TimC Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Ok, I'm just starting the civil project and I didn't make it past direction 4 without realizing this makes ZERO sense. 1. Create a layer, Spot (color yellow, linetype continuous), on which to draw the elevation values. 2. Create an X using two intersecting lines, each 10 feet long, on the layer Spot. The lines should intersect at their midpoints. 3. Move the lines from the intersection of the lines (using the Osnap) to the center of the benchmark (again using the Osnap). 4. Now, use the ARRAY command. When the command prompt asks you to select objects, enter P for Previous. (AutoCAD will automatically select the two lines you had just moved.) Use a rectangular array with 12 rows and 18 columns. When AutoCAD prompts you for the unit distance between rows, enter –50. (You enter a negative number since you're arraying the rows from the northwest corner to the lower portion of the screen, which is a negative direction in AutoCAD.) When AutoCAD prompts you for the unit distance between rows, enter 50. (This time, you'll enter a positive number since you're arraying columns from the northwest corner to the right, which in AutoCAD is a positive direction.) Finally, ERASE the spot elevation mark that you had positioned with the benchmark. 5. Create a text style named SPOT-TEXT. Select ROMANS as the font and use a height of 6″ and a width factor of 0.8. While still in layer Spot, use the DTEXT command, and type XXX alongside the spot elevation mark in the lower-left corner of the screen. Now, use the ARRAY command again to copy the XXX alongside the rest of the spot elevations. 6. The Spot Elevations table lists the spot elevations in rows, beginning with the northernmost row at BM 312 and reading from left to right. Double-click on the text to change the XXX for each spot to the appropriate elevation listed in the table. The rest of it is a pain to put on here but anyone whos ever opened excel knows that "Columns" go up and down, "Rows" go left and right. So there are many different ways this could come out with these confusing. Im not even sure how to proceed here.... Quote
ReMark Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I followed the instructions you provided above and got the following result (see attached image). How familiar are you with the ARRAY command? Quote
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