Hi all,
Name's Bryan. From USA, North Carolina
Dropping Auto Desk and have a few questions.
Is QCAD a subscription? If so, is there more than one possible length of a subscription?
Does QCAD have layering abilities, off, on, ability to draw in the current layer only?
Doing landscape design and I draw all of my objects for a more "unique" effect... are lineweights variable?
Can I "join" separate lines as long as they are the same "type"... ex: join two separate polylines?
Can I assign block and XRef status? Can the objects I create be stored in a "Design Center" type of setting that I can access from different drawings?
Can I work in "Polar co ordinates", degrees, minutes, seconds, north to south?
Is QCAD available in 2D only?
Thank you.
Introduction and ? s
Moderator: andrew
Forum rules
Always indicate your operating system and QCAD version.
Attach drawing files and screenshots.
Post one question per topic.
Always indicate your operating system and QCAD version.
Attach drawing files and screenshots.
Post one question per topic.
Re: Introduction and ? s
Hi Bryan,
Yes to polylines. No to lines etc. At least not directly. You can join lines converting them to a polyline. In a perfect world you could then explode them afterward to convert it back to a single line. Depends on situation!
Yes to blocks.
1. Used directly in and for the actual drawing
2. Used out of a Library (Design Center) for multiple drawings.
No to XREF. A Library item used in a drawing will be autarch with no further connection to the Library source.
This QCAD feature list will help you to answer all your questions ...
https://www.qcad.org/en/documentation/features
... or a free of charge trial will give you a better feeling for the software:
https://www.qcad.org/de/qcad-downloads-trial
Based on the ratio "Introducing" "Pre-sales Questions" I will move this topic to "Pre-sales Questions".
No. If you purchased the software you can use it for ever.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes and no.
Yes to polylines. No to lines etc. At least not directly. You can join lines converting them to a polyline. In a perfect world you could then explode them afterward to convert it back to a single line. Depends on situation!
Yes and no.
Yes to blocks.
1. Used directly in and for the actual drawing
2. Used out of a Library (Design Center) for multiple drawings.
No to XREF. A Library item used in a drawing will be autarch with no further connection to the Library source.
Yes.
Yes.
This QCAD feature list will help you to answer all your questions ...
https://www.qcad.org/en/documentation/features
... or a free of charge trial will give you a better feeling for the software:
https://www.qcad.org/de/qcad-downloads-trial
Based on the ratio "Introducing" "Pre-sales Questions" I will move this topic to "Pre-sales Questions".
Work smart, not hard: QCad Pro
Win10/64, QcadPro, QcadCam version: Current.
If a thread is considered as "solved" please change the title of the first post to "[solved] Title..."
Win10/64, QcadPro, QcadCam version: Current.
If a thread is considered as "solved" please change the title of the first post to "[solved] Title..."
Re: Introduction and ? s
Thank you very much Huskey. the regen function was easy to use - labels on Centre is just a little fad of mine! Happy days, Tim
Re: Introduction and ? s
QCAD supports the standard lineweights 0.00--2.11mm in any standard or custom installed Linetype.
The Lineweight is a unique property for whole the entity and is not variable along the entity.
For these lineweights QCAD uses a round pen.
Apart from a Lineweight one can specify a custom global Width for Polylines, there is no real limit on what size you use.
And one can specify start and end Widths for every individual Polyline segment.
For Polylines with Widths QCAD uses a flat pen.
This is rendered differently where line segments meet or for arc segments.
One can merge any line-art to polylines, when required it is approximated by line and arc segments.
The downside is that merging Polylines with other line-art may not retain global or local Widths.
This should be fixed when reversing a Polyline its orientation.
Defining Widths is best done in a final stage.
Regards,
CVH