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Building Your Own Interface
For repeated use of a particular tool, there is nothing better than having
it right next to your cursor. But the downside to this is the temptation
to keep all of your tools close by. Give in to that, and before
you know it, your screen may look like Figure 34.5and thats
without any dockers!
FIGURE
34.5 Watch outits easy to go toolbar
happy.
Clearly, another strategy is needed to keep a select set of tools within
easy reach, and DRAW provides for it. To best illustrate it, consider
yourself hired as our new designer.
Special Tools
for a Special Project
We have commissioned you to create a floor plan for our new editorial
division, in which each member of the writing team will have an office.
We want the plan drawn to correct scale, and it must have sufficient detail.
We are paying you $365,000 for your efforts, so youd better do a
good job.
As a savvy DRAW user, the first thing you think about are the electronic
tools you will need for this project. You write down your tasks and the
tools you will need for them:
- Youll need to import lots of objects
from your personal home-furnishings library of clipart.
- The Clipboard will be kept very busy with
frequent copying and pasting.
- Youll be creating lots of rectangles
and free-form objects.
- The Copy Properties From command will be
your faithful assistant, helping you quickly take attributes from other
finished pieces.
- You can already think of three layers that
youll need for the various objects.
- Youll have to set a grid, and will
be regularly turning on and off Snap to Grid and Snap to Objects.
- You expect to be doing a lot of trimming
and welding.
- The View Manager, which can quickly zoom
you into specific parts of the schematic, will offer a welcome advantage.
- Your preliminary design reveals that certain
shapes will need to be distinguished by fill patternsblack, 50%
gray, and 20% gray.
With this list in hand, you float a few of the important toolbars and
flyouts on your page and quickly conclude that you have no room left to
work. To correct this, you move all of these toolbars outside of the DRAW
window and hover them over the desktop. But now they are so far away from
your cursor that reaching them via the menus would be easier.
Ah, but you have already read this chapter that you are now reading,
and so you know what we havent yet told you: that you can create
a work environment ideally suited for this project. Your first order of
business is to head to Tools Ø Options
Ø Workspace, and create a workspace
called, say, Floorplan. Once you make it the current workspace, you are
ready to explore the buried treasure that is the Customize dialog page
of Options:
- 1. From Customize, click on the Toolbars tab. There
you will find every tool, command, and docker that exists on the menus,
in the Standard toolbar, and in the toolboxand even a few tools
that exist nowhere!
- 2. In the middle window, click on the plus sign
beside File & Layout, then on File, and then on one of the listed
commands. In the Buttons area, 28 icons appear, each one representing
a command appropriate to the File menu.

- 3. Select a command in the list and note that its
icon in the Buttons area is highlighted, and the Description area explains
the command. You can also hover your cursor over the icon to get the
description as bubble help.
- 4. Find the button for Import and drag it from the
dialog onto the page. As you do, DRAW automatically creates a toolbar
to house it.

This fledgling toolbar contains only the Import button so far. Assuming
this is your first custom toolbar, DRAW has called it Toolbar 1 (although
its so small, the name wont fit on its title bar).
- 5. Referring to your list of tools and commands,
you start moving through the command tree in the Toolbars page. Still
under File & Layout, you expand Grid, Guidelines & Snap, click
on Grid and Ruler Setup, and drag the highlighted button to your new
toolbar. Then you do the same with Snap to Objects. You dont need
to take Snap to Grid, because youve been pressing Ctrl+Y for
that since version 2.
- 6. Moving on to Styles, Layers & Object Management,
you take the Object Manager button and add it to your toolbar. Your
toolbar is starting to grow.

- 7. Next you go to the Edit & Transform category.
From the Editing Commands group, you decline the Clipboard commands
because you can press Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V in your sleep. (Your
sole criterion in selecting icons is ease of access, and youre
a right-handed mouse user, so Ctrl+C is easier than clicking on
an icon.) However, you do drag the Copy Properties From button to your
new toolbar.
- 8. Under the View & Display category, you explore
the Zoom & Pan group and take View Manager, which is a tremendous
help when zooming in and out of many different parts of a drawing.
- 9. Next, from Toolbars Ø
Toolbox, you take the Bézier tool.
- 10. Under Fill & Outline Ø
Fill, you scroll the long list and find icons for Black Fill, Gray20
Fill, Gray50 Filljust what you need. (These icons used to be on
the Fill flyout, but they disappeared in DRAW 9.)

- 11. For better organization, you place the Bézier
tool at the beginning of the toolbar, just by dragging it there. You
move a few other icons around, based on whatever divine guidance you
possess.
- 12. You discover, probably by accident, that if
you move an icon a tiny bit one direction or the other, DRAW creates
a separator. So you waste no time determining logical groupings for
functions.
- 13. A few of the icons have unintelligible symbols,
so for each one, you right-click, choose Properties, click Show Text,
and type in a short identifier.
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| TIP When the Customize dialog
is open, you do not need to hold Alt to move icons. With Customize
open, its as if the entire interface is unlocked, so you could
also drag icons from visible toolbars and place them on your custom
one.
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- 14. You resize the toolbar so that it appears as
two rows instead of one long one.
- 15. Finally, you back out to the main Customize
page of Options, find Toolbar 1, click on it twice to get a cursor,
and rename it to Floorplan Tools. Your custom toolbar is now ready for
active duty.
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