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AutoCAD 2009 and AutoCAD LT 2009: No Experience Required

AutoCAD 2009 and AutoCAD LT 2009: No Experience Required
By Jon McFarland

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Product Description

AutoCAD 2009 and AutoCAD LT 2009: No Experience Required is the perfect step-by-step introduction to the very latest version of the world's leading CAD software. It provides concise explanations and practical tutorials that clearly show you how to plan and develop a customized AutoCAD project. Follow the tutorials sequentially or just jump in at any chapter by downloading the drawing files from the companion website. Either way, you'll master AutoCAD features, get a thorough grounding in the essentials, and see quick results.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #83538 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-04-28
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 840 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
AutoCAD 2009 and AutoCAD LT 2009: No experience Required

AutoCAD 2009 and AutoCAD LT 2009: No Experience Required is the perfect step-by-step introduction to the very latest version of the world's leading CAD software. It provides concise explanations and practical tutorials that clearly show you how to plan and develop a customized AutoCAD project. Follow the tutorials sequentially or just jump in at any chapter by downloading the drawing files from the companion website. Either way, you'll master AutoCAD features, get a thorough grounding in the essentials, and see quick results.

Completely revised and better than ever, this perennial bestseller includes comprehensive, up-to-date coverage of the latest AutoCAD features, such as the new Ribbon-based user interface, the ViewCube 3D navigation system, Quick View for drawings and layouts, the Quick Properties tool, and the Action Recorder. It also offers a glossary and a supporting website with project files.

  • Utilize the AutoCAD interface as you learn basic commands and set up your own drawings

  • Build on your skills with groups, elevations, hatches, and by using text and dynamic blocks in drawings

  • Develop sophisticated drawings as you graduate to dimensioning, creating external references, using tables, leveraging dynamic blocks, and mastering layouts and printing

  • Take advantage of the 3D capabilities that make AutoCAD 2009 the complete design tool

  • See the best ways to define the appearance of 3D drawings using different visual styles

  • Learn to clearly dimension and add notes to your drawings

  • Model in 3D (right side), then apply materials and render for photorealism (left)

About the Author
Jon McFarland manages the design department at a property development company, where he uses AutoCAD and VIZ to create visualizations of proposed facility construction and expansions. He also teaches AutoCAD, VIZ, and 3ds Max courses at the university level.


Customer Reviews

plenty for a beginner4
Is there anything McFarland has left out about AutoCad 2009? Apparently not, at least for the newbie. As the cover prominently says, no experience needed. The book comprehensively covers what the novice might want. Explaining in detailed steps such basics as setting up a drawing, laying out walls of a building, and the use of layers. The latter is significant. For layering lets you decompose your design process into manageable parts. If you have perhaps used Adobe's Photoshop and its layering, then the idea transfers over readily.

The chapters also end in suggestions for exercises, so that you can integrate each chapter's lessons into your understanding. The exercises are not that extensive, so you may have to push yourself into devising more problems if you feel the need.

I should add that the text applies AutoCad to the designing of a building. Other important usages include designing consumer products. But the book stays on topic with architecture.

By the way, for non-US readers, the examples in the book all use imperial measurements. But you can trivially change the Autocad settings to use metric.

for beginers only2
I purchased this book when I upgraded from 2005LT to 2009LT. This book does not cover many of the new features of 2009. I was hoping for an in depth section on dynamic blocks and annotative dimensioning. This book barely covers those topics. It also skims over plotting and layers. I will be returning this book for one with much more depth. This book would be good for a beginner, and by beginner I mean someone who has never used any autodesk product. It is also biased to the architectural side of drafting.

Best book ever for Newbies4
Due to a change of job last year I was required to quickly learn AutoCAD, so I purchased this book and a copy of AutoCAD LT2009. I knew nothing whatsoever about the subject, but I learn fast from books and this one got rave reviews and it deserves them. McFarlane covers virtually everything from setting up the software and the screen and drawing the first line to multi-color layering and setup templates that I did not even know what they were until I read this book.
The book is a real step by step and even gives you the chance to practice more or move on at the end of each chapter. There are great downloads of each stage so if you only want to practice a little but need the result for the next chapter it is there. My opinion is that after 20 -40 hours using this book you can get to the stage where only repeated practice and application will take you further.
There are very few errors in the book although some practical advice on the fact that fonts that start with an @ sign are for vertical writing and are listed in the list of fonts before normal horizontal fonts would have prevented a frustrating 30 minutes wondering why my text wouldn't write horizontal and there is no clear explanation of the practical differences of "Thaw/Freeze" vs "On/Off" or why you would use one vs the other, but these are minor and overall this book is great.
After saying all that you are probably wondering why I didn't give the book 5 stars. The reality is that I did this for one reason but one very important reason. If you have zero AutoCAD skills then you are a newbie by definition. If you are, then you are used to using a mouse, NOT a keyboard, yet every example almost without exception either shows how to do the command/action with the keyboard first and then the mouse or simply doesn't mention how to do it with the mouse at all. This is wrong. Virtually all of the 2 step commands can be carried out by selecting the tool on the tool ribbon with a left click, selection the item(s) which are to be the subject of the action with left mouse clicks then carrying out the action or selecting it via a right mouse click without going near or looking down at the keyboard. McFarlane himself states he took over the book from a long series covering previous versions. I hope he takes my advice to make everything mouse first and then show keyboard example or miss it out where no normal modern PC user would use that method.
Apart from the mouse issue, this is a great book and I would strongly recommend it if you are a newbie and want to learn AutoCAD. The book is very competitively priced and worth every cent. I went from zero knowledge to being able to carry out extensive red line edits of others drawings in less than 3 weeks and in les than 3 months am now a power user due to the skills imparted by this book.