Convertir Pdf En Dwg Autocad

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Billi Mayhue

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Aug 5, 2024, 5:55:49 AM8/5/24
to erazndesin
Inautocad 2013 is the best way still to convert data you have connected to, for example a shapefile, as feature data in order to convert that into polylines and text is the best method saving it all as a seperate drawing using the "save as autocad drawing command"? Is there way to do it individually in the current drawing so that I do not always have to be saving things out as seperate drawings and then copy and pasting them back into my working drawing?

I guess that really is the second best alternative, is there any more other than doing the save as drawing command and the check out feature geometery command you suggested. Just looking at all my opitions.


Thanks for interest! Basically for years I have been using the command Mapimport to bring in shapefile data into drawings because it created for me real polylines and points which I could then save my drawing and email it to a client as needed. I have randomly fooled around with connecting to the shapefile data through the taskpane and apply styles and creating labels for some of the data that is attached. I usually about 99% of the time just use the mapimport command because it is easier to work with and send to people but I just wanted to try the other way and see what my options are currently.


Basically i just wanted to know all my options on converting feature data into real polylines, text, and such and see which one I thought was best. So far I guess I like the "Save as drawing command"... I wish there was an option to just "Save as real polylines, text, and hatches, inside current drawing command".


Hi there, has anybody any information about converting blender files into CAD (autocad) formats to get them produced by machines? are there export-formats of blender whcih can be converted into cad? any experiences?

cad formats are e.g .dwg .dxf .dxb .dwf

Thanks very much!

regards


Though i used curves, converted them to meshes and the resulting mesh had a ton of geometry so the cnc machine ran out of memory while trying to load the file so it had to be done in pieces, but yes it works.


Hey Every one,im new to python and Blender,i currently have a number of Autocad packages and patents ,i have just finished my Anti-Gravity design and modeling of my project,im about to go into Marketing in October,but the Market research team would like a comprehensive look at how my Antigravity Design works.


What i want to know is if it is possible to take my Autocad files and give them life using python and Blender,since i am new to this i will most likely find some one that can help me Animate my design on a professional level,i need to do this before september,because there will be a board room conference held for me to explain the fundementals of how my machine works,i need to be able to bring my Autocad files to life as it does in Reality,it would be much appreciated if some one would contact me directly ,my email address is incon...@mailforce.net,it would be much appreciated!


The autocad format like dxf dwg or other are only a specific autocad format. most of common mesh format are similar and interchangeable, but when you say Blender to CAD, this mean a lot of thing. Personally I use Blender as CAD, and for exchange file is not always simple and it depend on your needs, for Nurbs CAD there are many ways, for simple mesh planar, you can save the file in fbx, for autocad or dxf with the addon, if you need a nurbs file there are three ways one is using freeship, an other Fusion 360 and the last this Moi3d, all previous this need a mesh ready for the subdivision.

Below some links


At no cost, hobbyists, makers, and others who are willing to freely share their designs can pursue their projects without the hassles commonly found in old CAD systems. Onshape is accessible from any device, never loses data, and makes sharing and collaboration easy. For the ability to create private design data, see Onshape Professional.


the two things you are asking for don't go together.

If you want the layout it will ONLY have paper coordinates.

If you want real world coordinates it will never know the orientation of your paper (or layout).

The work around would be to get the data in the dataframe exported (using the export to cad function for each data layer you want in the drawing.

(you can add more than one layer into the tool) or compile them into one drawing.

Then use the pdf 2 cad method to get the layout information exported (without the dataframe) [you might call this a sheet template]. Then insert it into Autocad and scale it up then clip the other data to it.


If I were doing it I would use autocad map 3d to create the template, and pull in the data as shape file but unless you have access to autocad map 3d you would have problems making that work.

The other thing about this is that it does not take advantage of the Autocad sheet layout.


DXF Page Exporter - cheap but somewhat poorly implemented with crappy results. Converts everything to polygons - texts and lines included! Real world coordinates export is not precise - seems to be a rough approximation - in their words "data precision loss is due to real-world to pixel coordinate conversion". Objects are exploded into many little parts. Overall the DXF when rendered looks good but the drawing has no engineering value.


To be complete - there is a third company called CEDRA but they are outrageously expensive and I haven't been able to make their exporter work for me. It is not easy to obtain a demo version. The exporter seems to be very limited, requiring to follow certain rules when designing your ArcMap documents, layer coordinates do not register in the exported file, the symbology mapping is very basic, the whole process is very manual, layout elements are not supported, grids and north arrows are not exported unless converted to graphics and a lot of other quirks and problems.


In a nutshell - if you want to look at a pretty picture in AutoCAD - go with DXF Page Exporter. If you want to be able to match exact coordinates, edit the exported file and do any other engineering work with the exported document - go with SmartExporter.DXF. If you want to waste your time and money - go with CEDRA.


My best way around this issue has been exporting the symbology that does not depend on direction (such as circles) using the classic export to cad seed file; and for symbology like arrows and such, i export the map to an .ai file with a very high resolution, like 1500dpi. then i open it in adobe illustrator, export it as .dxf, open it in cad and use the align command.


Ive tried to convert a multipage autocad drawing with some ecw images, and the software end crashing without creating the conversion. Then I'd tried page by page, but each page weighed about 150mb, so i ended with eigth files weighing about 2 Gb. Why is this?. I've tried to join the files into one, and then optimize the resulting file, but she size does not weighed much less than previous files.


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