-
You can fill the furniture to the point that it means that the outer contour of the furniture is not closed, you can use the polyline command is PL to outline the object you don't want to fill first, and then click on the one to be filled, and it won't be like this! Follow-up question: It's very annoying to use the PL line to enclose the edge, and it is difficult to enclose some blocks very accurately, but I have seen other people's drawings, and their blocks can be put directly on the back of the filling to hide, but I don't know how to do it:
1.Use the polyline command PL to close your fill outline. 2.
Once the fill is complete, add the object to the fill - Furniture 3Create a furniture layer to avoid how CAD furniture blocks hide the fill pattern when filling.
-
It's not a layer issue, it's that you want to select "Ignore Inner Islands" when you fill it
-
With layers, you can, and then you can hide layers.
-
Just hide it in the layer.
-
It's a matter of drawing order, and it doesn't seem that there are many professionals.
It depends on whether you want your own picture to be very regular, or if you want to get your own picture to be irregular, irregular, you just pick the block, blow up the ground, trim, regular, you need to use the shortcut key to enter "wipeout" to trace the outline of the furniture, so as to cover the furniture map, and then use"DR"command to make the floor padded at the bottom, the mask at the middle, and the furniture at the top, so that you can get the most standard picture.
When you fill the furniture, you can fill it to indicate that the outer contour of the furniture is not closed. >>>More
Enter H in the command line, and when the "Boundary Hatch" box appears, click the "Advanced" button in the box, and select "External" in the "Island Test Style". >>>More
It's the standard I don't know.,Our company is to hide the furniture.,The layer where the door is located.,Only the wall is left.,Refill.。。。 >>>More
HI: Blank, but you can't zoom and pan anymore.