Im not aware of anything in CorelCAD that does this - you could probably script it, but a better solution would be to be able to select a number of objects and move them all to the same Z-location as either the first object selected, or to a selected Z location. With that snap on it's easy for me to "lock" the wall into another wall and have it completely straight with 90 degree angles. By not coplanar, I assume you mean different Z axis locations. To make it work you just have to change all Elevations to 0, or at least have them at equal one.
AUTOCAD LINES ARE NOT COPLANAR BUT ARE SOFTWARE
Why I Cannot do fillet in AutoCAD This happens because AutoCAD is 3D capable software and cannot connect objects that have no intersection point in 3D space.
Two planes that do not intersect are called parallel planes. Actually if we draw two arc or line on same plane it will work but when planes are not coplanar and drawn entities are not connected to each other then it will not create fillet and reflect message planes are not coplanar.But if planes are not coplanar and both fillet entity share common point of contact then it will create arc by fillet option. Lines that are not coplanar and do not intersect are called skew lines. Frustrated Revit user who have to work in autocadĮdit: Just been toying around with some of the different settings you all recommended, and it seems like "Perpendicular" snapping actually is helping my issue. What kind of lines are not coplanar Two lines are parallel lines if they are coplanar and do not intersect. Can autoCAD also learn to figgure these things out? in a different height (Z, elevation) or in different UCSs. This message appears when filleting or joining lines which are not on the same plane. Like for example if you have a straight line and you make a line next to it, then Revit will snap it to be parallel. FILLET command reports 'objects are not coplanar'. Would there be any way to get the snapping logics from Revit obtained in autoCAD? Because they seem so much superior in every way. I am studying architectural technology and I work with Revit quite alot in school, and I can't help but think how I could have done all this work in 5 minutes on Revit, but instead I am battling with making a wall that has 2 parallel lines. And then the line/wall becomes angled and wrong. One way I am working around this is to use F8 frequently which limits every line to horizontal/vertical but even then quite often when I end the line it decides to snap to a point which is not the one I wan't it to. I am tasked with updating all the plan drawings at my work, so everything is mostly simple lines/poly-lines work.īut for reasons unknown I have huge issues with drawing simple vertical/horizontal lines. Hello everyone, I am fairly new to drawing in autoCAD and I must say that the software is driving me nuts.