AutoCAD 2005: One Step at a Time, Part I

Lesson 8: More Complex Lines - Polylines

Overview

Back in Lesson 6 , we discussed ways of differentiating among the various parts of a drawing using colors, linetypes, and layers. We also used lineweights to add width, but we had problems with them because lineweight isn't a true WYSIWYG property. In that lesson, I promised to show you how to create lines with true WYSIWYG width. Once you've conquered width through polylines you can combine wide lines with linetypes and layers for more complex drawings.

You can draw lines with width using the PLine command. We call these lines polylines, not for their ability to show width, but for their ability to be drawn as multi-segmented lines. That is, polylines can contain many lines and still be treated as a single unit (much as you've already seen with polyline rectangles and polygons).

Polylines used to confuse the AutoCAD user because of the massive amounts of information they contained. They also dramatically increased the size of a drawing with stored information that was often never needed. For this reason, AutoCAD created the light weight polyline (lwpolyline). Capable of containing most of the information available to the polyline, the lwpolyline is much more condensed, presents its information via the List command (Section 8.2.1 ) in a much more logical and understandable manner, and takes up much less drawing memory. The PLine command will actually draw an lwpolyline (pronounced "L-W-polyline") and convert automatically to a polyline if...

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