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            DXF:drawing interchange and file formats

            http://www.moon-soft.com/program/FORMAT/graphics/dxf.htm

            drawing interchange and file formats

            [ this file is an excerpt from the autocad release 10 reference manual.
            copyright (c) 1988 autodesk, inc. all rights reserved. ]
            autocad can be used by itself as a complete drawing editor.  in some appli-
            cations, however, other programs must examine drawings created by autocad
            or generate drawings to be viewed, modified, or plotted with autocad.
            for example, if you've made an architectural drawing with autocad, using
            inserted parts to represent windows, doors, and so on, you can process the
            drawing file and produce a bill of materials of all the items used in the
            drawing, or even make energy use calculations based on the area and the
            number and type of windows used. another possible application is to use
            autocad to describe structures that are then sent to a large computer for
            finite element structural analysis. you can compute stresses and displace-
            ments and send back information to display the deformed structure as an
            autocad drawing.
            since the autocad drawing database (.dwg file) is written in a very compact
            format that changes significantly from time to time as new features are
            added, we do not document its format and do not recommend that you attempt
            to write programs to read it directly. to assist in interchanging drawings
            between autocad and other programs, a "drawing interchange" file format
            (dxf(tm)) has been defined. all implementations of autocad accept this
            format and are able to convert it to and from their internal drawing file
            representation.
            autocad also supports the initial graphics exchange standard (iges) file
            format. the information comprising an autocad drawing can be written out
            in iges format, and iges files can be read and converted to autocad's
            internal format.
            c.1  ascii drawing interchange (dxf) files
            this section describes autocad's dxf (drawing interchange) file format and
            the commands provided to read and write these files. dxf files are stan-
            dard ascii text files. they can easily be translated to the formats of
            other cad systems, or submitted to other programs for specialized analysis.
            c.1.1  dxfout command - writing a dxf file
            you can generate a drawing interchange file from an existing drawing by
            means of the drawing editor's dxfout command. the command format is:
                command:  dxfout   file name <default>:  (name or return)
            the default name for the output file is the same as that of the current
            drawing, but with a file type of ".dxf". if you specify an explicit file
            name, do not include a file type; ".dxf" is assumed. if a file with the
            same name already exists, it is deleted. next, dxfout asks what precision
                                                                                      1
            autocad reference manual
            you want for floating-point numbers and permits output of a partial dxf
            file containing only selected objects.
                enter decimal places of accuracy (0 to 16)/entities/binary <6>:
            the "binary" option is described later in this appendix. if you respond
            with "entities" (or just "e"), dxfout will ask you to select the objects
            you want written to the dxf file. only the objects you select will be
            included in the output file - symbol tables (including block definitions)
            will not be included. once you've selected the desired objects, autocad
            will prompt again for the numeric precision:
                enter decimal places of accuracy (0 to 16)/binary <6>:
            c.1.2  dxfin command - loading a dxf file
            a drawing interchange file can be converted into an autocad drawing by
            means of the dxfin command. first enter the drawing editor using the
            "create new drawing" task from the main menu. then issue the dxfin com-
            mand.
                command:  dxfin   file name:  (name)
            enter the name of the drawing interchange file to be loaded.
            full dxfin
            to load a complete dxf file, you must use dxfin in an empty drawing, before
            any entities have been drawn and before any additional block definitions,
            layers, linetypes, text styles, named views, named coordinate systems, or
            named viewport configurations have been created. (if your prototype draw-
            ing contains any such items, use main menu task 1's "name=" technique to
            create a new drawing without a prototype.)
            if any errors are detected during the input, the new drawing is discarded.
            otherwise, an automatic "zoom all" is performed to set the drawing extents.
            partial dxfin
            if the current drawing is not empty, dxfin loads only the entities section
            of the dxf file, adding the entities found there to the current drawing.
            in this case, dxfin displays the message:
                not a new drawing -- only entities section will be input.
            if errors are detected during such partial dxf input, the drawing is
            returned to the state it was in before the dxfin command. otherwise, the
            newly added entities are drawn.

            2
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
            c.1.3  dxf file format
            this section describes the format of a dxf file in detail.  it contains a
            great deal of technical information that you need only if you're writing
            your own program to process dxf files. otherwise, you can skip this sec-
            tion.
            it would probably be helpful to produce a dxf file from a small drawing,
            print it out, and refer to it occasionally while reading the information
            presented below.
            c.1.3.1  general file structure
            a drawing interchange file is simply an ascii text file with a file type of
            ".dxf" and specially-formatted text. the overall organization of a dxf
            file is as follows:
              1. header section - general information about the drawing is found in
            this section of the dxf file. each parameter has a variable name
            and an associated value.
              2. tables section -- this section contains definitions of named
            items.
                   o  linetype (ltype) table
            o layer table
            o text style (style) table
            o view table
            o user coordinate system (ucs) table
            o viewport configuration (vport) table
            o drawing manager (dwgmgr) table (for future use)
              3. blocks section - this section contains block definition entities
            describing the entities comprising each block in the drawing.
              4. entities section - this section contains the drawing entities,
            including any block references.
              5. end of file
            if you use dxfout's "entities" option, the resulting dxf file will contain
            only the entities and end of file sections, and the entities section will
            reflect only the objects you select for output.
            a dxf file is composed of a multiplicity of groups, each of which occupies
            two lines in the dxf file. the first line of a group is a group code,
            which is a positive nonzero integer output in fortran "i3" format (that is,
            right justified and blank filled in a three character field). the second
            line of the group is the group value, in a format which depends on the type
            of the group as specified by the group code.

                                                                                      3
            autocad reference manual
            the specific assignment of group codes depends upon the item being
            described in the file. however, the type of the value this group supplies
            is derived from the group code in the following way:
                                group code range   following value
            0 - 9 string
            10 - 59 floating-point
            60 - 79 integer
            210 - 239 floating-point
            999 comment (string)
            thus a program can easily read the value following a group code without
            knowing the particular use of this group in an item in the file. the
            appearance of values in the dxf file is not affected by the setting of the
            units command: coordinates are always represented as decimal (or possibly
            scientific notation if very large) numbers, and angles are always repre-
            sented in decimal degrees with zero degrees to the east of origin.
            variables, table entries, and entities are described by a group that intro-
            duces the item, giving its type and/or name, followed by multiple groups
            that supply the values associated with the item. in addition, special
            groups are used for file separators such as markers for the beginning and
            end of sections, tables, and the file itself.
            entities, table entries, and file separators are always introduced with a 0
            group code that is followed by a name describing the item.
            c.1.3.2  group codes
            group codes are used both to indicate the type of the value of the group,
            as explained above, and to indicate the general use of the group. the spe-
            cific function of the group code depends on the actual variable, table
            item, or entity description. this section indicates the general use of
            groups, noting as "(fixed)" any that always have the same function.
               group code                           value type
            0 identifies the start of an entity, table entry, or file
            separator. the text value that follows indicates which.
            1 the primary text value for an entity.
            2 a name; attribute tag, block name, etc.
            3-4 other textual or name values.
            5 entity handle expressed as a hexadecimal string.
            6 line type name (fixed).
            7 text style name (fixed).
            8 layer name (fixed).
            9 variable name identifier (used only in header section of
            the dxf file).
            10 primary x coordinate (start point of a line or text
            entity, center of a circle, etc.).
            11-18 other x coordinates.
            continued ...
            4
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
               group code                           value type
            20 primary y coordinate. 2n values always correspond to 1n
            values and immediately follow them in the file.
            21-28 other y coordinates.
            30 primary z coordinate. 3n values always correspond to 1n
            and 2n values and immediately follow them in the file.
            31-37 other z coordinates.
            38 this entity's elevation if nonzero (fixed). output only
            if system variable flatland is set to 1.
            39 this entity's thickness if nonzero (fixed).
            40-48 floating-point values (text height, scale factors, etc.).
            49 repeated value - multiple 49 groups may appear in one
            entity for variable length tables (such as the dash
            lengths in the ltype table). a 7x group always appears
            before the first 49 group to specify the table length.
            50-58 angles.
            62 color number (fixed).
            66 "entities follow" flag (fixed).
            70-78 integer values, such as repeat counts, flag bits, or
            modes.
            210, 220, 230 x, y, and z components of extrusion direction.
            999 comments
            c.1.4  comments
            the 999 group code indicates that the following line is a comment string.
            dxfout does not currently include such groups in its output file, but dxfin
            honors them and ignores the comments. thus, you can use the 999 group to
            include comments in a dxf file you've edited. for example:
                999
            this is a comment.
            999
            this is another comment.
            c.1.5  file sections
            the dxf file is subdivided into four sections.  file separator groups are
            used to delimit these file sections. the following is an example of a void
            dxf file with only the section markers and table headers present.
                  0                           (begin header section)
            section
            2
            header
            <<<<header variable items go here>>>>
            0
            endsec (end header section)
            0 (begin tables section)
            section
            2
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            autocad reference manual
                tables
            0
            table
            2
            vport
            70
            (viewport table maximum item count)
            <<<<viewport table items go here>>>>
            0
            endtab
            0
            table
            2
            ltype, layer, style, view, ucs, or dwgmgr
            70
            (table maximum item count)
            <<<<table items go here>>>>
            0
            endtab
            0
            endsec (end tables section)
            0 (begin blocks section)
            section
            2
            blocks
            <<<<block definition entities go here>>>>
            0
            endsec (end blocks section)
            0 (begin entities section)
            section
            2
            entities
            <<<<drawing entities go here>>>>
            0
            endsec (end entities section)
            0
            eof (end of file)
            c.1.5.1  header section
            the header section of the dxf file contains settings of variables
            associated with the drawing. these variables are set with various commands
            and are the type of information displayed by the status command. each
            variable is specified in the header section by a 9 group giving its name,
            followed by groups that supply its value. the header variables, the groups
            that follow, and their meanings are listed below.
            although this list is very similar to the list of system variables in
            appendix a, the two lists are not identical. be sure you're referring to
            the proper list.

            6
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              $acadver       1     the autocad drawing database version number.
            $angbase 50 angle 0 direction.
            $angdir 70 1=clockwise angles, 0=counterclockwise.
            $attdia 70 attribute entry dialogues, 1 = on, 0 = off
            $attmode 70 attribute visibility: 0=none, 1=normal, 2=all.
            $attreq 70 attribute prompting during insert, 1 = on, 0 = off
            $aunits 70 units format for angles.
            $auprec 70 units precision for angles.
            $axismode 70 axis on if nonzero.
            $axisunit 10,20 axis x and y tick spacing.
            $blipmode 70 blip mode on if nonzero.
            $cecolor 62 entity color number; 0 = byblock, 256 = bylayer.
            $celtype 6 entity linetype name, or byblock or bylayer.
            $chamfera 40 first chamfer distance.
            $chamferb 40 second chamfer distance.
            $clayer 8 current layer name.
            $coords 70 0=static coordinate display, 1=continuous update,
            2="d<a" format.
            $dimalt 70 alternate unit dimensioning performed if nonzero.
            $dimaltd 70 alternate unit decimal places.
            $dimaltf 40 alternate unit scale factor.
            $dimapost 1 alternate dimensioning suffix
            $dimaso 70 1=create associative dimensioning, 0=draw
            individual entities.
            $dimasz 40 dimensioning arrow size.
            $dimblk 2 arrow block name.
            $dimblk1 1 first arrow block name.
            $dimblk2 1 second arrow block name.
            $dimcen 40 size of center mark/lines.
            $dimdle 40 dimension line extension.
            $dimdli 40 dimension line increment.
            $dimexe 40 extension line extension.
            $dimexo 40 extension line offset.
            $dimlfac 40 linear measurements scale factor.
            $dimlim 70 dimension limits generated if nonzero.
            $dimpost 1 general dimensioning suffix
            $dimrnd 40 rounding value for dimension distances.
            $dimsah 70 use separate arrow blocks if nonzero.
            $dimscale 40 overall dimensioning scale factor.
            $dimse1 70 first extension line suppressed if nonzero.
            $dimse2 70 second extension line suppressed if nonzero.
            $dimsho 70 1=recompute dimensions while dragging,
            0=drag original image.
            $dimsoxd 70 suppress outside-extensions dimension lines
            if nonzero.
            $dimtad 70 text above dimension line if nonzero.
            $dimtih 70 text inside horizontal if nonzero.
            $dimtix 70 force text inside extensions if nonzero.
            $dimtm 40 minus tolerance.
            $dimtofl 70 if text outside extensions, force line between
            extensions if nonzero.
            $dimtoh 70 text outside horizontal if nonzero.
                                                                                      7
            autocad reference manual
              $dimtol       70     dimension tolerances generated if nonzero.
            $dimtp 40 plus tolerance.
            $dimtsz 40 dimensioning tick size: 0=no ticks.
            $dimtvp 40 text vertical position.
            $dimtxt 40 dimensioning text height.
            $dimzin 70 zero suppression for "feet & inch" dimensions.
            $dragmode 70 0=off, 1=on, 2=auto.
            $elevation 40 current elevation set by elev command.
            $extmax 10,20,30 xy drawing extents upper right corner (in wcs).
            $extmin 10,20,30 xy drawing extents lower left corner (in wcs).
            $filletrad 40 fillet radius.
            $fillmode 70 fill mode on if nonzero.
            $flatland 70 force compatibility with older versions if nonzero.
            $handling 70 handles enabled if nonzero.
            $handseed 5 next available handle.
            $insbase 10,20,30 insertion base set by base command (in wcs).
            $limcheck 70 nonzero if limits checking is on.
            $limmax 10,20 xy drawing limits upper right corner (in wcs).
            $limmin 10,20 xy drawing limits lower left corner (in wcs).
            $ltscale 40 global linetype scale.
            $lunits 70 units format for coordinates and distances.
            $luprec 70 units precision for coordinates and distances.
            $menu 1 name of menu file.
            $mirrtext 70 mirror text if nonzero.
            $orthomode 70 ortho mode on if nonzero.
            $osmode 70 running object snap modes.
            $pdmode 70 point display mode.
            $pdsize 40 point display size.
            $plinewid 40 default polyline width.
            $qtextmode 70 quick text mode on if nonzero.
            $regenmode 70 regenauto mode on if nonzero.
            $sketchinc 40 sketch record increment.
            $skpoly 70 0=sketch lines, 1=sketch polylines.
            $splframe 70 spline control polygon display, 1 = on, 0 = off.
            $splinesegs 70 number of line segments per spline patch.
            $splinetype 70 spline curve type for "pedit spline"
            (see appendix a).
            $surftab1 70 number of mesh tabulations in first direction.
            $surftab2 70 number of mesh tabulations in second direction.
            $surftype 70 surface type for "pedit smooth" (see appendix a).
            $surfu 70 surface density (for "pedit smooth") in m direction.
            $surfv 70 surface density (for "pedit smooth") in n direction.
            $tdcreate 40 date/time of drawing creation.
            $tdindwg 40 cumulative editing time for this drawing.
            $tdupdate 40 date/time of last drawing update.
            $tdusrtimer 40 user elapsed timer.
            $textsize 40 default text height.
            $textstyle 7 current text style name.
            $thickness 40 current thickness set by elev command.
            $tracewid 40 default trace width.
            $ucsname 1 name of current ucs.
            $ucsorg 10,20,30 origin of current ucs (in wcs).
            8
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              $ucsxdir   10,20,30  direction of current ucs's x axis
            (in world coordinates).
            $ucsydir 10,20,30 direction of current ucs's y axis
            (in world coordinates).
            $useri1 - 5 70 five integer variables intended for use by
            third-party developers.
            $userr1 - 5 40 five real variables intended for use by
            third-party developers.
            $usrtimer 70 0=timer off, 1=timer on.
            $worldview 70 1=set ucs to wcs during dview/vpoint,
            0=don't change ucs
            the header variables listed below existed prior to autocad release 10 but
            now have independent settings for each active viewport. they are not
            output by dxfout unless system variable flatland is set to 1. dxfin honors
            these variables when read from dxf files, but if a vport symbol table with
            "*active" entries is present (as is true for any dxf file produced by
            release 10 or higher), the values in the vport table entries will override
            the values of these header variables.
              $fastzoom     70     fast zoom enabled if nonzero.
            $gridmode 70 grid mode on if nonzero.
            $gridunit 10,20 grid x and y spacing.
            $snapang 50 snap grid rotation angle.
            $snapbase 10,20 snap/grid base point (in ucs).
            $snapisopair 70 isometric plane: 0=left, 1=top, 2=right.
            $snapmode 70 snap mode on if nonzero.
            $snapstyle 70 snap style: 0=standard, 1=isometric.
            $snapunit 10,20 snap grid x and y spacing.
            $viewctr 10,20 xy center of current view on screen.
            $viewdir 10,20,30 viewing direction (direction from target, in wcs).
            $viewsize 40 height of view.
            the date/time variables ($tdcreate and $tdupdate) are output as real num-
            bers in the format:
                <julian date>.<fraction>
            the elapsed time variables ($tdindwg and $tdusrtimer) have a similar
            format:
                <number of days>.<fraction>
            c.1.5.2  tables section
            the tables section contains several tables, each of which in turn contains
            a variable number of table entries. the order of the tables may change, but
            the ltype table will always precede the layer table. each table is intro-
            duced with a 0 group with the label "table". this is followed by a 2 group
            identifying the particular table (vport, ltype, layer, style, view, ucs, or
            dwgmgr) and a 70 group that specifies the maximum number of table entries
                                                                                      9
            autocad reference manual
            that may follow. the tables in a drawing may contain deleted items, but
            these are not written to the dxf file. thus, fewer table entries may
            follow the table header than are indicated by the 70 group, so don't use
            the count in the 70 group as an index to read in the table. it is provided
            so that your program to read dxf files can allocate an array in advance
            large enough to hold all the table entries that follow.
            following this header for each table are the table entries.  each table
            item consists of a 0 group identifying the item type (same as table name,
            e.g., "ltype" or "layer"), a 2 group giving the name of the table entry, a
            70 group specifying flags relevant to the table entry (defined for each
            table below), and additional groups that give the value of the table entry.
            the end of each table is indicated by a 0 group with the value "endtab".
            if any table entry has bit value 64 set in its group 70 flags, the table
            entry was referenced by at least one entity in the drawing the last time
            the drawing editor was entered to edit this drawing. this "referenced"
            flag is for the benefit of the purge command; it can be ignored by most
            programs that read dxf files, and need not be set by programs that write
            dxf files.
            the following are the groups used for each type of table item.  all groups
            are present for each table item.
              ltype    3 (descriptive text for linetype), 72 (alignment code), 73
            (number of dash length items), 40 (total pattern length), 49
            (dash length 1), 49 (dash length 2), . . .
              layer    62 (color number, negative if layer is off), 6 (linetype
            name). the 1 bit is set in the 70 group flags if the layer is
            frozen.
              style    40 (fixed text height; 0 if not fixed), 41 (width factor), 50
            (obliquing angle), 71 (text generation flags), 42 (last height
            used), 3 (primary font file name), 4 ("bigfont" file name;
            blank if none). if the third bit (4) is set in the 70 group
            flags, this is a vertically-oriented text style.
                       a style table item is used to record shape file load requests
            also. in this case the first bit (1) is set in the 70 group
            flags and only the 3 group (shape file name) is meaningful
            (all the other groups are output, however).
                       the "text generation flags" are a bit-coded field with the
            following bit meanings:
                            flag bit value                meaning
            2 text is backwards (mirrored in x)
            4 text is upside down (mirrored in y)



            10
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              view     40 and 41 (view height and width), 10 and 20 (view center
            point), 11, 21, 31 (view direction from target, in wcs), 12,
            22, 32 (target point, in wcs), 42 (lens length), 43 and 44
            (front and back clipping planes-offsets from target point), 50
            (twist angle), 71 view mode (see viewmode system variable
            appendix a).
              ucs      10, 20, 30 (origin), 11, 21, 31 (x axis direction), 12, 22, 32
            (y axis direction). all in world coordinates.
              vport    10 and 20 (lower left corner of viewport; 0.0 to 1.0), 11 and
            21 (upper right corner), 12 and 22 (view center point), 13 and
            23 (snap base point), 14 and 24 (snap spacing, x and y), 15
            and 25 (grid spacing, x and y), 16, 26, 36 (view direction
            from target point), 17, 27, 37 (view target point), 40 (view
            height), 41 (viewport aspect ratio), 42 (lens length), 43 and
            44 (front and back clipping planes; offsets from target
            point), 50 (snap rotation angle), 51 (view twist angle), 71
            (view mode; see viewmode system variable in appendix a), 72
            (circle zoom percent), 73 (fast zoom setting), 74 (ucsicon
            setting), 75 (snap on/off), 76 (grid on/off), 77 (snap style),
            78 (snap isopair).
                       the vport table is unique in that it may contain several
            entries with the same name (indicating a multiple-viewport
            configuration). the entries corresponding to the active view-
            port configuration all have the name "*active". the first
            such entry describes the current viewport.
              dwgmgr   for future use.  fields not yet defined.
            c.1.5.3  blocks section
            the blocks section of the dxf file contains all the block definitions.
            this section contains the entities that make up the blocks used in the
            drawing, including "anonymous" blocks generated by the hatch command and by
            associative dimensioning. the format of the entities in this section is
            identical to those in the entities section described below, so refer to
            that section for details. all entities in the blocks section appear
            between block and endblk entities. block and endblk entities appear only
            in the blocks section. block definitions are never nested (that is, no
            block or endblk entity ever appears within another block-endblk pair).
            c.1.5.4  entities section
            entity items appear in both the block and entities sections of the dxf
            file. the appearance of entities in the two sections is identical, with
            the exception that entities in the block section never have handles. the
            following gives the format of each entity as it appears in the file. some
            groups that define an entity always appear, and some are optional and
            appear only if they differ from their default values. in the following
                                                                                     11
            autocad reference manual
            discussion, groups that always occur are given by their group number and
            function, while optional groups are indicated by "-optional n" following
            the group description. "n" is the default value if the group is omitted.
            programs that read dxf files should not assume that the groups describing
            an entity occur in the order given here. the end of the groups that make
            up an entity is indicated by the next 0 group, beginning the next entity or
            indicating the end of the section.
            remember that a dxf file is a complete representation of the drawing data-
            base, and that as autocad is further enhanced, new groups will be added to
            entities to accommodate additional features. writing your dxf processing
            program in a table-driven way, making no assumptions about the order of
            groups in an entity, and ignoring any groups not presently defined, will
            make it much easier to accommodate dxf files from future releases of
            autocad.
            each entity begins with a 0 group identifying the entity type.  the names
            used for the entities are given in the table that follows. every entity
            contains an 8 group that gives the name of the layer on which the entity
            resides. each entity may have elevation, thickness, linetype, or color
            information associated with it. if handles are enabled, every entity has a
            5 group containing its handle (as a string representing a hexadecimal
            number). the following groups are included only if the entity has nonde-
            fault values for these properties.
              group code                         meaning
            6 linetype name (if not "bylayer"). the special name "byblock"
            indicates a floating linetype.
                  38      elevation (if nonzero).  output only if system variable
            flatland is 1. otherwise, z coordinates are supplied as
            3x-groups as part of each of the entity's defining points.
                  39      thickness (if nonzero).
                  62      color number (if not "bylayer").  zero indicates the
            "byblock" (floating) color.
                 210,     these groups are included for each line, point, circle, shape,
            220, text, arc, trace, solid, block reference, polyline, dimension,
            230 attribute, and attribute definition entity if its extrusion
            direction is not parallel to the world z axis. the indicate
            the x, y, and z components of the entity's extrusion direction.
            the rest of the groups that make up an entity item are described below.
            many of the entities include "flag" groups. these are integer codes (6x or
            7x groups) that encode various pieces of information regarding the entity,
            and are specific to the particular entity type. in the following descrip-
            tions, the term "bit-coded" means that the flag contains various true/false
            values coded as the sum of the bit values given. any bits not defined in
            the following section should be ignored in these fields and set to zero
            when constructing a dxf file.
            12
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              line      10, 20, 30 (start point), 11, 21, 31 (end point).
              point     10, 20, 30 (point), 50 (angle of x axis for the ucs in effect
            when the point was drawn -optional 0, for use when pdmode is
            nonzero).
              circle    10, 20, 30 (center), 40 (radius).
              arc       10, 20, 30 (center), 40 (radius), 50 (start angle), 51 (end
            angle).
              trace     four points defining the corners of the trace: (10, 20, 30),
            (11, 21, 31), (12, 22, 32), and (13, 23, 33).
              solid     four points defining the corners of the solid: (10, 20, 30),
            (11, 21, 31), (12, 22, 32), and (13, 23, 33). if only three
            points were entered (forming a triangular solid), the third
            and fourth points will be the same.
              text      10, 20, 30 (insertion point), 40 (height), 1 (text value), 50
            (rotation angle -optional 0), 41 (relative x scale factor
            -optional 1), 51 (obliquing angle -optional 0), 7 (text style
            name -optional "standard"), 71 (text generation flags
            -optional 0), 72 (justification type -optional 0), 11, 21, 31
            (alignment point -optional, appears only if 72 group is
            present and nonzero).
                        the "text generation flags" are a bit-coded field with mean-
            ings as follows:
                             flag bit value                meaning
            2 text is backwards (mirrored in x)
            4 text is upside down (mirrored in y)
                        the "justification type" value (not bit-coded) indicates the
            text justification style used on this entity, as shown in the
            following table.
                          value                       meaning
            0 text is left justified
            1 text is centered along its baseline
            2 text is right justified
            3 text is aligned between two points (height varies)
            4 text is "middle" (fully) centered
            5 text is fit between two points (width varies)
                        if the justification is anything other than 0 (left justi-
            fied), 11, 21, and 31 groups will also appear in the entity
            to specify the alignment point of the text (center, right-
            most, or second alignment point).
                        dxfout handles ascii control characters in text strings by
            expanding the character into a "^" (caret) followed by the
                                                                                     13
            autocad reference manual
                        appropriate letter.  for example, an ascii control-g (bel,
            decimal code 7) is output as "^g". if the text itself con-
            tains a caret character, it is expanded to "^ " (caret,
            space). dxfin performs the complementary conversion.
              shape     10, 20, 30 (insertion point), 40 (size), 2 (shape name), 50
            (rotation angle -optional 0), 41 (relative x scale factor
            -optional 1), 51 (obliquing angle -optional 0).
              block     2 (block name), 70 (block type flags), 10, 20, 30 (block base
            point). appears only in blocks section. the "block type
            flags" are bit-coded, with the following bit meanings:
                          flag bit value                   meaning
            1 this is an "anonymous" block generated by
            hatching, associative dimensioning, or
            other internal operations.
            2 this block has attributes.
              endblk    no groups.  appears only in blocks section.
              insert    66 ("attributes follow" flag -optional 0), 2 (block name),
            10, 20, 30 (insertion point), 41 (x scale factor -optional
            1), 42 (y scale factor -optional 1), 43 (z scale factor
            -optional 1), 50 (rotation angle -optional 0), 70 and 71
            (column and row counts -optional 1), 44 and 45 (column and
            row spacing -optional 0).
                        if the value of the "attributes follow" flag is 1, a series
            of attribute (attrib) entities is expected to follow the
            insert, terminated by a sequence end (seqend) entity.
              attdef    10, 20, 30 (text start), 40 (text height), 1 (default value,
            see text above for handling of ascii control characters), 3
            (prompt string), 2 (tag string), 70 (attribute flags), 73
            (field length -optional 0), 50 (text rotation -optional 0),
            41 (relative x scale factor -optional 1), 51 (obliquing angle
            -optional 0), 7 (text style name -optional "standard"), 71
            (text generation flags -optional 0, see text above), 72 (text
            justification type -optional 0, see text above)), 11, 21, 31
            (alignment point -optional, appears only if 72 group is
            present and nonzero).
                        the "attribute flags" are a bit-coded field in which the bits
            have the following meanings:
                          flag bit value                   meaning
            1 attribute is invisible (does not display)
            2 this is a constant attribute
            4 verification is required on input of this
            attribute.
            8 attribute is preset (no prompt during
            insertion)
            14
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              attrib    10, 20, 30 (text start), 40 (text height), 1 (value, see text
            above for handling of ascii control characters), 2 (attribute
            tag), 70 (attribute flags; see attdef above), 73 (field
            length -optional 0), 50 (text rotation -optional 0), 41 (rel-
            ative x scale factor -optional 1), 51 (obliquing angle
            -optional 0), 7 (text style name -optional "standard"), 71
            (text generation flags -optional 0, see text above), 72 (text
            justification type -optional 0, see text above), 11, 21, 31
            (alignment point -optional, appears only if 72 group is
            present and nonzero).
              polyline  66 ("vertices follow flag"), 70 (polyline flags), 40 (default
            starting width), 41 (default ending width), 71 and 72 (poly-
            gon mesh m and n vertex counts -optional 0), 73 and 74
            (smooth surface m and n densities -optional 0), 75 (smooth
            surface type -optional 0). the default widths apply to any
            vertex that doesn't supply widths (see below).
                        the "vertices follow" flag is always 1, indicating that a
            series of vertex entities is expected to follow the polyline,
            terminated by a sequence end (seqend) entity. the "polyline
            flags" group is a bit-coded field with bits defined as fol-
            lows:
                         flag bit value                    meaning
            1 this is a closed polyline (or a polygon
            mesh closed in the m direction)
            2 curve-fit vertices have been added
            4 spline-fit vertices have been added
            8 this is a 3d polyline
            16 this is a 3d polygon mesh. group 75 indi-
            cates the smooth surface type, as follows:
                                           0 = no smooth surface fitted
            5 = quadratic b-spline surface
            6 = cubic b-spline surface
            8 = bezier surface
                               32        the polygon mesh is closed in the n direc-
            tion
              vertex    10, 20, 30 (location), 40 (starting width -optional, see
            above), 41 (ending width -optional, see above), 42 (bulge),
            70 (vertex flags), 50 (curve fit tangent direction
            -optional). the bulge is the tangent of 1/4 the included
            angle for an arc segment, made negative if the arc goes
            clockwise from the start point to the end point; a bulge of 0
            indicates a straight segment, and a bulge of 1 is a semicir-
            cle. the meanings of the bit-coded "vertex flags" are shown
            in the following table.


                                                                                     15
            autocad reference manual
                         flag bit value                    meaning
            1 extra vertex created by curve fitting
            2 curve fit tangent defined for this vertex.
            a curve fit tangent direction of 0 may be
            omitted from the dxf output, but is signif-
            icant if this bit is set.
            4 unused (never set in dxf files)
            8 spline vertex created by spline fitting
            16 spline frame control point
            32 3d polyline vertex
            64 3d polygon mesh vertex
              seqend    no fields.  this entity marks the end of vertices (vertex
            type name) for a polyline, or the end of attribute entities
            (attrib type name) for an insert entity that has attributes
            (indicated by 66 group present and nonzero in insert entity).
              3dline    10, 20, 30 (start point), 11, 21, 31 (end point).
              3dface    four points defining the corners of the face: (10, 20, 30),
            (11, 21, 31), (12, 22, 32), and (13, 23, 33). 70 (invisible
            edge flags -optional 0). if only three points were entered
            (forming a triangular face), the third and fourth points will
            be the same. the meanings of the bit-coded "invisible edge
            flags" are shown in the following table.
                                  flag bit value           meaning
            1 first edge is invisible
            2 second edge is invisible
            4 third edge is invisible
            8 fourth edge is invisible
              dimension 2 (name of pseudo-block containing the current dimension pic-
            ture), 10, 20, 30 (definition point for all dimension types),
            11, 21, 31 (middle point of dimension text), 12, 22, 32
            (insertion point for clones of a dimension (for baseline and
            continue), 70 (dimension type; 0=rotated, horizontal, or ver-
            tical; 1=aligned; 2=angular; 3=diameter; 4=radius - the value
            128 is added to this field if the dimension text has been
            positioned at a user-defined location rather than at the
            default location), 1 (dimension text explicitly entered by
            the user. if null, the dimension measurement is drawn as the
            text. otherwise, this text is drawn (but if it includes the
            sequence "<>", the dimension measurement is drawn in place of
            the "<>")), 13, 23, 33 (definition point for linear and angu-
            lar dimensions), 14, 24, 34 (definition point for linear and
            angular dimensions), 15, 25, 35 (definition point for diame-
            ter, radius, and angular dimensions), 16, 26, 36 (point
            defining dimension arc for angular dimensions), 40 (leader
            length for radius and diameter dimensions), 50 (angle of
            rotated, horizontal, or vertical linear dimensions).

            16
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
                        in addition, all dimension types have an optional group (code
            51) that indicates the "horizontal" direction for the dimen-
            sion entity. this determines the orientation of dimension
            text and dimension lines for horizontal, vertical and rotated
            linear dimensions. the group value is the negative of the
            ecs angle of the ucs x axis in effect when the dimension was
            drawn. in other words, the x axis of the ucs in effect when
            the dimension was drawn is always parallel to the xy plane
            for the dimension's ecs, and the angle between the ucs x axis
            and the ecs x axis is a single 2d angle. the value in group
            51 is the angle from "horizontal" (the effective x axis) to
            the ecs x axis. entity coordinate systems (ecs) are
            described later in this section.
                        for all dimension types, the following groups represent 3d
            wcs points, regardless of the flatland setting.
                            10, 20, 30
            13, 23, 33
            14, 24, 34
            15, 25, 35
                        for all dimension types, the following groups represent ecs
            points, and are 2d or 3d depending on the flatland setting.
                            11, 21(, 31)
            12, 22(, 32)
            16, 26(, 36)
              linear    (13,23,33)   the point used to specify the first extension line.
            (14,24,34) the point used to specify the second extension line.
            (10,20,30) the point used to specify the dimension line.
              angular   (13,23,33) and (14,24,34)  the endpoints of the first line
            (10,20,30) and (15,25,35) the endpoints of the second line
            (16,26,36) the point used to specify the dimen-
            sion line arc
              diameter  (15,25,35)   the point used to pick the circle/arc to dimension
            (10,20,30) the point on that circle directly across from the
            pick point.
              radius    (15,25,35)   the point used to pick the circle/arc to dimension
            (10,20,30) the center of that circle.








                                                                                     17
            autocad reference manual
            entity coordinate systems (ecs)
            to save space in the drawing database (and in the dxf file), the points
            associated with each entity are expressed in terms of its own entity coor-
            dinate system (ecs). the entity coordinate system allows autocad to use a
            much more compact means of representation for entities. with ecs, the only
            additional information needed to describe its position in 3d space is the
            3d vector describing the z axis of the ecs, and the elevation value.
            for a given z axis (or extrusion) direction, there is an infinite number of
            coordinate systems, defined by translating the origin in 3d space and by
            rotating the x and y axes around the z axis. however, for the same z axis
            direction, there is only one entity coordinate system. it has the follow-
            ing properties:
              o  its origin coincides with the wcs origin.
            o the orientation of the x and y axes within the xy plane are calcu-
            lated in an arbitrary, but consistent manner. autocad performs
            this calculation using the "arbitrary axis" algorithm described
            below.
            for some entities, the ecs is equivalent to the world coordinate system and
            all points (dxf groups 10-37) are expressed in world coordinates. see the
            following table.
                              entities                        notes
            line, point, 3dface, 3d these entities do not lie in
            polyline, 3d vertex, 3d a particular plane. all
            mesh, 3d mesh vertex points are expressed in
            world coordinates. of these
            entities, only lines and
            points can be extruded;
            their extrusion direction can
            differ from the world z axis.
                    circle, arc, solid, trace,    these entities are planar in
            text, attrib, attdef, shape, nature. all points are
            insert, 2d polyline, 2d expressed in entity coordi-
            vertex nates. all these entities
            can be extruded; their
            extrusion direction can
            differ from the world z axis.
                    dimension                     some of a dimension's points are
            expressed in wcs, and some in ecs.
                    others                        the remaining entities have
            no point data and their
            coordinate systems are
            therefore irrelevant.
            once autocad has established the ecs for a given entity, here's how it
            works:
            18
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              o  the elevation value stored with an entity indicates how far along
            the z axis to shift the xy plane from the wcs origin to make it
            coincide with the plane that the entity is in. how much of this
            is the user-defined elevation is unimportant.
            o any 2d points describing the entity that were entered through the
            ucs are transformed into the corresponding 2d points in the ecs,
            which (more often than not) is shifted and rotated with respect to
            the ucs.
            a few ramifications of this process are:
              o  you can not reliably find out what ucs was in effect when an
            entity was acquired. you can only find out where the entity is in
            the current ucs if the current ucs has the same z axis direction
            as the original ucs (i.e., they both reduce to the same ecs).
            o when you enter the xy coordinates of an entity in a given ucs and
            then do a dxfout, you probably won't recognize those xy coordi-
            nates in the dxf file. you'll have to know the method by which
            autocad calculates the x and y axes in order to work with these
            values.
            o the elevation value stored with an entity and output in dxf files
            will be a sum of the z coordinate difference between the ucs xy
            plane and the ecs xy plane, and the elevation value that the user
            specified at the time the entity was drawn.
            arbitrary axis algorithm
            the arbitrary axis algorithm is used by autocad internally to implement the
            "arbitrary but consistent" generation of entity coordinate systems for all
            entities except lines, points, 3d faces, and 3d polylines, which contain
            points in world coordinates.
            given a unit-length vector to be used as the z axis of a coordinate system,
            the arbitrary axis algorithm generates a corresponding x axis for the coor-
            dinate system. the y axis follows by application of the right hand rule.
            the method is to examine the given z axis (also called the normal vector)
            and see if it is close to the positive or negative world z axis. if it is,
            cross the world y axis with the given z axis to arrive at the arbitrary x
            axis. if not, cross the world z axis with the given z axis to arrive at
            the arbitrary x axis. the boundary at which the decision is made was
            chosen to be both inexpensive to calculate and completely portable across
            machines. this is achieved by having a sort of "square" polar cap, the
            bounds of which is 1/64, which is precisely specifiable in 6 decimal frac-
            tion digits and in 6 binary fraction bits.
            in mathematical terms, the algorithm does the following (all "vectors" are
            assumed to be in 3d space, specified in the world coordinate system).
                let the given normal vector be called n.
            let the world y axis be called wy, which is always (0,1,0).
            let the world z axis be called wz, which is always (0,0,1).
                                                                                     19
            autocad reference manual
            we are looking for the arbitrary x and y axes to go with the normal n.
            they'll be called ax and ay. n could also be called az (the arbitrary z
            axis).
                if (nx < 1/64) and (ny < 1/64) then
            ax = wy * n (where "*" is the cross-product operator).
            otherwise,
            ax = wz * n.
            scale ax to unit length.
            the method of getting the ay vector would be:
                ay = n * ax.
            scale ay to unit length.
            c.1.6  writing dxf interface programs
            writing a program that communicates with autocad via the dxf mechanism
            often appears far more difficult than it really is. the dxf file contains
            a seemingly overwhelming amount of information, and examining a dxf file
            manually may lead to the conclusion that the task is hopeless.
            however, the dxf file has been designed to be easy to process by program,
            not manually. the format was constructed with the deliberate intention of
            making it easy to ignore information you don't care about while easily
            reading the information you need. just remember to handle the groups in
            any order and ignore any group you don't care about, and you'll be home
            free.
            as an example, the following is a microsoft basic program that reads a dxf
            file and extracts all the line entities from the drawing (ignoring lines
            that appear inside blocks). it prints the endpoints of these lines on the
            screen. as an exercise you might try entering this program into your com-
            puter, running it on a dxf file from one of your drawings, then enhancing
            it to print the center point and radius of any circles it encounters. this
            program is not put forward as an example of clean programming technique nor
            the way a general dxf processor should be written; it is presented as an
            example of just how simple a dxf-reading program can be.
                1000 rem
            1010 rem extract lines from dxf file
            1020 rem
            1030 g1% = 0
            1040 line input "dxf file name: "; a$
            1050 open "i", 1, a$ + ".dxf"
            1060 rem
            1070 rem ignore until section start encountered
            1080 rem
            1090 gosub 2000
            1100 if g% <> 0 then 1090
            1110 if s$ <> "section" then 1090
            20
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
                1120 gosub 2000
            1130 rem
            1140 rem skip unless entities section
            1150 rem
            1160 if s$ <> "entities" then 1090
            1170 rem
            1180 rem scan until end of section, processing lines
            1190 rem
            1200 gosub 2000
            1210 if g% = 0 and s$ = "endsec" then 2200
            1220 if g% = 0 and s$ = "line" then gosub 1400 : goto 1210
            1230 goto 1200
            1400 rem
            1410 rem accumulate line entity groups
            1420 rem
            1430 gosub 2000
            1440 if g% = 10 then x1 = x : y1 = y : z1 = z
            1450 if g% = 11 then x2 = x : y2 = y : z2 = z
            1460 if g% = 0 then print "line from (";x1;",";y1;",";z1;") to (";x2;
            ",";y2;",";z2;")
            1470 goto 1430
            2000 rem
            2010 rem read group code and following value
            2020 rem for x coordinates, read y and possibly z also
            2030 rem
            2040 if g1% < 0 then g% = -g1% : g1% = 0 else input #1, g%
            2050 if g% < 10 or g% = 999 then line input #1, s$ : return
            2060 if g% >= 38 and g% <= 49 then input #1, v : return
            2080 if g% >= 50 and g% <= 59 then input #1, a : return
            2090 if g% >= 60 and g% <= 69 then input #1, p% : return
            2100 if g% >= 70 and g% <= 79 then input #1, f% : return
            2110 if g% >= 210 and g% <= 219 then 2130
            2120 if g% >= 20 then print "invalid group code";g% : stop
            2130 input #1, x
            2140 input #1, g1%
            2150 if g1% <> (g%+10) then print "invalid y coord code";g1% : stop
            2160 input #1, y
            2170 input #1, g1%
            2180 if g1% <> (g%+20) then g1% = -g1% else input #1, z
            2190 return
            2200 close 1
            writing a program that constructs a dxf file is more difficult, because you
            must maintain consistency within the drawing in order for autocad to find
            it acceptable. autocad allows you to omit many items in a dxf file and
            still obtain a usable drawing. the entire header section can be omitted if
            you don't need to set any header variables. any of the tables in the
            tables section can be omitted if you don't need to make any entries, and in
            fact the entire tables section can be dropped if nothing in it is required.
            if you define any linetypes in the ltype table, this table must appear
            before the layer table. if no block definitions are used in the drawing,
            the blocks section can be omitted. if present, however, it must appear
            before the entities section. within the entities section, you can refer-
            ence layer names even though you haven't defined them in the layer table.
                                                                                     21
            autocad reference manual
            such layers will be automatically created with color 7 and the continuous
            linetype. the eof item must be present at the end of file.
            the following microsoft basic program constructs a dxf file representing a
            polygon with a specified number of sides, leftmost origin point, and side
            length. this program supplies only the entities section of the dxf file,
            and places all entities generated on the default layer "0". this may be
            taken as an example of a minimum dxf generation program. since this pro-
            gram doesn't create the drawing header, the drawing limits, extents, and
            current view will be invalid after performing a dxfin on the drawing gener-
            ated by this program. you can do a "zoom e" to fill the screen with the
            drawing generated. then adjust the limits manually.
                1000 rem
            1010 rem polygon generator
            1020 rem
            1030 line input "drawing (dxf) file name: "; a$
            1040 open "o", 1, a$ + ".dxf"
            1050 print #1, 0
            1060 print #1, "section"
            1070 print #1, 2
            1080 print #1, "entities"
            1090 pi = atn(1) * 4
            1100 input "number of sides for polygon: "; s%
            1110 input "starting point (x,y): "; x, y
            1120 input "polygon side: "; d
            1130 a1 = (2 * pi) / s%
            1140 a = pi / 2
            1150 for i% = 1 to s%
            1160 print #1, 0
            1170 print #1, "line"
            1180 print #1, 8
            1190 print #1, "0"
            1200 print #1, 10
            1210 print #1, x
            1220 print #1, 20
            1230 print #1, y
            1240 print #1, 30
            1250 print #1, 0.0
            1260 nx = d * cos(a) + x
            1270 ny = d * sin(a) + y
            1280 print #1, 11
            1290 print #1, nx
            1300 print #1, 21
            1310 print #1, ny
            1320 print #1, 31
            1330 print #1, 0.0
            1340 x = nx
            1350 y = ny
            1360 a = a + a1
            1370 next i%
            1380 print #1, 0
            1390 print #1, "endsec"
            22
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
                1400 print #1, 0
            1410 print #1, "eof"
            1420 close 1
            the dxfin command is relatively forgiving with respect to the format of
            data items. as long as a properly formatted item appears on the line on
            which the data is expected, dxfin will accept it (of course, string items
            should not have leading spaces unless these are intended to be part of the
            string). the above program takes advantage of this flexibility in input
            format, and does not go to great effort to generate a file appearing
            exactly like one generated by autocad.
            in the case of error loading a dxf file using dxfin, autocad reports the
            error with a message indicating the nature of the error detected and the
            last line processed in the dxf file before the error was detected. this
            may not be the line on which the error occurred, especially in the case of
            such errors as omission of required groups.

            c.2  binary drawing interchange files
            the ascii dxf file format described in the preceding sections of this
            appendix is a complete representation of an autocad drawing in an ascii
            text form easily processed by other programs. in addition, autocad can
            produce or read a binary form of the full dxf file, and accepts limited
            input in another binary file format. these binary files are described in
            the following sections.
            c.2.1  binary dxf files
            the dxfout command provides a "binary" option that writes binary dxf files.
            such a file contains all of the information present in an ascii dxf file,
            but in a much more compact form that takes, typically, 25% less file space
            and can be read and written more quickly (typically 5 times faster) by
            autocad. unlike ascii dxf files, which entail a trade-off between size and
            floating-point accuracy, binary dxf files preserve all of the accuracy in
            the drawing database. autocad release 10 is the first version to support
            this form of dxf file; it cannot be read by older versions.
            a binary dxf file begins with a 22-byte sentinel consisting of:
                "autocad binary dxf<cr><lf><sub><nul>"
            following the sentinel are (group,value) pairs as in an ascii dxf file, but
            represented in binary form. the group code is a single-byte binary value,
            and the value that follows is one of the following:
              o  a two-byte integer with the least significant byte first and the
            most significant byte last,

                                                                                     23
            autocad reference manual
              o  an eight-byte ieee double precision floating-point number stored
            with the least significant byte first and the most significant
            byte last, or
              o  an ascii string terminated by a zero (nul) byte.
            the type of the datum following a group is determined from the group code
            according to the same rules used in decoding ascii dxf files. translation
            of angles to degrees, and dates to fractional julian date representation,
            is performed for binary files as well as for ascii dxf files. the comment
            group, 999, is not used in binary dxf files.
            dxfout writes binary dxf files with the same file type (".dxf") as for
            ascii dxf files. the dxfin command automatically recognizes a binary file
            (by means of its sentinel string) and loads it. there is no need for you
            to identify it as a binary file.
            if dxfin encounters an error in a binary dxf file, it reports the byte
            address within the file where the error was detected.
            c.3  binary drawing interchange (dxb) files
            the dxf file formats described earlier in this appendix are complete repre-
            sentations of an autocad drawing that can be written and read by autocad
            and other programs. however, autoshade(tm) and programs executed via the
            "external commands" facility (appendix b) often have a need to supply
            simple geometric input to autocad. for these purposes, another file format
            even more compact than the binary dxf format is supported. this format,
            called dxb (for "drawing interchange binary") is limited in the entities it
            can represent. furthermore, autocad has a command to read such files, but
            no direct method of writing them. (the adi plotter driver can plot to a
            file in dxb format.)
            c.3.1  dxbin command
            to load a dxb file produced by a program such as autoshade, enter the dxbin
            command:
                command:  dxbin
            dxb file:
            enter the name of the file you wish to load.  don't include a file type;
            ".dxb" is assumed.







            24
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
            c.3.2  dxb file format
            this information is for experienced programmers, and is subject to change
            without notice.
            the format of a dxb file is as follows:
                header:      "autocad dxb 1.0" cr lf ^z nul       (19 bytes)
            data: . . . zero or more data records . . .
            terminator: nul (1 byte)
            each data record begins with a single byte giving its type, followed by
            data items. the data items have various forms of representation and encod-
            ing. in the descriptions below, each data item is prefixed with a letter
            and a hyphen. the meaning of the letter codes is as follows:
              w-  16-bit integer, byte reversed in the standard 8086 style (least
            significant byte first, most significant byte second).
              f-  ieee 64-bit floating-point value stored with lsb first, msb last
            (as stored by an 8087).
              l-  32-bit integer with the bytes reversed 8086-style.
              n-  number which may be either a 16-bit integer or a floating-point
            number depending on the most recent setting of the "number mode"
            data item. the number mode defaults to 0, signifying integers. if
            set to 1, all n- items will be read as floating-point.
              u-  item which is either a 32-bit integer or a floating-point number
            depending on the most recent number mode setting. if a 32-bit
            integer, the value is scaled by multiplying it by 65536 (2^16). if
            a floating-point value, no scaling is applied.
              a-  item representing an angle.  if number mode is integer, this is a
            32-bit integer representing an angle in units of millionths of a
            degree (range 0 to 360,000,000). if a floating-point number, rep-
            resents degrees.
            in the following table, the lengths include the item-type byte and assume
            the number mode is set to zero (integer mode). if number mode is floating-
            point, add 6 bytes to the length for each n- item present and 4 bytes for
            each a-, or u- item present.
                    item type        code           data items           length
            (decimal) (bytes)
            line 1 n-fromx n-fromy 9
            n-tox n-toy
            point 2 n-x n-y 5
            circle 3 n-ctrx n-ctry n-rad 7
            arc 8 n-ctrx n-ctry n-rad 19
            a-starta a-enda
            continued ...
                                                                                     25
            autocad reference manual
                    item type        code           data items           length
            (decimal) (bytes)
            trace 9 n-x1 n-y1 n-x2 n-y2 17
            n-x3 n-y3 n-x4 n-y4
            solid 11 n-x1 n-y1 n-x2 n-y2 17
            n-x3 n-y3 n-x4 n-y4
            seqend 17 (none) 1
            polyline 19 w-closureflag 3
            vertex 20 n-x n-y 5
            3dline 21 n-fromx n-fromy n-fromz 13
            n-tox n-toy n-toz
            3dface 22 n-x1 n-y1 n-z1 25
            n-x2 n-y2 n-x2
            n-x3 n-y3 n-z3
            n-x4 n-y4 n-z4
            scale factor 128 f-scalefac 9
            new layer 129 "layername" nul "layername"
            length + 2
            line extension 130 n-tox n-toy 5
            trace extension 131 n-x3 n-y3 n-x4 n-y4 9
            block base 132 n-bx n-by 5
            bulge 133 u-2h/d 5
            width 134 n-startw n-endw 5
            number mode 135 w-mode 3
            new color 136 w-colornum 3
            3dline extension 137 n-tox n-toy n-toz 7
            the line extension item extends the last line or line extension from its
            "to" point to a new "to point". the trace extension item similarly extends
            the last trace solid, or trace extension from its x3,y3-x4,y4 ending line
            to a new x3,y3-x4,y4 line.
            the scale factor is a floating-point value by which all integer coordinates
            are multiplied to obtain the floating-point coordinates used by the actual
            entities. the initial scale factor when a file is read is 1.0. the new
            layer item will create a layer if none exists, giving it the same defaults
            as the "layer new" command, and will set that layer as the current layer
            for subsequent entities. at the end of the dxb file load, the layer in
            effect before the command will be restored.
            the block base item specifies the base (origin) point of a block being cre-
            ated. the block base must be defined before the first entity record is
            encountered. if dxb is not defining a block, this specification will be
            ignored.
            a polyline consists of straight segments of fixed width connecting the ver-
            tices, except as overridden by the bulge and width items described below.
            the closure flag should be 0 or 1; if it is 1, then there is an implicit
            segment from the last vertex (immediately before the seqend) to the first
            vertex.
            a bulge item, encountered between two vertex items (or after the last
            vertex of a closed polyline), indicates that the two vertices are connected
            26
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
            by an arc rather than a straight segment.  if the line segment connecting
            the vertices would have length d, and the perpendicular distance from the
            midpoint of that segment to the arc is h, then the magnitude of the bulge
            is (2 * h / d). the sign is negative if the arc from the first vertex to
            the second is clockwise. a semicircle thus has a bulge of 1 (or -1). if
            the number mode is 0 (integer), bulge items are scaled by 216. if the
            number mode has been set to floating-point, then the floating-point value
            supplied is just 2*h/d (not scaled).
            the width item indicates the starting and ending widths of the segment
            (straight or curved) connecting two vertices. this width stays in effect
            until the next width item or the seqend. if there is a width item between
            the polyline item and the first vertex, it is stored as a default width for
            the polyline; this will save considerable database space if the polyline
            has several segments of this width.
            the number mode item controls the mode of items with types given in the
            table above as n-, a-, or u-. if the value supplied is zero, these values
            will be integers, otherwise floating-point. the storage and implicit scal-
            ing conventions for these values in both modes are described above.
            lines and 3dlines share the same cells to remember the last to-point, so
            you shouldn't mix extension groups for the two entities without an initial
            group before the extension. there is no "extension" group for 3dfaces, as
            there's no obvious edge to extend from.
            the "new color" group specifies the color for subsequent entities in the
            dxb file. the "w-colornum" word argument is in the range from 0 to 256. 0
            means color by block, 1-255 are the standard autocad colors, and 256 means
            color by layer. a color outside the range from 0 to 256 sets the color
            back to the current entity color (you can do this deliberately, and it can
            be quite handy). the initial entity color of material added by dxbin is
            the current entity color.
            all points specified in the dxb file are interpreted in terms of the cur-
            rent ucs at the time the dxbin command is executed.
            c.3.3  writing dxb files
            there is no direct autocad command to write a dxb file, but the special
            "adi" plotter driver can write such a file. if you want to create a dxb
            file from an autocad drawing, configure the "adi" plotter and select its
            dxb file output option.








                                                                                     27
            autocad reference manual
            c.4  initial graphics exchange standard (iges) files
            using the commands described in this section, you can instruct autocad to
            read and write iges format interchange files.
            note:  the format of iges files and the mapping performed to translate
            between autocad drawing information and iges are described in the separate
            autocad / iges interface specifications document (one of the items supplied
            when you return your autocad license registration card).
            c.4.1  igesout command
            you can generate an initial graphics exchange standard (iges) interchange
            file from an existing autocad drawing by means of the drawing editor's
            igesout command. the command format is:
                command:  igesout   file name:  (name or return)
            the default name for the output file is the same as that of the current
            drawing, but with a file type of ".igs". if you specify an explicit file
            name without including a file type, ".igs" is assumed. if a file with the
            same name already exists, it is deleted.
            c.4.2  igesin command
            an iges interchange file can be converted into an autocad drawing by means
            of the igesin command. first enter the drawing editor using the "create
            new drawing" task from the main menu. then issue the igesin command.
                command:  igesin   file name:  (name)
            enter the name of the iges file to be loaded.
            if a serious error is encountered, the input process is halted and an error
            message is displayed reporting where the error was found. the partial
            drawing is not discarded.














            28
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
            c.5  slide file format
            autocad slide files are screen images written by the mslide command and
            read by the vslide command. this section describes the format of slide
            files, for the benefit of developers who wish to incorporate support for
            autocad slides into their programs.
            this information is for experienced programmers, and is subject to change
            without notice.
            the general format of a slide file is:
               1.  header (31 bytes)
            2. one or more data records (variable length)
            all coordinates and sizes written to the slide file reflect the graphics
            area of the display device from which the slide was created, with point
            (0,0) located at the lower left corner of the graphics area. for autocad
            release 9 and later, the slide file header consists of the following
            fields:
                  field       bytes                     description
            id string 17 "autocad slide" cr lf ^z nul
             type indicator     1    currently set to 86 (decimal).
             level indicator    1    currently set to 2.
             high x dot         2    width of the graphics area - 1, in pixels.
             high y dot         2    height of the graphics area - 1, in pixels.
             aspect ratio       4    aspect ratio (horizontal size / vertical size in
            inches) of the graphics area, scaled by
            10,000,000. this value is always written with
            the least significant byte first.
             hardware fill      2    either 0 or 2 (value is unimportant).
             test number        2    a number (1234 hex) used to determine whether
            all 2-byte values in this slide file were writ-
            ten with the high byte first (as by intel
            8086-family cpus) or the low byte first (as by
            motorola 68000-family cpus).
            data records follow the header.  each data record begins with a 2-byte
            field whose high-order byte is the record type. the remainder of the
            record may be composed of 1-byte or 2-byte fields, as described in the fol-
            lowing table. to determine whether the 2-byte fields are written with the
            high byte first or the low byte first, examine the test number field of the
            header, described above.

                                                                                     29
            autocad reference manual
                 record    length      meaning                description
            type (hex) (bytes)
            00 - 7f 8 vector the from-x coordinate for an
            ordinary vector. from-y, to-x,
            and to-y follow in that order, as
            2-byte values. the from point is
            saved as the last point.
            80 - fa - undefined reserved for future use.
            fb 5 offset vector the low-order byte and the fol-
            lowing three bytes specify the
            endpoints (from-x, from-y, to-x,
            to-y) of a vector, in terms of
            offsets (-128 to +127) from the
            saved last point. the adjusted
            from point is saved as the last
            point for use by subsequent vec-
            tors.
            fc 2 end of file the low-order byte is 00.
            fd 6 solid fill the low-order byte is always
            zero. the following two 2-byte
            values specify the x and y coor-
            dinates of one vertex of a poly-
            gon to be solid-filled. 3 to 10
            such records occur in sequence.
            a solid fill record with a nega-
            tive y coordinate indicates the
            start or end of such a flood
            sequence. in the start record,
            the x coordinate indicates the
            number of vertex records to
            follow.
            fe 3 common this is a vector starting at the
            endpoint last point. the low-order byte
            vector and the following byte specify
            to-x and to-y in terms of offsets
            (-128 to +127) from the saved
            last point. the adjusted to
            point is saved as the last point
            for use by subsequent vectors.
            ff 2 new color subsequent vectors are to be
            drawn using the color number
            indicated by the low-order byte.
            if a slide contains any vectors at all, a new color record will be the
            first data record. the order of the vectors in a slide, and the order of
            the endpoints of those vectors, may vary.
            for example, the following is an annotated hex dump of a simple slide file
            created on an ibm pc/at with an ibm enhanced graphics adapter. the slide
            consists of a white diagonal line from the lower left corner to the upper
            right corner of the graphics area, a green vertical line near the lower
            left corner, and a small red rectangle at the lower left corner.
            30
            (c) drawing interchange and file formats
              41 75 74 6f 43 41        id string ("autocad slide" cr lf ^z nul)
            44 20 53 6c 69 64
            65 0d 0a 1a 00
            56 type indicator (86)
            02 level indicator (2)
            3c 02 high x dot (572)
            24 01 high y dot (292)
            0b 80 df 00 aspect ratio (14,647,307 / 10,000,000 = 1.46)
            02 00 hardware fill (2)
            34 12 test number (1234 hex)
            07 ff new color (7 = white)
            3c 02 24 01 00 00 00 00 vector from 572,292 to 0,0. 572,292 becomes
            "last" point
            03 ff new color (3 = green)
            0f 00 32 00 0f 00 13 00 vector from 15,50 to 15,19. 15,50 becomes
            "last" point
            01 ff new color (1 = red)
            12 fb e7 12 ce offset vector from 15+18,50-25 (33,25) to
            15+18,50-50 (33,0). 33,25 becomes "last" point
            df fe 00 common-endpoint vector from 33,25 to
            33-33,25+0 (0,25). 0,25 becomes "last" point
            00 fe e7 common-endpoint vector from (0,25) to
            0+0,25-25 (0,0). 0,0 becomes "last" point
            21 fe 00 common-endpoint vector from (0,0) to
            0+33,0+0 (33,0). 33,0 becomes "last" point
            00 fc end of file
            old slide header
            the slide format described above is that produced by autocad release 9 and
            later, and is portable among all computers running autocad release 9 or
            later. previous versions of autocad (as well as autoshade 1.0 and
            autosketch 1.02) produce slides with a somewhat different header, as shown
            below.
                  field       bytes                     description
            id string 17 "autocad slide" cr lf ^z nul
            type indicator 1 86 (decimal).
            level indicator 1 1 (old format).
            high x dot 2 width of the graphics area - 1, in pixels.
            high y dot 2 height of the graphics area - 1, in pixels.
            aspect ratio 8 aspect ratio (horizontal size / vertical size in
            inches) of the graphics area, written as a
            floating-point number.
            hardware fill 2 either 0 or 2 (value is unimportant).
            filler byte 1 unused
            note that the old-format header does not contain a test number field.  the
            floating-point aspect ratio value and all two-byte integers are written in
            the native format of the cpu used to create the file (for 8086-family cpus,
            ieee double-precision and low byte first). old-format slide files are not
            portable across machine types, but they can be read by any version of autocad
            running on the same cpu type as the cpu with which the slide was created.
                                                                                     31
            autocad reference manual
            c.6  slide library file format
            this section describes the format of autocad slide libraries (release 9 and
            later), for the benefit of developers who wish to incorporate support for
            slide libraries into their programs.
            this information is for experienced programmers, and is subject to change
            without notice.
            the general format of a slide library is:
              1.  header (32 bytes)
            "autocad slide library 1.0" cr lf ^z nul nul nul nul
            2. one or more slide directory entries (36 bytes each)
            3. one or more slides (variable length)
            slide directory entries have the following format:
              1.  slide name (nul terminated) (32 bytes)
            2. address of slide within library file (4 bytes)
            the slide address is always written with the low byte first.  each slide to
            which the directory points is a complete slide file as described in the
            previous section. the end of the slide directory is signified by an entry
            with a null slide name (first byte is nul). a slide library may contain a
            mixture of old-format and new-format slides.

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