MAREBER Posted Monday at 07:12 AM Posted Monday at 07:12 AM Good morning all, I am trying to find an easy way for our office manager to take the scaled PDFs that I create and do accurate measurements from them, when I am not available to answer her questions on the measurements. There must be an easy to use, PDF measuring program (Adobe?) for quick calculations of Square Feet and Linear Feet from an existing PDF? I'm open to any and all suggestions. Thank you in advance! Quote
MAREBER Posted Monday at 10:15 AM Author Posted Monday at 10:15 AM To be clear, I know that one can do measurements within the adobe acrobat program, but this only gets us so far, in that I can only make it do straight line measurements, and in landscape architecture, we have LOTS of curves. Thanks! Quote
BIGAL Posted Monday at 10:10 PM Posted Monday at 10:10 PM (edited) If I remember correctly TRUEVIEW is free and may do what the person wants, they can open a dwg, view it, plot it not sure about object properties. https://www.autodesk.com/products/dwg-trueview/overview it shows a measure icon in the web page. Edited Monday at 10:10 PM by BIGAL Quote
MAREBER Posted Tuesday at 11:10 AM Author Posted Tuesday at 11:10 AM Thanks so much, I'll check into it! Quote
eldon Posted Tuesday at 12:24 PM Posted Tuesday at 12:24 PM I am not sure how my free version of Adobe Acrobat differs, but in the measurement tool I can measure lengths, perimeters and areas. Quote
MAREBER Posted Tuesday at 02:13 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 02:13 PM yes, that I can do. What we are in need of is a tool that can also measure curvalinear lines. Quote
MAREBER Posted Tuesday at 02:19 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 02:19 PM On 3/24/2025 at 10:10 PM, BIGAL said: If I remember correctly TRUEVIEW is free and may do what the person wants, they can open a dwg, view it, plot it not sure about object properties. https://www.autodesk.com/products/dwg-trueview/overview it shows a measure icon in the web page. Expand Hmmm, after a quick look, this seems to be more for people editing CAD, not so much for viewing and measuring completed drawings. Quote
eldon Posted Tuesday at 06:04 PM Posted Tuesday at 06:04 PM On 3/25/2025 at 2:13 PM, MAREBER said: yes, that I can do. What we are in need of is a tool that can also measure curvalinear lines. Expand Using the perimeter tool is easier with a mouse and good hand/eye coordination, so probably would not suit some users, especially whilst tracing over curves. Quote
SLW210 Posted Wednesday at 11:30 AM Posted Wednesday at 11:30 AM They need to be using a CAD program and .dwg or .dxf if they need accuracy. This is not what a PDF is used for, IMO. Just place the relevant dimensions on the drawing before making it a PDF. Use the tools in Adobe Acrobat and do the best as you can as mentioned by eldon. You could use some math calculations on the known parameters of the curves to get a more accurate measurement. All sounds like a lot of extra work when an inexpensive CAD program could do this quickly. Quote
MAREBER Posted Wednesday at 11:57 AM Author Posted Wednesday at 11:57 AM The office manager does not know CAD, nor do they have a subscription. I am an independent consultant/ contractor for this Design/ Build firm. I design and draw up the plans, they install the designs. They do not require, nor do they want to pay me to draw up detailed layout plans. They only need quick measurements for some things when I am not available to answer specific questions. I do supply scaled drawings, along with a breakdown of measurements for all programming, however, at times, they add items, delete items, etc. It is at these times, they would like to be able to figure it out for themselves. It just feels like there should be a quick and dirty program for this purpose, that is user friendly without having to learn new skills? Quote
SLW210 Posted Wednesday at 05:19 PM Posted Wednesday at 05:19 PM Precise measuring is not the intended purpose of PDF format. If you are asking for new programs to do this, then by default, those needing it will need to be trained. Apparently they do not even know how to use Acrobat which they already have, I would presume. They could always plot and use the appropriate ruler scale like in old times. Though I would presume they would need training. You do not have to "know" CAD to open a drawing and get some dimensions any more than you would need to learn to do it for a PDF. There are some very cheap and free CAD programs that would work for measuring .dxf etc. Inkscape/Illustrator has measure tool, not sure if it's easier or better than the Acrobat one though. Quote
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