Posted August 17, 2012 Posted August 17, 2012 MikeB dont no wether this will help but if u go to modify then go down to the bottom to Mesh editing n there is a smooth in there just hope this is helpfulThis has nothing to do with visual fidelity. Anti-aliasing isn't an option in AutoCAD that I know of, other than render output. Revit does have Anti-aliasing but only in a 3D View, not in Plan, Elevation, or Section Views. Quote
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