The Basics: Do U OOPS or UNDO?
Let’s get everybody on the same page with these features, easy one first:
U - This is not the command alias for the Undo command. Type U at the command
line and it undoes the result
of the last command successfully completed. Even grip edits are undone using
U. Keep hitting the spacebar and it will continue to U.
OOPS - This is a great recovery method when you have erased
something and then, n commands later, realize you actually needed it! Oops
unerases the last
erased selection set. As shown, if you erased several objects in one Erase
command, you can use Oops immediately or several commands later, but only during
that
drawing session. You can’t save the drawing, re-open and then use Oops.
Note: The only thing that prevents Oops from unerasing is if you have performed,
ironically, a U or Undo. Oops will even un-erase if you have performed a Save
or Plot in the interim.
UNDO - This one has some power. Type in the whole word at the Command line
and you get these options:
[Auto/Control/BEgin/End/Mark/Back]
The first two options, Auto and Control, specify if and when the command works.
The defaults are fine. BEgin and End group commands together that can be later
undone. The last two options are best and work like this:
Mark - Essentially places a ‘bookmark’ in your drawing process
that you can return to using the Back option. For example, if you’re editing a drawing and you’re not sure if it’s
really going to work out, place a Mark before you begin. This establishes a
flag, of sorts, for the Undo command to come Back to.
Back - After spending an hour or so editing, then realize it just isn’t
what you had hoped, launch the Undo command and enter B for the Back option. AutoCAD goes back (undoes everything)
to the point in the drawing at which you placed the Mark. Just like in your Lightolier or Grainger catalog
where you have more than one sticky note, you can have more than one Mark in
a drawing session. After the first few minutes of your design process, if you
want to hold onto what you have so far, use the Undo command and place another
Mark. (You can Save during the process, too, without interrupting the integrity
of using Back later.) After placing a few marks, when you use the Back option,
it will undo your drawing process until it encounters a Mark.
This sound great, but the trick is to remember to place the Marks before you
get too deep into your drawing. Which brings us to the overlooked and underused <number> feature of the
Undo command:
<1> - The default option of the Undo command enables you to enter the
number of commands you want to undo. As AutoCAD veterans, you have a pretty fair idea of how many commands
it took to get to where you are from where you want to go back to. (I know you followed that.) So enter
a number and AutoCAD undoes that many commands. Just today I had to undo a
bunch of things so I started with 12, then 4, then just hit U until I got to
where I needed to be.
Redo - Saved the best for last. Actually, it’s best in AutoCAD 2004
where they now have multiple Redo!! And they did it right, too. There’s even a dropdown list where you see
what you’re undoing. Ee-hah! Those of you, however, that are running pre-A2004, you get one Redo and it
has to follow a U or Undo routine. Unless, of course, you have LT which has had a multiple Redo feature
for years!
|