Dear friends,
i need a lisp which can convert the layers from excel to autocad. please do the needful.
note :- the layers,colour and linetype are only given in text forum.
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Dear friends,
i need a lisp which can convert the layers from excel to autocad. please do the needful.
note :- the layers,colour and linetype are only given in text forum.
Please stop requesting that someone write code for you (in this and other forums), and instead post your code and questions in the applicable developer forum.
... Welcome to AUGI.
Last edited by RenderMan; 2012-04-15 at 10:05 PM.
"How we think determines what we do, and what we do determines what we get."
Sincpac C3D ~ Autodesk Exchange Apps
Computer Specs:
Dell Precision 3660, Core i9-12900K 5.2GHz, 64GB DDR5 RAM, PCIe 4.0 M.2 SSD (RAID 0), 16GB NVIDIA RTX A4000
my dear render man,
i wrote some codes but it was not working. so only i came to this forum.
and before you say sumthing just think. and say.
tharwat is my friend we had conversation last time. and by mistake i might have come into that thread as i am new to the forum.
any how i am sorry if my words where rash.
Mistakes happen; no apologies are necessary.
There are many, many members that are willing to help you. If you have already written some code, please post it for others to see, so that we may help you more easily.
"How we think determines what we do, and what we do determines what we get."
Sincpac C3D ~ Autodesk Exchange Apps
Computer Specs:
Dell Precision 3660, Core i9-12900K 5.2GHz, 64GB DDR5 RAM, PCIe 4.0 M.2 SSD (RAID 0), 16GB NVIDIA RTX A4000
WOW, I guess I have been doing "wrong" all the many years I have been using AutoCAD and members of forums, especially "(in this and other forums)".
I have, in many occasions, request for lisps. If I can do something, I ask. We are not good at everything in life, that's why we ask.
I have gotten lots of lisps from the ones who know it and they have always been pleased to help. Actually, in may cases, someone would know of a lisp
and past the link to get it. Many other AutoCAD users have benefited greatly by sharing lisp and getting them written for them. Many times, I have
seen searched for and found lisps posted "(in this and other forums)", copied, and used them my AutoCAD.
I know my English may be limited, so I many misunderstand your point, but am kinda baffled by your comment. Isn't forums where we come to learn, find
and share ideas? Is it against the forum regulations to request for lisps?
I may be wrong but sure doubt it (and please correct me since I may have missed something).
Please don't take this the wrong way (am just passive) and need to do things right especially if I am, or have been wrong.
Thanks.
Hi omorah,
As one who more often than not posts code for the sole purpose of helping others, I do not typically react that way the first few times someone asks for a custom LISP to be written, for their specific needs, with little to no information, regardless of it being here, or in other forums where I participate... I was also not a Moderator back then, FWIW.
That said, and having only re-read this thread (I've not gone back to search that user's entire posting history here, and elsewhere), I'm more than willing to say that I should perhaps have used a bit more tact.
Now, I'm a bit confused... Was this just a public rant in response to my three year old post, or did you actually have a coding question, need help with a LISP, etc.?
Cheers
"How we think determines what we do, and what we do determines what we get."
Sincpac C3D ~ Autodesk Exchange Apps
Computer Specs:
Dell Precision 3660, Core i9-12900K 5.2GHz, 64GB DDR5 RAM, PCIe 4.0 M.2 SSD (RAID 0), 16GB NVIDIA RTX A4000
Fairly reasonable response, if a bit blunt; to be fair, could have just posted "RTFM".
Nothing wrong with asking for help. The problem with continuously asking for code to be done for you is there is no learning. "Why is it doing ____?", "What happens if I do _____?", and other questions which should be personally investigated are how people move forward in their understanding. It also skips past a number of fundamentals which should (must?) be grasped prior to working on more complex code.