2011

Table Of Contents
For the field to display the correct information about a view or sheets on
which you later insert it, the field must be included within a block attribute,
not text, when you define the block. To create the block attribute definition,
insert a placeholder field as the value, select the Preset option, and specify a
tag.
NOTE If you create your own label blocks and callout blocks, set any attribute
definitions to Preset to avoid prompts when placing these blocks in a drawing.
For more information about fields, see Insert Fields on page 1352.
Place a Sheet View (Advanced)
The Sheet Set Manager automates and enhances the process for adding views
to a sheet. A view on a sheet, called a sheet view, consists of several coincident
entities: an xref or geometry in model space, a layout viewport on a sheet,
and a named view in paper space.
The sheet view can display model space from a different drawing file. In
this case, that drawing is attached as an xref in your current drawing. The
layers of that drawing file are displayed only in the sheet view that you
create.
NOTE The xref is attached using a relative path. If you need to change the
path to a fully specified (absolute) path, use the External References palette.
A layout viewport that displays the model space view is created on your
current sheet.
A named view that encompasses the area of the layout viewport is created
in paper space.
When you place a sheet view on a sheet, all the layers in the current drawing
(including layer 0) are frozen in the new viewport created by the view. The
layers are shown as frozen in the VP Freeze column of the Layer Properties
Manager.
If you need to remove a sheet view from a sheet, you can delete the layout
viewport to remove the view. However, to remove all unused items, you need
to detach the xref and delete the named paper space view.
NOTE The easiest method for removing a sheet view immediately after placing it
is to use UNDO.
Create and Modify Sheets | 445