Equipped with the right applications, a computer can be of great help in virtually any domain of activity. When it comes to designing and precision, no other tool is as accurate as a computer. Moreover, specialized applications such as AutoCAD give you the possibility to design nearly anything ranging from art, to complex mechanical parts or even buildings.
Suitable for business environments and experienced users
After a decent amount of time spent installing the application on your system, you are ready to fire it up. Thanks to the office suite like interface, all of its features are cleverly organized in categories. At a first look, it looks easy enough to use, but the abundance of features it comes equipped with leaves room for second thoughts.
Create 2D and 3D objects
You can make use of basic geometrical shapes to define your objects, as well as draw custom ones. Needless to say that you can take advantage of a multitude of tools that aim to enhance precision. A grid can be enabled so that you can easily snap elements, as well as adding anchor points to fully customize shapes.
With a little imagination and patience on your behalf, nearly anything can be achieved. Available tools allow you to create 3D objects from scratch and have them fully enhanced with high-quality textures. A powerful navigation pane is put at your disposal so that you can carefully position the camera to get a clearer view of the area of interest.
Various export possibilities
Similar to a modern web browser, each project is displayed in its own tab. This comes in handy, especially for comparison views. Moreover, layouts and layers also play important roles, as it makes objects handling a little easier.
Sine the application is not the easiest to carry around, requiring a slightly sophisticated machine to properly run, there are several export options put at your disposal so that the projects itself can be moved around.
Aside from the application specific format, you can save as an image file of multiple types, PDF, FBX and a few more. Additionally, it can be sent via email, directly printed out on a sheet of paper, or even sent to a 3D printing service, if available.
To end with
All in all, AutoCAD remains one of the top applications used by professionals to achieve great precision with projects of nearly any type. It encourages usage with incredible offers for student licenses so you get acquainted with its abundance of features early on. A lot can be said about what it can and can't do, but the true surprise lies in discovering it step-by-step.
History
AutoCAD (formally known as AutoCAD R14) was initially developed in 1981 by Wayne Carter and Russ Lang at Autodesk for their own use, and by November 1982, Autodesk began to commercially market the product. Originally targeted to users of external graphic cards, Autodesk introduced the first version of AutoCAD with a built-in graphics display in the form of the first minicomputer, the Xerox 3650 Graphic Workstation (GW), in January 1983. A year later, Autodesk released AutoCAD for the PDP-11 series of minicomputers in January 1984. In 1985, the AutoCAD R30 release introduced 2D drafting, 3D modelling, and 2D and 3D rendering. That year, AutoCAD also started to ship with the MicroVAX and Macintoshes. This signaled the beginning of CAD on the desktop. The release of AutoCAD R34 in 1988, introduced bitmap-only support and added the ability to use mouse and keyboard (mouse-only support had been in R33). The R34 release also introduced the component data-browsing and format palette.
The first release of AutoCAD LT in 1993 for the Windows environment included the component data browser, and was widely used for quick and easy data import. Autodesk has continued to enhance the program in AutoCAD LT. The latest version of AutoCAD LT introduced in 2010 included the ability to import and edit the Component Data format, which is the file format used by most applications for building block and component data. Aesthetically, AutoCAD LT is somewhat closer to AutoCAD. AutoCAD LT for Windows had almost the same application as AutoCAD LT for Mac and AutoCAD LT for Linux had a similar application as AutoCAD LT for Windows. The last AutoCAD LT release on Windows included the ability to publish to a Web server. AutoCAD LT, AutoCAD LT for Windows and AutoCAD LT for Mac have been replaced by AutoCAD since 2011.
AutoCAD released AutoCAD Web Design in 2010. In 2011, the AutoCAD 2016 family released a more user-friendly and intuitive interface and some new features.
In 2011, Autodesk released Autodesk Mechanical (previously known as Structure, and Architecture) for Windows. In 2013, Autodesk released AutoCAD BIM 360 for iOS and
Versions
AutoCAD has had several versions over its history:
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When you use the built-in Markup import tools, you can bring images, text, or other information from anywhere into AutoCAD. (See the “Document management” section later in this article for more information.)
When you mark up drawings with the Markup tools, you can search for, and import, information from a variety of sources. You can import data from any application that exports data in a format that AutoCAD can understand.
After you import data, you can do various things with the text or other elements.
In addition to the built-in Markup tools, the Markup tools now include the ability to import data from other applications.
Import your data from anything, anywhere, and in any format.
With Markup Assist, import text or other annotations that you create in a Word document, a spreadsheet, or another application.
Use Markup Assist to import text from PDFs, printouts, images, and other media.
With AutoCAD (Desktop Standard), you can import 2D images in several ways. In the past, you imported the images to the current drawing and then applied the text or annotated images to the drawings.
In this release of AutoCAD, you have a choice. You can import the images as usual, then apply the text to the drawings. Or, you can create a simple text block, and then add the images to that text block. The text block is what AutoCAD calls a custom annotation.
You can also import images as a collection of images, where each image can be annotated individually.
When you import images as a collection, you can combine images, or split images into their component parts. And, you can create your own collections of images.
As an example, you might want to import some illustrations of potential equipment parts to use as wireframe models. The illustrations show the parts well, but you don’t need to do anything with the drawings. You can also create a collection of these parts and store them in one place. You can use the collection of images to set up and use an object for the parts.
You can also import images from the Internet. Just make sure to do some research and think about what information you’re importing. The drawings could have valuable or proprietary information, and you don’t want to get sued by someone else.
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