michaeloureiro Posted April 29, 2009 Posted April 29, 2009 Is there anyway to view or keep record of all the comand input/info history in a particular drawing? Quote
Tiger Posted April 29, 2009 Posted April 29, 2009 You can do a simple Copy-Paste from the command line window (F2)..but I'm guessing you want something more automated? Quote
michaeloureiro Posted April 29, 2009 Author Posted April 29, 2009 Some kind of file or lisp that would save all of the comand history. Copy-paste would be a bit counter productive. Quote
Tiger Posted April 29, 2009 Posted April 29, 2009 I moved this to the Lisp-section, I think that's more appropriate place. I'm thinking that even if there is a lisp to do this (which probably is not too hard to do, based on the knowledge of this forum) but I know personally how many commands I do in a day when I working a lot, and a lot of it is very repetative and a lot of undos and shuffling back and forth - so I have trouble seeing the usefulness of saving the log. Just my two cents. Quote
michaeloureiro Posted April 29, 2009 Author Posted April 29, 2009 Sometimes i forget comands that are useful and usually remember the file where i used them. Being able to look over comands in a particular file would beat trying to find them in cad help or bothering somebody here in the forum. Quote
Tiger Posted April 29, 2009 Posted April 29, 2009 aha, that I can understand - my desk is littered with small green scraps of paper for just that reason :wink: Quote
ReMark Posted April 29, 2009 Posted April 29, 2009 Re: Command history. http://www.cadinfo.net/editorial/acadtext-2.htm Quote
feargt Posted April 29, 2009 Posted April 29, 2009 In the following link is a Lisp for a command counter (provided by ASMI), It will display the commands used in a single drawing session and how many times they were used. I required it for a different purpose. it may be of some use to you too. With some imagination you could use in conjuction with the Link provided by Remark. As an example run the Lisp command before saving and then when you look at your log file you can edit it quickly so that it just shows you when you have run this lisp. http://www.cadtutor.net/forum/showthread.php?t=27191 Quote
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