Autocad Annotative Tutorial
- One of the problems in CAD drafting has always been keeping text and dimensions readable when plotted at different scales. For instance, a drawing may be drafted to plot on an E size sheet and a C size copy is also printed to quickly check the drawing. As it is half the size, the text may not be readable. Additional work is required so that both sizes can be read when printed.
- With annotative scaling, the size the text will be printed at is decided first. This size remains constant regardless of the scale that is printed. Dimensions can be aligned and additional scales can be added to the drawing. This considerably simplifies printing the same drawing at different scales and ensures all the text is still readable.
- Because the text size is constant, if the drawing is printed on too small a sheet then the text can appear too large and obscure parts of the actual drawing. As annotative scaling was only introduced with the 2008 version of AutoCAD, adjustments must be made so that earlier versions can read the drawings. Other CAD programs may not be able to use annonative scaling at all.