Andy Clarke Posted September 10, 2013 Author Posted September 10, 2013 tuns i have wrote your email down so if you want to remove it you can Quote
Andy Clarke Posted September 10, 2013 Author Posted September 10, 2013 i have sent over an email from my personal account to you email thanks again Quote
Tuns Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 This is so awkward... If you select too many lines at one time you can't see any grips... but if you select 4 or 5 random lines you can use the grips. I used the macro you have to flatten and it made the entire thing disappear. I'll try my best though so give me some time. Quote
Andy Clarke Posted September 10, 2013 Author Posted September 10, 2013 no problem thanks again for the help Quote
steven-g Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Whilst you are waiting did you try the change I suggested. Quote
eldon Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Don't trust anyone, their out to get you If you get an e-mail go back to your post and EDIT the e-mail out I think you also should edit your post to remove the e-mail address from the quote. Quote
Tuns Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Ok.. I know your problem. There is a limit to how many objects you can select and edit and for some reason the lines in this drawing are taking up way more memory than they should be. I guess it's because it wasn't drawn with AutoCAD or something, but if you select too many lines the grips will vanish making it appear to have multiple elevations. It's already all on one level, you're just limited by AutoCAD here... Quote
eldon Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 I think that arcs which are not initially horizontal, move in a direction which is normal to the arc. They are still in the drawing, but not much use after the 1e99 procedure. Quote
Andy Clarke Posted September 10, 2013 Author Posted September 10, 2013 Tuns if you select just two different lines it still shows that there on different elevations before using the macro i have even tried make the arc into a polyline but it still moving them around it so frustrating eldon this is whats stressing em out that there still in the drawing but moved, i was thinking of upgrading to full version of CAD to use the express tools but i don't know if i will have the same problem using the flatten command Quote
eldon Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 I have just been trying things out with an arc I rotated in 3D. The 1e99 procedure sends it to pastures new, but flatten turns it into an ellipse at zero elevation, which is what you want. Quote
Tuns Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 I'm not having your problem Andy. Everything on the file you sent me is working the way it should. Quote
steven-g Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Unfortunately this macro doesn't work for arcs that are on a different UCS, I haven't got a clue why but they wander off on their own. Quote
Tuns Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Can you ask the original draftsman to flatten it for you? I think that would be the best rout. Quote
steven-g Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 How many arcs are there in the drawing? Quote
Tuns Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Not too many. None of them are 3D by any means. They're all drawn on a flat plain. Quote
steven-g Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Not seeing the original, makes it a bit difficult, but I tried a few things. If an arc isn't parallel to the world UCS it goes walkabout, I figured out 2 options but both will only work with one arc at a time. Make sure the UCS is 'world' then trace over the arcs one at a time (arc command and pick end centre and end), an arc is forced to be on the UCS it doesn't matter what the elevation of the starting point is all subsequent points have the same Z value so tracing over the arcs will create new ones parallel to the UCS then delete the old ones and flatten the drawing. The second option I haven't fully tested yet but for each arc run the PEDIT command and change them into polylines, polylines will flatten with the macro. Obviously you can't use these options if there are too many arcs. EDIT converting to polyline doesn't work - so only the first option looks like it may work. Quote
Andy Clarke Posted September 11, 2013 Author Posted September 11, 2013 just a quick one guys thanks for all your help last night i upgraded to autocad 2014 full and the flatten command worked a treat thanks for all your help again Quote
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