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versacad

VersaCAD Tips 'n Tricks

VersaCAD Tips, Tricks and News. CPL Programing and other CAD-musings. This Blog is Independently maintained by Jim Longley with no affiliation to VersaCAD or Archway. See "Introduction" at bottom. =:-}

Tuesday, 19 August 2008

VersaCAD Forum
W
hile Googling the web today (Google: “versacad”) on or about page 5 of the results I found a reference to a VersaCAD Forum at Versacad.net  Woo Hoo!

This is a controlled forum. You must register to post. I received in my in-box a confirmation email indicating my username and password.  What was interesting is the return address on this emails   Josh, with an archwaysystems.com address. That would be Josh Lazear.

So a forum with a true VersaCAD connection! Come on all you VersaCAD’ers! Community discussion and peer-to-peer help will only but help improve VersaCAD releases and profile – all to our best interest

VersaCAD Forum: www.versacad.net/viewforum.php

Posted by: versacad at August 19, 2008 17:53 | link | comments |
inquire drawing, filer get

Friday, 08 August 2008

Tom Lazear and the Histrory of VersaCAD
B
een sometime since my last post. There is not much happening on the VersaCAD front. Things are pretty quite at Archway. Last news letter from them reported progress in converting to an XML database for the “new and improved” .2D format.

History has never been my strong suit. However I’ve been reading a history book. One I think you’d be interested in too as a VersaCAD’er

The Engineering Design Revolution:The People, Companies and Computer Systems That Changed Forever the Practice of Engineering - By David E. Weisberg

I started my CAD-career in the mid 1980’s and many many of the products and firms mentioned struck a cord with me. Some I can remember print ads for, some having ssen demos for. It was a trip down memory lane – I can’t stop reading it!

One chapter is on VersaCAD. Chapter 20 – “Tom Lazear and VersaCAD” I suspect this will be enjoyed by all whom remember or still use VersaCAD. This publication is also available as a zip file with all chapters in PDF format. Visit: www.cadhistory.net

Posted by: versacad at August 08, 2008 17:17 | link | comments |

Friday, 27 July 2007

VersaCAD and AutoCAD Layouts
I
n a recent post over at the autodesk blog Between the Lines is an announcement of preview version to an AutoCAD tool - Export Layout to Model Space:

Now this could well be of interest to VersaCADer's. If you are uisng VersaCAD pretty much in your own universe as-it-were, with little interaction or need to edit AutoCAD drawings, this may mean little to you. On the other hand if you want to get an AutoCAD "drawing" - not just the .dwg file - but a file that is a useable representation of the finished-printed drawing - here it is!

There , of course, conditions attached. The sender would need to be using AutoCAD/AutoCAD LT 2008 and this new tool. That said, it does offer hope (short of VersaCAD implementing some kind of paperspace environment) a greater visual fidelity between systems.

JimL

Posted by: versacad at July 27, 2007 13:06 | link | comments (2) |
filer get

Friday, 07 July 2006

New News
I
n a recent VersaCAD newsletter (delivered via e-mail) - Volume 7, July 2006, Number 1 - three items appear that would be of interest to VersaCAD'ers:

VersaCAD 2007 for Windows is soon to be in the works: "Work is started on next year’s VersaCAD release which will sport a brand new database. The goal: unlimited file size, improved portability, increased functionality while maintaining the familiar, productive interface. Keep tuned for updates on this project." "Increased Functionality" - there's one to watch for. VersaCAD, though "old", is stills more than able as a CAD product. It will be interesting to see what those new functions will consist of!

VersaCAD Mac is also in the news, as it appears that every Mac user's favorite subject (or one of them) - Universal Binarys - is a work in progress for the Vacd Mac Edition

Last, is the VersaCAD's staff experimenting with Google SketchUp and a ShetchUp model of the 'well worn' Cabin.2d drawing. To read the latest edition of their newsletter - drop them an e-mail and ask for it. - http:/www.versacad.com

Posted by: versacad at July 07, 2006 12:18 | link | comments (2) |
output printer

Wednesday, 04 January 2006

It’s Been A While
Perhaps some readers of this Blog have wonder if I was still alive or not. Well I am still here! It has been a while since my last post. I see VersaCAD 2006 has been issued, with some added features, most notably the Project Navigator and a chain feature undoer the Group menu. I, however, can not attest to these feature as I have only access to VersaCAD 2003 :(

I must admit that of late I have been observing the Mac/OSX marketplace. There are a couple of interesting products out there. Vectorworks being one. Perhaps with more features that required for most VersaCAD users. The other is PowerCADD. A 2d-centirc product. I was prosing it’s WildTools “plugin” and could not help but note certain abilities that reminder me of VersaCAD. It “3D Tools” put me in mind of VersaCAD’s ‘ahead-of-its-time’ Group -> View option for creating isometric views.

Could not help but think about the potential for the VersaCAD Mac edition. First and foremost, as I may have mentioned in previous posts, The Mac Edition NEEDS the same full tool set as does the Windows edition, including CPL programming and menu customization. Second (and this would include the Windows version as well), the ability to handle in some form AutoCAD’s paperspace/viewports. Even if only to able to offer, as an option, importing a vector equivalent of the printed paperspace layout.

What are your thoughts concerning VersaCAD, now and in the future? What not leave your comment!
Jim L


Posted by: versacad at January 04, 2006 12:16 | link | comments (4) |
sketch, macintosh

Wednesday, 16 November 2005

Editing VersaCAD Hatch Patterns

Best kept secret - Hatch pattern editor for VersaCAD - Windows-based application. Who knew? Not me at any rate. I saw this reference in the Nov 8/05, Issue #450 of  Ralph Grabowski's upFront.eZine  http://www.upfrontezine.com/2005/upf-450.htm. Scroll down to the "Below the Radar" section and note the item on HatchKit

An application (Windows Based) for the creation and editing of CAD hatch patterns - including, amongst others - VersaCAD! Wow, cool! I dropped Archway an e-mail. Seems Mike has heard of this - in fact I understand that there is reference to this product in the info included with VersaCAD 2004. (Poor me, I have 'only' VersaCAD 2003)

Check it out at www.cadro.com.au/hatchkit

Know of any other "externals" that work either directly or supplement VersaCAD in some way? Leave a comment, and we all can check it out :)  

Posted by: versacad at November 16, 2005 20:38 | link | comments |
construct extend

Saturday, 17 September 2005

Screened Fills with VersaCAD

Here's a tip for creating screened fills or lines in VersaCAD. For example, working in AutoCAD, I oft times used Acad colour 8 or 9 (Grey or light grey) for solid fills of  "existing" linework. On top of that, those colours are screened or toned if you will with a 50 or 20% screen - fading them even further into the background. You  can use the following tip to get the same net effect in VersaCAD.

Select "Pen Table" from File on the Windows tool bar menu and click the "colors" button down in the HPGL Defaults area. No matter even if your output device is monochrome only. For each "normal 100% fill" pen/color - click the pen number, then the color swatch button and click the black tile.  Repeat for each normal color.

For those pen you wish to be screened fills do as above, but select one of the grey tones. (Suggestion: In VersaCAD do Output/Display/Color/Index and you can adjust the corresponding screen colour to match if you want!). Save the results as, say "screened.ptb". Now, choose Pentable from Output/pRinter for printing!

Also, remember, some colours (VersaCAD color 12 for example, light yellow) will print as shaded greys anyway on a monochrome print device.

Try this. Create a rectangle and Hatch it with a close space hatch (a seemingly solid fill). Make sure you assign under properties the pen number representing your screened color. But wait. draw a diagonal line across your solid hatched rectangle assigning a normal pen - then plot. I think you will be amazed by the results - by the possiblities!

JimL

Posted by: versacad at September 17, 2005 20:42 | link | comments |
output printer

Wednesday, 14 September 2005

CPL Programming Macros

One of the more powerful features of VersaCAD for Windows/DOS is the ability to automate and customize with the CPL programming language. Straw poll: How many of you V-cadders make use of CPL? And Would you be interested in shareing some of you "time savers" with fellow users?

Jim L

Posted by: versacad at September 14, 2005 20:07 | link | comments |
sketch, construct extend

VersaCAD MacIntosh OSX

How many VersaCAD Mac users are there out there?? I think that the Mac edition is one with a future (No matter if it is a G5 Mac or an Intel based Mac).  That said, there are some significant differences between the Mac version and the Windows version.

To but note a few...

  • The Mac editions have no built-in programming language. Oh, sure, I guess one could do something (perhaps even alot?) with hypercard stacks, but how many of today's Mac owner have the hypercard application? VersaCAD for Windows (for DOS for that matter) has the CPL programming environment. C-like in nature, it allows the user "direct access" to the drawing environment. In fact whole "applications" can be done with this utility.
  • Menu Customization. The Windows flavour lets the user customize the user interface - the menu, to add, for example custom routinees, such as might be programmed in CPL.
  • Some native windows command options are missing in the Mac variant. Example is Windows VersaCAD to Subset a Group, Build Fence an group with a "Totally In" option

On a slightly different note, I see in the latest of Archway News, that Archway is offering a VersaCAD/Sketch-Up bundle for 2D/3D work. (See recent - Sept/05 - Newsletter at archway.com NOT Versacad.com site). Now, If VersaCAD Mac had the same functionality as Windows.... Sketch-Up has a Mac version... Wel I know what my next computer purchase would be.

Hey!, how about you VersaCAD Mac users... You out there??

Posted by: versacad at September 14, 2005 19:41 | link | comments (2) |
macintosh

Sunday, 08 May 2005

Paperspace and Viewports - Part II

Last post I wrote about using AutoCAD's DXB output to generate a facsimile of a paperspace layout for use in VersaCAD. This produces probably best, visually looking, equivalent. There are short comings – text is not text, but line strokes, all objects a lines, of line segments – etc. But!, it “looks right”.

 Now, if it is editable objects and text you need, here is another work around. This will give you and AutoCAD dwg file with all the ‘modelspace’ objects in tact AND reproduce the elements (e.g. titleblock, general text etc etc) that may be in the current papersapce layout. Get the AutoCAD drawing in Release 10 format!

 In my testing I saves and AutoCAD drawing in release 2000 format, the using a conversion utility (there are several of them – Google for them) I converted to R10 format. Then run ther VersaCAD translation utility to convert from AutoCAD R10 to VersaCAD 2d. What you get is the autocad modelspace information (perhaps not the most gracefully laid out)  and somewhere at it’s real world size, the paperspace drawing element.

 At this point it would be helpful to have a hardcopy of the drawing in hand. You now need to re-construct the drawing – probably  group scaling the paperspace stuff up. Group moving (or even Construct Break Fence Grouping) elements to re-compose the drawing. The end product, for the effort of some or many group operations is a reconstruction of the AutoCAD papersapce drawing WITHOUT having to actually drawing anything

 Cheers!

Posted by: versacad at May 08, 2005 14:10 | link | comments (1) |
filer get