Microsoft Office Visio 2003 Inside Out (Inside Out (Microsoft))
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In a floor plan or a site plan, you often need to refer to the specific measurements of furniture, walls, paths, or other objects. Although shape dimensions appear in the Size & Position window while you work in Visio, you can easily add dimension lines that display measurements dynamically as you reposition and size shapes. Table 18-2 summarizes shapes and techniques you can use to display measurements.
Type of Dimension | Technique |
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Add dimension line shapes that calculate and display linear and angular dimensions | See the shapes on the Dimensioning—Architectural stencil in the Visio Extras folder. For details, see “Calculating and Displaying Dimensions,” page 453. |
Display the dimensions of a shape within the shape itself | Add a geometry field to the shape’s text block with the Field command on the Insert menu. For details, see “Displaying Custom Measurements,” page 456. |
Label a room and display its dimensions | Drag the Room Measurements shape (see Figure 18-28) from the Walls, Doors And Windows or Walls, Shell And Structure stencil into a room. |
In addition to dimensions, building plans frequently include other annotations and text information. Useful techniques are described elsewhere in this book:
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You can point out relevant features and highlight information with callout shapes. For details, see “Annotating Diagrams with Callout Shapes,” page 130.
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You can create custom callouts that automatically display information from the Custom Properties window. Because all the building plan shapes have a variety of built-in properties, you can design automated annotations. For details, see “Displaying Values in a Custom Callout,” page 132.
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For details about working with the shapes on the Title Block stencil, see “Adding a Title Block to a Diagram,” page 134.
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