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Glossary of Terms

Glossary is usually defined as an alphabetical list of technical terms in some specialized field of knowledge. This knowledge base glossary provides a collection of knowledge base documents that define many technical terms. These terms are arranged alphabetically, but you can quickly jump to a specific term by selecting its first letter from the index of the knowledge base glossary below.

ALL A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
application
A computer program. A CAD application, also called and add-on or plug-in, can carryout comlex tasks specific to a particular drawing problem. CAD applications run in tandem with the CAD software to perform specialized or automated tasks. Some examples of CAD applications specific to theatre include programs to automate the drawing of construction drawings and light plots.
arrowhead
The part of a dimension or leader which points to an object or extension line. Arrowheads usually can be drawn automatically in several styles or shapes.
attribute
AutoCAD: Information or data about a drawing object which can be hidden or appear in the drawing as text. Often this information can be extracted from the drawing and used in a spreadsheet or other program.. Vectorworks: Color, Pattern, or Marker Style of an object.
autocad
AutoCAD is a commercial software application for 2D and 3D computer-aided design (CAD) and drafting — available since 1982 as a desktop application and since 2010 as a mobile, web- and cloud-based app marketed as AutoCAD 360.
Bezier curve
A curve defined by endpoints, tangent lines, and control points at the ends of the tangent lines. Altering the length and angle of tangent lines alters the shape of the curve.
Bitmap
A pixel based graphic or image inserted in a drawing. Bitmaps can be sized but not edited with most CAD programs.
block
(AutoCAD terminology) Blocks are also called Symbols in AutoCAD
CAD
Computer-aided design. Common CAD programs include: AutoCAD, Vectorworks, Microstation. Programs differ greatly in features, complexity, cost, and hardware requirements.
CADD
Computer-aided design and drafting.
center point
The defining point at the exact center of a circle, arc, regular polygon or ellipse.
chamfer
A diagonal line which connects points on two intersecting objects such as an angled corner. The chamfer tool is an editing tool.
class
A category of objects (Vectorworks) to which objects can be assigned and then manipulated as a group.
color
A property of any drawing object which defines the color in which it appears on the screen and (possibly) the color in which it is printed. Color is often associated with an object\’s layer or class assignment and can be used to determines how that object will appear on a printout with regard to line thickness and line type.
constraint
A drawing tool which limits drawing to a particular point, line or angle. Some common constraints are snap to grid and ortho.
control points
Points determining the path and shape of a Bezier curve.
coordinates
A sytem of numbers used to locate a point or object in a drawing. In the Cartesian coordinate system 2 numbers x and y are used to describe the location of a point in the horizontal and vertical dimensions respectively. 3D CAD programs add the z coordinate which describes distance in the third dimension. In the Polar coordinate system a point is described by a distance and an angle where 0° exends horizontally to the right.
cursor
The screen symbol or icon which represents the current mouse location relative to the drawing window or viewport. The cursor may appear as crosshairs or another symbol based on which command is active.
curve
A complex entity created by the definition of endpoints of spline curve sections. Note, the type of curve you use determines the types of editing tools or functions that may be performed on it.
datum
A temporary coordinate point set by the user which can be used as a snap point or reference point when drawing.
dgn
DGN (design) is the name used for CAD file formats supported by Bentley Systems\’ MicroStation and Intergraph\’s Interactive Graphics Design System (IGDS) CAD programs.
dimension line
A line, usually with an arrow indicatiing the direction and distance of a drawing dimension.
dongle
A dongle is a small piece of hardware that connects to another device to provide it with additional functionality. In relation to computing, the term is primarily associated with hardware providing a copy protection mechanism for commercial software—in which the dongle must be attached to the system that the software is installed on in order for it to function.
drawing database
The central part of a CAD drawing. A list of all objects which exist within a drawing along with all parameters and definition points.
dropbox
Dropbox (service), a web-based file hosting service
dwg
DWG (from drawing) is a proprietary binary file format used for storing two- and three- dimensional design data and metadata. It is the native format for several CAD packages including AutoCAD , GstarCAD, DraftSight, ZwCAD, ProgeCAD, BricsCAD, IntelliCAD (and its variants), Caddie and Open Design Alliance compliant applications.
dws
.dws, a drawing standard file for AutoCAD
dxf
AutoCAD DXF (Drawing Interchange Format, or Drawing Exchange Format) is a CAD data file format developed by Autodesk[2] for enabling data interoperability between AutoCAD and other programs.
edit
The process of modifying a drawing object or entity.
editing tools
A class of drawing commands used to modify drawing entities or objects. Common edits include: trim, rotate, move and stretch.
ellipse
A CAD drawing object defined by a major axis, minor axis and centerpoint. An ellipse may also be constructed out of arcs and line segments. An ellipse created in this way is not mathematically a true ellipse but is an easier object to edit.
environment
The over-all setup of a CAD program including all drawing settings, colors, units, tool palettes, etc. comprise the drawing environment.
explode
A common command which break objects apart into their component pieces. Explode most often works on symbols, breaking them back into their component pieces. In some CAD programs other entities are explodable such as text lines, polylines, or other complex objects.
extension line
The line which extends from a measured line or object to the dimension line, showing the extent of the measured distance.
fill
A complex object defined by a series of points or a bordering object such as a circle or polyline which fills the defined area with solid color. The display of a fill is highly dependant upon the display or printer/plotter being used.
fillet
An arc connecting endpoints of two intersecting lines or objects, often a rounded corner.
FLEXlm
FlexNet Publisher (formerly known as FLEXlm) is a software license manager from Flexera Software which implements license management and is intended to be used in corporate environments to provide floating licenses to multiple end users of computer software.
flexnet
FlexNet Publisher (formerly known as FLEXlm) is a software license manager from Flexera Software which implements license management and is intended to be used in corporate environments to provide floating licenses to multiple end users of computer software.
font
The typographic style property of text. Fonts may be drafting style (one line thickness) or typographic such as that being used in this document. Fonts are commonly managed by the operating system, not the CAD program and can be difficult to translate from one computer to another or one CAD program to another.
grid
A drawing tool which is usually a pattern of regularly spaced dots or lines which make the alignment and drawing of objects easier. A snap to grid tool constrains or locks all drawing to grid points only.
group
A collection of objects which can be manipulated as one object.
hatch
A complex object defined by a series of points or a bordering object such as a circle or polyline which fills the defined area with a repeating pattern of lines. Hatches have a scale property which determines the size and density of the repeating pattern.
hyperlink
hyperlink is a reference to data that the reader can directly follow either by clicking or by hovering.
layer
A property of any drawing object. Usually objects are organized onto different layers for organazational purposes and ease of drawing, viewing and editing. Layers often can be named and can have default colors or other properties associated with them. Vectorworks Layers have the added ability to have associated properties of scale, view, and projection. These added properties of Vectorworks layers are similar in function to AutoCAD paperspace.
leader
A line with an arrowhead and attatched text pointing at another object.
leader line
The line portion of a leader connecting the shoulder to an arrowhead.
line
A CAD object defined by two endpoints.
line type
A property of any line, circle, curve, or arc. Line type describes a repeating pattern of lines and spaces. Lines may be solid, dashed, alternate, etc. The additional property of line type scale determines how often in a given distance a pattern of lines and spaces repeats. Scale may or may not be affected by the scale of the drawing view.
line width
A property of any line, circle, curve, or arc. Line width describes how thick a line or other object appears on the the screen or on a printout. Different CAD programs use different schemes for acheiving line width.
locus
A drawing object with a single reference point and no physical dimension.
macro
A sequence of commands recorded and saved for easy playback. Well designed macros can save a great deal of drawing time.
major axis
The longer axis of an ellipse.
manifest file
A manifest file in computing is a file containing metadata for a group of accompanying files that are part of a set or coherent unit. For example, the files of a computer program may have a manifest describing the name, version number and the constituting files of the program.
manual entry
The process of entering points manually by typing coordinates as opposed to clicking within the viewport or workspace.
markers
A line marker is used to mark the end points of lines.
Microsoft Excel
Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet developed by Microsoft for Windows, Mac OS X, and iOS. It features calculation, graphing tools, pivot tables, and a macro programming language called Visual Basic for Applications.
minor axis
The shorter axis of an ellipse.
move
A drawing editing tool which moves objects or selection sets to a new drawing location by changing all definition points by a given distance.
nested
Objects inside of other objects. Symbols may be nested within other symbols. Drawing commands can be nested or executed while other drawing commands are active. Macro programming objects can be nested in terms of their control structure.
network license
A network license allows many users on the same TCP/IP network to share access to product licenses. The Network License Manager (NLM), installed on one or more servers, controls the distribution of licenses to users.
object handles
In a windows CAD program the handles which appear when an object is selected. Handles often allow objects to be stretched, rotated, or moved. Note: in AutoCAD handles refer to arbitrary names assigned to each drawing entity in the drawing database so that macros and applications may refer to specific entities directly.
offset
The distance between two objects. Offsets are often used to draw parallel lines or determine the location of a dimension. In AutoCAD a command which creates a duplicate of an object at a specified distance.
origin
The point in a drawing with the x,y coordinates of 0,0.
ortho
Short for orthagonal. Usually refers to objects placed horizontally or vertically within a drawing. Ortho mode is a constraint which limits all drawing to regular 90° angles. In some CAD programs other ortho angles and modes may be set.
pan
The process of altering the drawing view by moving the viewpoint laterally relative to the drawing.
polygon
A complex object composed of three or more straight lines in a closed figure. Polygons are treated differently by diffent CAD programs. Often a polygon is simply a closed polyline entity.
polyline
A complex object composed of two or more lines, curves, or arcs which have contiguous endpoints. A closed polyline or polygon has its endpoints joined into a closed form. Polylines are more difficult to edit than a form drawn with individual line segments, but offers some advantages when editing or building surfaces and 3 dimensional objects.
primitive
The simplest drawing objects from which all objects are built. Common 2D primitives include: point, line, circle, arc, and ellipse.
prompt
A program message often located on the programs status line.
radial copy
Also Duplicate Array (Vectorworks). An editing command which creates multiple copies of objects by copying them around a centerpoint for a given angle.
real scale
Objects in a CAD program a drawn at full scale or 1:1.
redraw
The process by which the video display is updated cleaning up any unwanted marks or construction points.
reference points
Points associated with drawing objects which allow an object to be selected, grouped, and manipulated. Reference points are often not visible. One example is the reference point of a text line which is often found at the lower left hand corner of the text line. To select a text entity it is often neccessary to click near this invisible point or include it within a selection window.
regenerate
The process by which the view updated from the drawing database cleaning up any unwanted marks or construction points. Similar but more comprehensive and time consuming that a redraw. Note: on some CAD packages these processes are synonymous.
relative coordinates
Drawing coordinates which when manually entered are interpreted as relative to the last point entered. In AutoCAD relative coordinates are entered by preceeding the coordinate pair with the @ sign such as @2,3.
resolution
The clarity or degree to which individual elements can be discerned on a monitor or print/plot. Common monitor resolutions include 600x800 and 1280x1024 measured in pixels. Common laser printer and plotter resolutions range from 300x300 to 600x600 dots per inch. Resolution of these devices determines how accurate a printout will be or how accurate an object will appear on the screen. The actual resolution of objects saved in the drawing database is usually much higher to insure a high degree of accuracy. When drawing objects are viewed on screen or plotted their size and position is rounded to the nearest dot at the resolution of a given device.
rotate
A drawing editing tool which rotates objects or groups of objects based on a center of rotation and an angle.
rubberbanding
A feature of many CAD programs which shows how a line or other object will look before it is actually placed. An example is with the line command. A starting point is selected after which a line appears rubberbanded between the first point and the cursor. As soon as another point is selected the actual line is drawn and the rubberband moves to the next point.
scale
1) An editing tool which changes the size of an object relative to percentage. Some objects can be rescaled to different percentages in the x and y directions. 2) The relative size at which a drawing is viewed on the screen or printed/plotted. Scale is often represented as a ratio where 1:1 is full scale, 1:12 = 1\" =1\’-0\", 1:24=1/2\"=1\’-0\" etc.
script
A list of drawing commands which can be typed in a text editor and then loaded and executed with one command. Different scripting methods are supported by different CAD programs. Scripts are useful for performing repetitive tasks such as drawing setups.
selection set
One or more objects selected for action with a single command. Often items are selected this way by drawing a window around them or holding down the shift key while selecting them individually.
shoulder
The horizontal part of a leader line.
snap
A drawing tool which locates points exactly by finding an existing point within the drawing database which is closest to a point selected with the on the screen. Some common snaps are: snap to nearest point, snap to midpoint, snap to intersection of two lines, etc.
snap to grid
A drawing constraint which forces all points picked to fall on the currentl grid.
stretch
An editing tool which moves some of the points which define an object and leaves others.
symbol
A collection of drawing objects defined as a single complex entity. Defining and using symbols speeds drawing and makes drawing files more compact. Symbols are also called blocks (AutoCAD).
tangent
A line which intersects a circle, ellipse or arc at only one point. Tangent lines to Bezier curves define the shape of the curve.
toggle
A drawing control or setting which is either on or off. Subsequent execution of the command reverses the state of the parameter. One toggle is the dispaly grid command.
trim
A drawing editing command which causes one object to end exactly at another. Trim points are calculated mathmatically so they are exact. Some complex objects such as curves cannot be trimmed to.
units
Units of measure represented by numbers in a CAD program. Usually units are inches or feet, but can be anything from millimeters to light years.
usb
USB, short for Universal Serial Bus, is an industry standard developed in the mid-1990s that defines the cables, connectors and communications protocols used in a bus for connection, communication, and power supply between computers and electronic devices.
vertex
A point defining the junction of a segment within a polyline or polygon.
view
The graphical representation of the geometry stored in the drawing database which appears in the drawing window or viewport. A view has a center point and a scale or zoom. Multiple views of one drawing may be open in seperate windows or viewports simultaneously.
viewport
The window or frame within which a view of the drawing is visible. In some complex CAD programs viewports are considered complex objects and can be placed in drawings. Many programs also support the use of multiple viewports which can simultaneously show different parts of the same drawing. This is especially important when working in 3D.
zoom
The way the view is changed by magnifying or reducing the image on the screen. Zoom scales the view only and does not affect the actual size of drawing objects.

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