2013

Table Of Contents
Use object snaps, grid snaps, and relative coordinate entry to stretch with
precision.
Scale Objects Using a Scale Factor
With SCALE, you can make an object uniformly larger or smaller. To scale an
object, you specify a base point and a scale factor. Alternatively, you can
specify a length to be used as a scale factor based on the current drawing units.
A scale factor greater than 1 enlarges the object. A scale factor between 0 and
1 shrinks the object.
Scaling changes the size of all dimensions of the selected object. A scale factor
greater than 1 enlarges the object. A scale factor less than 1 shrinks the object.
NOTE When you use the SCALE command with annotative objects, the position
or location of the object is scaled relative to the base point of the scale operation,
but the size of the object is not changed.
Scale Objects Using a Reference Distance
You can also scale by reference. Scaling by reference uses an existing distance
as a basis for the new size. To scale by reference, specify the current distance
and then the new desired size. For example, if one side of an object is 4.8 units
long and you want to expand it to 7.5 units, use 4.8 as the reference length.
Select and Modify Objects | 233