What’s New in AutoCAD® 2008
Layers
You can now specify colors,
linetypes, lineweights, and plot styles individually for
each viewport. Because the Layer dialog box is now so
big, you can specify which properties to display.
There is a new Layer
Settings dialog box that determines whether
other users are notified when new layers are added to
xrefs and the current drawing. A balloon appears in the
tray.
Layer states
have been underused and hard to access, so they've been
brought into the foreground with their own dialog box,
as well as a new droplist in the Dashboard.
AutoCAD 2007 moved all of
the layer-related Express Tools into the core command
set. One of them, LayIso, has been
enhanced. In the past, it turned off all layers, except
the one belonging to the selected object (hence,
isolating it). New in 2008 is the ability to fade the
other layers, rather than just turn them off. The faded
layers are locked: you can see them and osnap to them,
but cannot edit them. Very nice touch!
Dashboard
A second dashboard now
exists for 2D drafting. The Dashboard can be customized
with commands and droplists, although it does not appear
that you can add custom macros to it.
Annotation Text
The single biggest new
feature is annotation text, which I'll call AText from
now on. This text is different because of two new
properties: Its size (scale) and display (on or off) is
dependent on the scale factor of the viewport in which
it appears.
For example, when you
specify a scale factor of 0.125 in the style of the
AText, then that text appears only in viewports which
also have a scale of 0.125. That's the simplest aspect
by which to understand it.
Model space has a new drop
list on the status bar, which lets you specify the scale
factor of all text in model space. Select a different
scale factor from the drop list, and all text changes
correctly (by that I mean, size and justification).
Paper space has two such
drop lists: one to specify the scale factor of the
current viewport, the other to specify the scale factor
of text in the viewport. (No more Zoom XP!) Normally,
the two droplists are linked: change vp scale to 1:50
and the text also changes its scale to 1:50. But you can
unlink them if you need.
If text in a viewport does
not match the scale factor, then it is not displayed. No
worries: an option overrides the invisibility cloak,
allowing you to see all text in the viewport, including
that which does not match the viewport scale factor.
AText can have multiple scale factors attached, through
the new ObjectScale command. That lets it appear in
multiple viewports of differing scales.
AText works with every type of text, except RText, I was
told. A new icon appears near the crosshair cursor when
it passes over AText. (The icon looks like the
cross-section of a triangular architect's ruler.)
MText
MText can now split a long
column of text into multiple columns. It can also
specify spacing between paragraphs. It imports from Word
2003 and 2007 with formatting intact.
The new spell
checker checks spelling in dimensions, zooms
into misspelled words, and ignores words with nubmers.
MLeader
AutoCAD already has Leader
and QLeader, so why not add MLeader -- leaders with
multiple leader lines. MLeader also keeps text (or
block) attached to the leader, can justify all selected
leaders, and combine multiple leaders into one. New
leader lines can be added to existing MLeaders, and
there are new editing grips on the mleader line. MLeader
Styles let you predetermine what the mleader will look
like.
InfoCenter
Autodesk keeps trying with
the InfoCenter, its attempt at make help always
available. Now the InfoCenter has been moved onto the
toolbar: type in a word or phrase, and a droplist shows
related help items. The Communication Center
is moved from the tray to the new InfoCenter, and a
Favorites button has been added. The
CommCenter allows RSS feeds.
Tables
(this is the annotation
release of AutoCAD!) The new DataExchange
command links tables with Excel 2003/2007 spreadsheets.
The link is two-way, so changes in the table and the
spreadsheet are reflected in each other. The link is
through the XLS file, not through OLE. But you might not
want the table updated in AutoCAD, so that can be
prevented; by default, cells in the AutoCAD table are
locked to prevent accidental change, but you can unlock
them.
Here is a scenerio:
1. Make change in Excel.
2. Save the change.
3. In AutoCAD, a notification balloon appears in the
tray, alerting you of the change.
4. You can accept or reject the change.
The new DataLink
command allows you to modify links. The Excel table is
included with packages created by the eTransmit command.
The split-long-mtext-into-multiple-columns
feature also applies to tables: long tables can be split
into columns.
Attribute Extraction
Now properties of objects
can be extracted, such as the length of a polyline --
attribute extraction is no longer limited to blocks. If
you create custom rows or columns, these are no longer
overwritten the next time you extract data.
DWF Changes
When a DWF file is imported
as an underlay, you can now specify which layers to
display. Still no importing (translating) of DWF files
into AutoCAD.
DGN Import & Export
MicroStation DGN files can
be imported -- translated into objects (for editing) or
displayed as an underlay (for visual accuracy). This is
limited to 2D drawings only. AutoCAD drawings can be
exported to DGN format.
Layout Tabs
You can now directly edit
layout tabs. For example, click the name twice to change
it; hold down the Ctrl key, and then
drag to copy the tab. Both the tab name and layout
contents are copied.
click picture below
to enlarge
