2012

Table Of Contents
and creased to introduce ridges. Before , only the less modifiable polygon and
polyface mesh was available.
mini wheels The small version of SteeringWheels. No labels are displayed on
any of the wedges and they are often the size of the cursor.
mirror To create a new version of an existing object by reflecting it
symmetrically with respect to a prescribed line or plane. (MIRROR)
mode A software setting or operating state.
model A two- or three-dimensional representation of an object.
model space One of the two primary spaces in which objects reside. Typically,
a geometric model is placed in a three-dimensional coordinate space called
model space. A final layout of specific views and annotations of this model is
placed in paper space. See also paper space. (MSPACE)
model viewports A type of display that splits the drawing area into one or
more adjacent rectangular viewing areas. See also layout viewports, TILEMODE,
and viewport. (VPORTS)
motion path Defines the path or target of a camera. A path can be a line, arc,
elliptical arc, circle, polyline, 3D polyline, or spline.
multi-functional grip menu options Editing options you can access from
the grip menu that appears when you hover over an object grip (not available
for all object types).
multi-sheet DWF A DWF file that contains multiple sheets.
multileader A leader object that creates annotations with multiple leader
lines.
named object Describes the various types of nongraphical information, such
as styles and definitions, stored with a drawing. Named objects include
linetypes, layers, dimension styles, text styles, block definitions, layouts, views,
and viewport configurations. Named objects are stored in definition (symbol)
tables.
named objects, dependent See dependent named objects (in xrefs).
named path A saved motion path object that is linked to a camera or target.
named range A tool in Microsoft Excel that provides a method to assign a
meaningful name to a single cell or a range of cells.
named view A view saved for restoration later. (VIEW)
Glossary | 2309