2013

Table Of Contents
Export DXF Files
You can export a drawing as a DXF file, which contains drawing information
that can be read by other CAD systems.
You can export a drawing as a DXF (drawing interchange format) file. DXF
files are text or binary files that contain drawing information that can be read
by other CAD programs. If you are working with consultants who use a CAD
program that accepts DXF files, you can share a drawing by saving it as a DXF
file.
You can control floating-point precision of the DXF format up to 16 decimal
places and save the drawing in either ASCII or binary format. ASCII format
results in a text file that you can read and edit; binary format results in a
significantly smaller file that is faster to work with.
If you do not want to save the entire drawing, you can choose to export
selected objects only. You can use this option to remove extraneous material
from drawing files.
Export Raster Files
You can create a device-independent raster image of the objects in your
drawing.
Several commands can be used to export objects into device-independent
raster images in the bitmap, JPEG, TIFF, and PNG formats.
Objects are displayed in the raster image as they appear on the screen,
including objects in shaded and rendered viewports.
File formats such as JPEG are compressed as they are created. Compressed files
take up less disk space, but they might not be readable by certain applications.
Export PostScript Files
You can convert a drawing file to a PostScript file, a format that is used by
many desktop publishing applications.
The PostScript file format type is used by many desktop publishing
applications. Its high-resolution print capabilities make it preferable to raster
formats, such as GIF, PCX, and TIFF. By converting the drawing to a PostScript
format, you can also use PostScript fonts.
Work with Data in Other Formats | 693