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Autodesk Raster Design 3

Getting Started

34003-010000-5000A

January, 2002

Copyright 2002 Autodesk, Inc.


All Rights Reserved
AUTODESK, INC. MAKES NO WARRANTY, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, REGARDING THESE MATERIALS AND MAKES SUCH MATERIALS AVAILABLE SOLELY ON AN AS-IS BASIS. IN NO EVENT SHALL AUTODESK, INC. BE LIABLE TO ANYONE FOR SPECIAL, COLLATERAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES IN CONNECTION WITH OR ARISING OUT OF PURCHASE OR USE OF THESE MATERIALS. THE SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE LIABILITY TO AUTODESK, INC., REGARDLESS OF THE FORM OF ACTION, SHALL NOT EXCEED THE PURCHASE PRICE OF THE MATERIALS DESCRIBED HEREIN.

Autodesk, Inc. reserves the right to revise and improve its products as it sees fit. This publication describes the state of this product at the time of its publication, and may not reflect the product at all times in the future.

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Third Party Software Program Credits ACIS 1994, 1997, 1999 Spatial Technology, Inc., Three-Space Ltd., and Applied Geometry Corp. All rights reserved. 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. International CorrectSpell Spelling Correction System 1995 by Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products, N.V. All rights reserved. InstallShield 3.0. 1997 InstallShield Software Corporation. All rights reserved. Portions 1991-1996 Arthur D. Applegate. All rights reserved. Portions of this software are based on the work of the Independent JPEG Group. Typefaces from the Bitstream typeface library 1992. Typefaces from Payne Loving Trust 1996. All rights reserved. The license management portion of this product is based on lan License Manager 1989, 1990, 1998 lan Computer Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Portions (libgeotiff) copyright (c) 1995 Niles D. Ritter. Portions of this computer program are copyright 1995-1999 LizardTech, Inc. All rights reserved. MrSID is protected by U.S. Patent No. 5,710,835. Foreign Patents Pending Portions of this computer program are copyright 2000 Earth Resource Mapping, Inc. WexTech AnswerWorks 2000 WexTech Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Wise for Installation System for Windows Installer 2000 Wise Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved. C-Dilla Labs, a Macrovision company. 2001 ScanSoft, Inc. All rights reserved. GOVERNMENT USE Use, duplication, or disclosure by the U. S. Government is subject to restrictions as set forth in FAR 12.212 (Commercial Computer Software-Restricted Rights) and DFAR 267.7202 (Rights in Technical Data and Computer Software), as applicable.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Contents

Part I
Chapter 1

Working with Raster Design


Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
In This Manual . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Whats New in Autodesk Raster Design 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Raster Design Basics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 When to Use Raster Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Who Should Use Raster Design? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 How to Use the Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Getting Started Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Help . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Online Tutorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Raster Design Home Page. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Chapter 2

Getting Started. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Minimum Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Minimum Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Hardware Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Network Installation of Raster Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Using Raster Design. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Starting Raster Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Configuring Raster Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Accessing the Raster Design Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Image Menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Toolbar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Command Line . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

iii

Using AutoCAD Imaging Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Image Editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Image Insertion and Correlation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Image Manage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using AutoCAD Commands on Your Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exiting the Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

25 26 26 27 27 29

Chapter 3

Creating, Inserting, and Saving Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31


Creating New Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inserting Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pick Correlation Source Page. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Modify Correlation Values Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Insertion Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Saving Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exporting Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 34 36 37 37 39 40

Chapter 4

Setting Image Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43


Setting Up Your Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Changing Layer, Color, Linetype, and Display . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Applying Transparency Color . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Masking Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 46 48 50

Chapter 5

Image Editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Correlating Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rubbersheeting an Image After Correlation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Enhancing Images Using the Histogram Editing Filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Enhancing Images Using Image Processing and Cleanup Commands . . . Managing the Image Palette . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Selecting Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rubbing and Cropping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Merging Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 55 57 61 63 64 65 68

Chapter 6

Working with Raster Data. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71


Editing Raster Using REM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . REM Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Region Objects. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Enhanced Bitonal Regions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Selection Options for Enhanced Bitonal Region Objects . . . . . . . . . Primitive Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 72 75 76 77 82

iv

Contents

Using REM Objects to Edit Raster Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 Edit Mode Menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Merging REM Objects into Existing Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 Converting REM Objects to a New Raster Image. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 Merging Vector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Snapping to Binary Raster Entities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88

Chapter 7

Converting Raster to Vector. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91


Vectorization Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 The Follower Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 Using Vector Separation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96

Chapter 8

Converting Raster Text to AutoCAD Text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101


Converting Raster Text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102

Part II
Appendix A

Installation Guide
Installing Raster Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Choosing Your Installation Options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Single-User Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Network Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Network Deployment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 Client Deployment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 Single User Deployment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 Your Raster Design CD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 The Raster Design CD for Customers in the United States and Canada (Domestic) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 The Raster Design CD for International Customers . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 Checking System Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Minimum System Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Hardware Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Requirements for Sharing Data in a Network Environment . . . . . . 120 Preparing for Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Installation Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Unique Installation Conditions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 Installing Single-User Raster Design.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 Installing Raster Design on a Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 Associating Raster Design to Your AutoCAD Desktop . . . . . . . . . . 123 Raster Design Program Group Icons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 Raster Design Menus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

Contents

Appendix B

Licensing Raster Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125


Flexible Licensing Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Single-User Licensing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Floating Licensing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Network Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Registering Your Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Authorizing Raster Design for a Domestic Single User . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Authorizing Raster Design for an International Single User . . . . . . . . . . Important License Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Understanding the License Folder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Changing the System Clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Updating Components on a Licensed Computer or Installing a New Computer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Uninstalling and Reinstalling Raster Design. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Restoring from a Disk Backup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . License Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Raster Design Portable License Utility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Understanding License Transfers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Viewing License Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transferring a License . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Adding a Computer to the Pool . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exporting a License . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Importing a License. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Modifying the Pool of Computers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Specifying Portable License Utility Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Licensing Raster Design on a Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using the License Manager Settings Utility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 126 126 127 128 128 129 130 130 130 131 132 132 133 133 133 134 134 135 135 137 138 139 140 140

Appendix C

Supported Image Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141


Supported Image Formats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142

Appendix D

Raster Design Command Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145


Command Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146

Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153 Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171

vi

Contents

Part 1

Working with Raster Design

| Part 1

Working with Raster Design

Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

1
In this chapter
s s

Autodesk Raster Design 3 converts scanned paper drawings, blueprints, aerial photographs, and maps into data you can edit and manage in AutoCAD drawings. You can insert binary, grayscale, and color raster images into your AutoCAD drawings, then correlate, edit, manipulate, convert, save, and export the data.

New features in this release Basics of using raster and vector images with Raster Design and AutoCAD How to use the documentation

Raster Design 3 allows you to convert scanned paper drawings, blueprints, aerial photographs, and maps into data you can edit and manage in AutoCAD drawings. You can insert binary, grayscale, and color raster images into your AutoCAD drawings, then correlate, edit, manipulate, convert, save, and export the data. This release can increase your efficiency and accuracy by providing improved access to tools and commands, a full array of vectorization tools, and the ability to share image and correlation data on the Internet.

In This Manual
The purpose of this manual is to provide you with the information you need to get started with Raster Design. Part 1 presents the fundamentals of Raster Design 3. Part 2 provides installation, licensing, and upgrade information. Appendix C lists raster image formats supported by Raster Design. The glossary provides definitions of terms used with the software. The rest of this chapter describes:
s s s

New features in this release Basics of using raster and vector images with Raster Design and AutoCAD How to use the software and documentation

You will find detailed documentation online in the form of tutorials and a Users Guide in Help. This section describes how to use all the documentation, printed and online.

Whats New in Autodesk Raster Design 3


Autodesk Raster Design 3 is the most powerful imaging application yet. With new features, you can improve the appearance and standardize the use of color images, and interactively convert scanned text to AutoCAD text. Improved features also allow you to correct distortions in images with greater accuracy.

Chapter 1

Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

Whats New in Autodesk Raster Design 3


Function
Optical Character Recognition (OCR)

Feature
Text Recognition

Enhancements
You can convert the raster text in your images to AutoCAD text or AutoCAD Mtext. The Text Recognition command recognizes both machineprinted text and hand-printed text displayed as text or in a table in the image. Improved installation technology gives you more power over the installation process. For instance, you can now simultaneously install to multiple installations of AutoCAD or Autodesk desktops. The Tonal Adjustment tab on the Histogram dialog box allows you to Adjust the image contrast in a non-linear fashion by using a curve. This allows you to add detail to the darker regions of the image without changing the contrast of the mid-tones, and vice versa. The Palette Manager allows you to manipulate individual colors and entire palettes for 8-bit images. The Palette Manager can determine which colors are actually being used, change an existing color to a different color, combine several color indices into a single mapped color, compress the palette, and even import and export palettes. The Triangular method uses the control points you enter to triangulate the image, then performs a series of small, error-free, transformations on those areas. New grid selection techniques improve the efficiency of selecting control points by allowing you to create a custom grid of destination points.

Improved installation options

MSI Installer

Improved image contrast

Tonal Adjustment

Color palette management

Palette Manager

Improved rubbersheeting

Rubbersheet

To use Autodesk Raster Design 3, you must have AutoCAD 2002 or another AutoCAD product, such as Autodesk Map 5, installed on your computer.

Whats New in Autodesk Raster Design 3

Raster Design Basics


You can use Raster Design to edit and manage raster data. Raster data is a series of dots, or pixels, that represents an image. This type of data is produced when you scan a paper drawing, blueprint, or photograph. There are three types of raster images:

Binary Grayscale

Two-color line drawings, also called bitonal An image with several different shades of gray, such as a scanned black and white photograph An image with multiple colors, such as a color satellite image

Color

Vector data, on the other hand, is a group of mathematical equations that generates lines, arcs, and other AutoCAD objects. Vector data is typically made up of points which are used to define precise geometric shapes. This type of data is produced when you draw objects in AutoCAD.

Raster

Vector

If you use AutoCAD without Raster Design, you can insert raster images into a drawing and modify image display values such as brightness and contrast. However, you need to use a raster editing program like Raster Design to do any of the following:
s s s s

Permanently edit the raster data of your images Insert images that include correlation data into a drawing Save images to another format Export images to create external correlation files

Chapter 1

Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

Key Concepts: Raster Design Basics


s

In Raster Design, image frames, also called boundaries, are defined as AutoCAD objects, which means you can assign a frame to a layer and change its color. In this documentation, the term raster entities refers to the lines, arcs, and circles, including text, that make up a binary raster image.
Each line, circle, and arc in a binary raster image is a raster entity

Raster entities
s

Raster data refers to the pixels that make up a binary, grayscale, or color image. All references to a raster image refer to an image file or to the representation of that image after it is inserted into an AutoCAD drawing. Converting raster to vector makes modifying a drawing easier and may result in reducing the total file size of your project. After you convert raster data to vector entities such as lines or polylines, you can edit the vector entities using AutoCAD commands. To convert raster to vector, you can use the Raster Design vectorization tools. You can use the Raster Design REM commands to edit individual raster entities and raster areas directly. You can create a selection set of a raster area or raster entities, and then you can move, copy, or delete the selection set using native AutoCAD commands. You can use vectorization tools to convert raster data to vector. Vectorization tools replace raster geometry with vector geometry that can be manipulated like any other AutoCAD objects, and vectorization tools can even remove the raster data as you proceed.

Raster Design Basics

When to Use Raster Design


You can use Raster Design to:
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Insert images that respect correlation information from various sources Permanently adjust image brightness and contrast, convert color images to grayscale, and convert color and grayscale images to binary imagesall by using a histogram Trace the raster lines, arcs, circles, or even contours on a binary raster image, converting the raster geometry to vectors interactively or semiautomatically Modify the display order of images Merge two or more raster images Remove parts of images Merge vectors into a raster image Read, save, and export images to different names, locations, and formats Move, delete, and copy binary raster entities and areas on raster images using the REM (raster entity manipulation) commands Make vector additions to raster entities by using raster snap modes to snap the new vectors to existing raster entities Correlate images with AutoCAD coordinates or vectors Select a color in an image and make it transparent Clean up areas in raster images such as blueprints and floor plans Correct distortions in images

Who Should Use Raster Design?


Anyone who wants to edit, manage, and correlate raster images with AutoCAD can benefit from the capabilities of Raster Design.

Architects

To incorporate photographs and old hand-drawn plans into new vector data for planning and presentation purposes before remodeling, renovating, or doing historic reconstruction. To take advantage of real-world coordinate support. When running on AutoCADs GIS based desktops, such as Autodesk Land Desktop 3, and Autodesk Map 5, Raster Design gives you the ability to perform coordinate transformations. To generate groundwater contours, locate wells, plot contamination values, and use scanned soil maps and georeferenced data for support of risk assessment.

Cartographers

Environmental specialists

Chapter 1

Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

Geo-exploration specialists and engineers Land planners

To use remote sensing data for exploration planning, strata mapping, and geo-technical applications.

To integrate imagery, maps, and terrain models into base maps that depict change analysis. To easily update scanned drawings using raster entity manipulation (REM) commands. To use many image formats, including GeoTIFF and GeoSPOT. Also, to use rubbersheeting and other correlation commands to integrate images into base maps.

Mechanical engineers Photogrammetric and Remote Sensing Firms

Resource managers To use remote sensing data, scanned forest cover-type maps and soil maps, and geo-referenced data and images for impact studies in forestry, soil science, hydrology, and wildlife management. Surveyors To perform deed analysis using images for photogrammetric control by using the vectorization tools to convert raster to vector. To use scanned tax maps and ordinance surveys as references for detailing city systems and GIS tasks.

Town, city, county, municipal and state mapping agencies

How to Use the Documentation


The Raster Design documentation set is divided into three main categories:
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This Getting Started manual highlights the features of Raster Design with key concepts, and directs you to the online tutorials and Help, as appropriate, for greater detail. The online tutorials contain lessons to familiarize you with how Raster Design works. The lessons include actual drawing files for you to work on. It is recommended that you run through the tutorials for an understanding of how the Raster Design features are applied to real life scenarios. The Help contains all the information you need to work with raster and vector images.

How to Use the Documentation

Getting Started Guide


When a feature is described in this guide, the associated dialog box is shown along with instructions for using it. Key concepts summarize the features main points, and brief procedures outline step by step how to use the feature and direct you to topics in the online documentation. If you needed to insert an image, for example, you might check the table of contents or the index. You would find that Chapter 3 contains the information you need, with numbered steps to follow to complete the task. Some steps include references to the Help. For example: To insert an image
Step 1 Select Image Insert. or type iinsert. Use to locate

Inserting Images

In the left margin of many sections in this manual, you will see the following format that contains topics in Help with more information.

Search Help for


Inserting Images Correlating Images During Insertion

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Chapter 1

Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

Help
The Help files can provide you with detailed reference information about options, commands and dialog boxes. You can access Raster Design Help files by using several different methods. Each method takes you to a different place in the Help file, and each method has its own benefits. Accessing Help
Method From the program group, select the Raster Design Help Files icon. or Select Image Help. Result Displays a help window with two panes. The navigation pane, on the left, includes Contents, Index, and Search tabs. Use these tabs to display information in the topic pane on the right side of the Help window. Displays the Help topic that describes the options in the dialog box. Displays the Help topic that describes the command you are running. Benefits This method can be useful when you are not sure which topic has the information you need. Since the navigation pane remains open while you view the topic, the context in which the current topic is located will often direct you to the information you need.

Click the Help button when you have a dialog box open.

This method takes you directly to the information you need while you have the dialog box open.

Press F1 when you are in the middle of running a command and the command line prompts you for input. From the Image menu, select a command and press F1. Click a Help button in a dialog box.

This method takes you directly to the information you need while you are using a command.

Displays the Help topic that describes the selected command. Displays the Help topic that describes the options in the dialog box.

This method takes you directly to the information you need.

This method takes you directly to the information that you need while you have the dialog box open.

Many topics in online Help feature three tabs that separate the information into three content types. The default tab displays conceptual information about the feature, the second tab displays procedural information, and the third tab displays reference information. To move between tabs, simply click the new tab.

How to Use the Documentation

11

The following procedure describes how to locate a topic title in the Help file. To use Help to locate Raster Design Help topic titles
Steps 1 Select Image Help to display the main Help contents window.

2 Click the Search tab. If you have not previously used the Search tab. 3 Type the keywords you want to search for, then click List Topics. Topics with a similar title are listed. 4 Click the name of the topic you want to locate, and then click Display to view the Help topic. 5 When the Help topic is displayed, you can print the topic by selecting Options Print Topic or you can view related topics by clicking the blue, underlined text.

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Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

Key Concepts: Help


When you open the Help file, the Help window is divided into two panes. On the right is the navigation pane, where the Contents, Index, Favorites, and Search tabs are displayed. Main topics are indicated on the Contents tab by book icons. If you double-click, or open, the book icon, individual topics are displayed under each book. To view a topic such as Insert Images, select the page icon.
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The Help window has four tabs: Contents, Index, Favorites, and Search. Click the Index tab to view a list of Help topics. You can click any index entry to view the topic for that entry. If more than one topic shares the same index entry, then you can choose the topic that you want to view. Click the Search tab if you want to search for specific words, for example, to search for Help topic titles that are listed in this guide. With a topic open, you can move to other relevant topics or definitions by selecting the blue, underlined text. You can click Back to move back to the previous topic.

Online Tutorials
Each Raster Design tutorial contains a series of related lessons. A folder containing the images and drawings used in the lessons accompanies each tutorial. In each lesson, you work with various images to explore particular features of Raster Design. The lessons are organized based on how you would typically work with the those types of images. You can complete the lessons in any order you choose. The images and drawings used in later lessons do not require you to have completed the earlier lessons. As in online Help, most tutorial topics feature two tabs that separate the information into different content types. The default tab displays procedural information, while the second tab displays conceptual information about the feature. To move between tabs, simply click the new tab. You can access the tutorials by selecting Help on the Image menu and choosing Raster Design 3 Tutorials.

How to Use the Documentation

13

Raster Design Home Page


If you have an Internet connection, then you can find additional information about Raster Design on the Raster Design home page. The Raster Design home page includes information about technical support, purchasing information, and how to access the Raster Design news group. To access the Raster Design home page
Step 1 Select Image Raster Design Home Page. or Click the or Open http://www.autodesk.com/rasterdesignuser from your Web browser. icon on the Raster Design toolbar.

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Chapter 1

Welcome to Autodesk Raster Design 3

Getting Started

2
In this chapter
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Raster Design can read scanned and photographic images, including GeoSPOT satellite images and wavelet compressed images. More than 80 percent of the worlds engineering drawings still exist as paper drawings, which are sometimes damaged or misfiled and can be

Minimum System Requirements Starting and configuring Raster Design Accessing the Raster Design commands Using Raster Design and AutoCAD together Using AutoCAD commands on your images

difficult to update. Raster Design provides an effective, low-cost method for archiving and updating these drawings.
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15

To use Raster Design, you must convert your paper drawing to raster data. You can use a large document scanner, a desktop scanner, or a hand-held scanner to save the raster image to a file type that Raster Design can read. File size is determined by the scan resolution (dots per inch), the file format, the complexity of the drawing, and the size of the paper drawing being scanned.

Minimum Requirements
To run properly, Raster Design 3 requires a minimum of the following hardware and software. If your computer does not meet the minimum requirements, upgrade your computer before installing any software, to avoid problems later.

Minimum Requirements
One of the following AutoCAD 2002-based products:
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AutoCAD 2002 Autodesk Architectural Desktop 3.3 Autodesk Land Desktop 3 Autodesk Map 5 AutoCAD Mechanical 6 Autodesk Mechanical Desktop 6

Hardware Requirements
You should have 75 MB of disk space available in addition to the minimum system requirements of AutoCAD 2002, or the AutoCAD 2002-based product upon which Raster Design is installed.

Network Installation of Raster Design


System administrators planning to install Raster Design on a network must have TCP/IP installed and functioning on the computers that are running Raster Design.

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Getting Started

Using Raster Design


You can use Raster Design to insert, edit, correlate, and convert raster images in any AutoCAD drawing. Using Raster Design you can:
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Update existing paper drawings by scanning them, then adding vector information or editing the raster entities. Insert tiled quadrant sheets into a drawing using the correlation data saved within the files. Convert a grayscale contour map to a binary image you can then vectorize and use to create a digital terrain model surface. Correlate images so that they are positioned correctly within the AutoCAD coordinate system. Move, delete, and copy binary raster entities and areas on raster images.

Starting Raster Design


Raster Design runs seamlessly with AutoCAD. The Raster Design setup program automatically creates an icon that you can use to start both programs. To start the Raster Design programs
Steps 1 To initialize AutoCAD and Raster Design, select the Raster Design icon. 2 Select Image Insert to insert an image or select Image Options to configure Raster Design. Inserting Images Configuring Raster Design Use to locate

NOTE For complete instructions on installing Raster Design, see Appendix A,


Installing Raster Design on page 109.

Using Raster Design

17

Configuring Raster Design


Search Help for
Configuring Raster Design

The options in the Raster Design Options dialog box control Raster Design settings, paths, memory, and the default correlation information for new images, image masks, and vector merge. These settings affect the entire drawing and all images that are inserted into the drawing. To access the Raster Design Options dialog box, and select Image Options, or type ioptions.

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Chapter 2

Getting Started

Key Concepts: Configuring Raster Design


You use the Raster Design Options dialog box to configure Raster Design. The dialog box consists of the following tabs:
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Paths sets the path for correlation files and the AutoPaste feature. User Preferences controls image detachment, message display options, and the mouse settings. This tab also allows you to set default Startup options. Feature Settings sets the option to save a thumbnail with your image. This tab also controls locking settings, Remove Under settings, and the rub/crop line width. Image Defaults sets the default correlation information for an image, such as insertion point, scale, rotation, and density value. Memory specifies a temporary swap file for Raster Design to use if it runs out of RAM. This tab also allocates the amount of system RAM to be used for images. New Image sets the default values for the creation of a new image, including image properties and default color type. Vector Merge sets the default behavior for future vector merge operations, including expanding an image and respecting the display order. REM sets the default properties for REM Objects, including clipboard settings and REM Object color. Raster Entity Detection sets the default values for detecting various types of raster geometry using either single-pick or multi-pick methods. Image Mask sets the default property values for future image masks, including turning the mask on and off, showing how the mask affects the images in the drawing, and defining the mask boundary. VTools General sets the default options for most of the vectorization tools, including the removal method; Line, Circle, Arc and Polyline settings; and the vector separation table which allows you to assign layers and polyline widths based on the width of the raster being traced. VTools Follower sets the default options for the follower-enabled vectorization tools, including the follower color, and the settings for contours and 3D polylines.

Configuring Raster Design

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Accessing the Raster Design Commands


You can access the Raster Design commands from the Image menu, the shortcut menu, the toolbar, or the command line. We suggest you experiment with all options to determine which you prefer.

Image Menu
All Raster Design menu commands are located in the Image menu. The following chart outlines the commands you can access through the Image menu, with sources for more information. Image menu commands
Command name New Functions Displays the New Image dialog box, which you can use to define the frame and properties for an image you want to create. In this manual: see Creating New Images on page 32. Related Help topics:
s Creating New Images s New Image Tab s New Image Dialog Box

Insert

Displays the Insert Image dialog box that is used to insert images into your current AutoCAD drawing. Here you can also access the Correlation Function, which also allows easy image correlation through the Correlation Wizard. In this manual: see Inserting Images on page 34. Related Help topics:
s Insert Image Dialog Box s Inserting Images s Correlating Images

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Getting Started

Image menu commands (continued)


Command name Save, Save As, and Export Functions Commands that you can use to export an image to a different file format, save an image without saving the drawing, save an image to another file name, location, or file type, or export the correlation data associated with the image. In this manual: see Saving Images on page 39 and Exporting Images on page 40. Related Help topics:
s Saving an Image by Exporting s Saving Images s Saving an Image to Another File Name, Type, or Location

Correlate

Commands you can use to correlate your image, by matching, moving, scaling, or rubbersheeting. In this manual: see Correlating Images on page 54. Related Help topics:
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Changing the Image Scale and Rotation Moving an Image Deskewing an Image Scaling an Image Rubbersheeting an Image

Manage

Displays the Image Manage dialog box you can use to display information about images or insertions, to change display order of your insertions, to zoom to an image, to erase an image, to change the active or saved path, and so on. In this manual: see Setting Up Your Data on page 44. Related Help topics:
s Managing Images s Managing Images and Insertions

Cleanup

Commands you can use to correct errors that may occur during the scanning process. You can deskew, despeckle, invert, mirror, or adjust an images bias. In this manual see: see Enhancing Images Using Image Processing and Cleanup Commands on page 61. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Cleaning Up Images

Accessing the Raster Design Commands

21

Image menu commands (continued)


Command name Image Processing Functions Commands you can use to enhance the appearance of your image or convert an image to a different image type: histogram, convolve, bitonal filters, Change Density, Change Color Depth, and Palette Manager. In this manual: see Enhancing Images Using Image Processing and Cleanup Commands on page 61. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Image Processing

Raster Entity Manipulation

Commands you can use to define and manipulate raster entities. REM edits binary, color, and grayscale raster data. Unlike commands such as mirror, histogram, and invert, which operate on a whole image, REM commands can be used to edit small sections of an image. In this manual: see Editing Raster Using REM on page 72. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Overview of Raster Entity Manipulation (REM) tools s Manipulating a REM Object

Mask

Displays the New Image Mask dialog box that is used to create a mask. In this manual: see Masking Images on page 50. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Masking Images

Crop

Commands you can use to crop images. Options are provided for cropping a line, a circular region, a rectangular region, a diagonal region, and a polygonal region. In this manual: see Rubbing and Cropping on page 65. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Cropping Images

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Getting Started

Image menu commands (continued)


Command name Remove Functions Commands you can use to rub a raster line, rub multiple line segments, rub a donut, rub an arc, rub within a polygon region, rub within a diagonal region, rub within a rectangle region, or remove using existing geometry. In this manual: see Rubbing and Cropping on page 65. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Rubbing Images

Merge

Commands you can use to merge images or vector data, and select raster pens widths. In this manual: see Merging Images on page 68. Related Help topics:
s Modifying Images s Merging Images s Merging Vectors into a Raster Image

Vectorization Tools

Commands you can use to convert a raster arc, circle, text, line, polyline, rectangle, or contour to vector. In this manual: see Converting Raster to Vector on page 91. Related Help topics:
s Converting Raster Entities to Vector

Recognize Text

Commands you can use to convert raster text to AutoCAD text. In this manual: see Converting Raster Text to AutoCAD Text on page 101. Related Help topics:
s Changing Text Using Text Recognition

Snap

Displays the Raster Snap tab you use to set the snapping mode. In this manual: see Snapping to Binary Raster Entities on page 88. Related Help topics:
s Raster Snapping s Raster Snap Tab s Specifying Raster Snap Settings

Accessing the Raster Design Commands

23

Image menu commands (continued)


Command name Toggle Frames Functions Changes the visibility of the image frame. Related Help topics:
s Configuring Raster Design s Changing the Image Frame Visibility

Toggle Quick Bar

Changes the visibility of the Quick Bar. Related Help topics:


s Configuring Raster Design s Changing the Quick Bar Visibility

Options

Displays the Raster Design Options dialog box that you can use to configure Raster Design. In this manual: see Configuring Raster Design on page 18. Related Help topics:
s Raster Design Options Dialog Box s Configuring Raster Design s Setting the Options

Help

Displays the Raster Design Users Guide in Help.

Raster Design Home Opens the Raster Design home page on the Internet, if you have Page an internet connection and browser: http://www.autodesk.com/rasterdesignuser About Raster Design Displays Raster Design licensing information.

Toolbar
Search Help for
Raster Design Toolbar

With the Raster Design toolbar, you can access commands quickly. When you pass your mouse over a tool icon, the name of the tool is displayed so you can find out what the tool is used for. More detailed information about a tool, such as the equivalent command you can type on the command line, is displayed on the AutoCAD status bar at the bottom of the screen. If you close a toolbar and want to display it again, hold the pointer over any tool in an AutoCAD toolbar and right-click, then select the toolbar you want from the shortcut menu.

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Getting Started

Command Line
You can run most Raster Design commands by typing their names on the command line. Many Raster Design commands start with the letter i. For example, to run the histogram command, type ihistogram on the command line. For a detailed list of all the Raster Design commands, see Appendix D, Raster Design Command Summary on page 145 in this manual. For each topic that is described in Help, the menu path for the command is listed as well as the command line equivalent.

Using AutoCAD Imaging Commands


Search Help for
Use AutoCAD Commands on Images

AutoCAD imaging commands and Raster Design commands are fully compatible with each other. The primary differences between them are based on their image editing capabilities and the methods they provide to insert, manage, and correlate images. AutoCAD has basic imaging commands you can use to insert images, clip images, and adjust image appearance. AutoCAD command
IMAGE IMAGEADJUST IMAGEATTACH IMAGECLIP IMAGEQUALITY IMAGEFRAME TRANSPARENCY

What you can use it for


Attach, detach, load, reload, and unload images. Adjust the brightness and contrast of an image, and fade the image (display-only adjustments). Attach (or insert) images. Clip an image so that only a selected polygonal area of the image is displayed. Change between high and draft display modes. Turn frames on and off. Turn transparency on and off.

NOTE AutoCAD commands are shown in UPPERCASE. Raster Design commands have an initial capital letter, for example, Histogram. When you type a Raster Design command on the command line, the letter i precedes the command name.

Using AutoCAD Imaging Commands

25

The next sections describe the differences between AutoCAD imaging commands and Raster Design commands.

Image Editing
Using the AutoCAD imaging commands, you can modify image display values such as brightness and contrast, and you can clip an image so that only part of the image is displayed in the drawing. However, these adjustments affect only how the image appears in your drawing. You cannot use AutoCAD by itself to permanently edit the image pixels. Raster Design was designed to work with AutoCAD so that you can permanently edit your images. For example, if you make adjustments to the brightness and contrast of an image using the Raster Design Image Editing Filters Histogram (ihistogram) command, you can save the edits to the image file itself. Then, whenever you open a drawing that contains that image file, the image appears with the correct brightness and contrast values. If, on the other hand, you use the AutoCAD IMAGEADJUST command to adjust the brightness of an image and you have the same image inserted into another drawing, you must repeat the same changes to the image in the other drawing.

Image Insertion and Correlation


Images you insert using the AutoCAD IMAGE command are completely compatible with images you insert using the Raster Design Image Insert (iinsert) command. For example, if you insert images using the Raster Design Insert command and you then save the drawing, the images are displayed and correlated if you open the drawing using AutoCAD without Raster Design. Unlike AutoCAD, Raster Design respects correlation from various sources. Whenever you insert an image using the Insert, Raster Design searches for correlation files that are associated with that image. Then you can decide which source to use. These correlation sources include correlation that was saved in the image file, resource files, world files, and the defaults that you specify in the Raster Design Options dialog box. Using AutoCAD alone, you must manually specify the correlation data.

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Chapter 2

Getting Started

Image Manage
AutoCAD stores only one definition of each image you insert into a drawing, even if you have multiple copies of the same image in the drawing. The definition is referred to as the image, while each copy is referred to as an insertion. You can manage the images and insertions in your drawing using the Raster Design Image Manage (imanage) dialog box. Using the Images tab of the Image Manage dialog box, you can attach, detach, load, and unload images. Attaching an image is equivalent to inserting an image. Unloading an image removes the image from memory, speeding up system performance. Using the Insertions tab of the Image Manage dialog box, you can change the display order of the images, zoom to an image, and erase an image from the drawing. Each image you insert into the drawingwhether it is a copy of an image or an unnamed image you created by merging two images together is listed in the Image Manage dialog box. This is helpful if you have more than one copy of an image in your drawing.

Key Concepts: Imaging Commands


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When you use the AutoCAD IMAGEATTACH command, you attach an image to the drawing. If this terminology sounds familiar to you, it is because AutoCAD uses a similar attach option to link xrefs to an AutoCAD drawing. You cannot actually edit the raster data of an image using AutoCAD without Raster Design. To permanently edit an image, you must use an image editing program like Raster Design.

Using AutoCAD Commands on Your Images


Because image frames are treated as AutoCAD objects, you can modify your images using many of the AutoCAD commands you already know, such as MOVE, COPY, ROTATE, and SCALE. Using AutoCAD grips, you can select image frames and vectors and then choose an editing command. You can edit both raster images and vector objects at the same time by including both in your selection set.

Using AutoCAD Commands on Your Images

27

NOTE You can use the AutoCAD UNDO command for up to ten Raster Design image edits. This limit applies to edits that actually change raster data, not to display-only changes. Some of the commands that are affected by this limit are REM, Histogram, Rub, Crop, and Rubbersheet.
This table lists some frequently used AutoCAD commands. AutoCAD command
REGEN

What you can use it for


Restore the correct display order of images. When you edit an image, the image is placed on top of any other images or vectors in your drawing. Use the AutoCAD REGEN command to restore the images to their correct order. Control the display of images. You can insert each image on a different layer and then use the LAYER options to turn the image layers on or off, freeze them, change their colors, or lock them to prevent the images on them from being edited. Zoom to images and pan across images. Undo the effects of a Raster Design command. Rotate the UCS to any degree to view the images at a different angle. NOTE You cannot edit an image if you use the VPOINT command to change the drawing viewpoint to anything other than 0,0,1.

LAYER

ZOOM and PAN UNDO DVIEW

PLOT GRIP EDIT SCALE OSNAP(s)

Plot an image. Edit an image using grip editing commands. Scale a REM Object. Snap to image frames and REM objects.

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Getting Started

Exiting the Programs


When you have completed your editing session, you can exit AutoCAD and Raster Design, or you can start a new editing session by opening an existing drawing or creating a new drawing. You can exit AutoCAD and Raster Design by using any of the following methods:
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Select File Exit. Type exit or quit. Click the close box in the upper-right corner of the AutoCAD window.

When you exit, you will be prompted to save your drawing and any edits you have made to the images. Any image correlation information, such as insertion point, scale, and rotation, is saved in the drawing file. Any edits you have made to the images are saved in the image files.

NOTE Use the Image Export (iexport) command if you want to save the
correlation information to a separate file. You have the option to save edits you made to your images, or you can discard any unsaved edits by skipping over a specific image you edited. The Save Image dialog box is displayed when you save or exit a drawing with images you have edited.

You can use these options to save all edited images, skip all edited images, or save selected images before exiting the programs.

Using AutoCAD Commands on Your Images

29

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Chapter 2

Getting Started

Creating, Inserting, and Saving Images

3
In this chapter
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After you are familiar with the basics of Raster Design, you are ready to begin working with your images. This section describes the various methods of saving your image data, so that your image files are in the correct format when they need to be used again.

Creating new images Inserting raster images into AutoCAD drawings Saving images Exporting your data

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Creating New Images


Search Help for
Creating New Images Configuring Raster Design

You can create a new blank image that you can use with the Image Merge and Vector Merge commands. When you create a new image, you begin by defining an image frame. After you have created a new image, you must save it to establish a link between the drawing and the image file. To create a new image with Raster Design
Steps 1 From the menu, select Image New. 2 In the New Image dialog box, click Pick and specify two points on the screen to draw a frame.

3 In the AutoCAD Properties section, enter the correlation information insertion point, scale, and rotation.

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To create a new image with Raster Design (continued)


Steps 4 In the Color Type section, choose one of the following options when you create a new image:
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Bitonal. Image that contains only two colors. Grayscale. Image that contains up to 256 shades of gray. Indexed Color. Image that contains up to 256 different colors. True Color. Image that contains over 16.7 million colors. This type uses more system resources.

5 In the Image Properties section, specify the width and height of the new image in pixels per unit of measurement. 6 Enter a value to define the density of the new image. 7 Turn off Show This Dialog to access the command line. 8 Use the default insertion point coordinates you set in the Raster Design Options dialog box. 9 Type inew to define the properties of the image that you want to create. When you want to define the properties for more than one new image, use the New Image configuration tab on the Raster Design Options dialog box.

Key Concepts: Creating a New Image


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You can create a new image that contains binary, grayscale, indexed color, or true color. You can preview the properties of the new image before you insert it. You can create a new image using the Raster Design Image New (inew) command. You can turn off Show This Dialog to access the command line interface.

Creating New Images

33

Inserting Images
Search Help for
Inserting Images

You can insert any number of raster images into an AutoCAD drawing. When you insert an image, it is placed in a frame, and a link is created between the drawing and the image file. When you insert one image with the Raster Design Image Insert (iinsert) command, the Insert Image dialog box is displayed. On the right side of the dialog box, you can preview the image and information such as file type, color depth, density, and so on. The column of folders along the left side of the Insert Images dialog box is called the Places List. It contains shortcuts to local folders such as your Favorites folder or My Documents folder (or Personal folder, depending on which operating system you are using). The Places List also includes a History folder which displays the folders you have used most recently.

Search Help for


Inserting an Image From the Internet Using the Insert Image Dialog Box

If you have Microsoft Internet Explorer (version 4.71 or higher), and access to the Internet, you can open image files from the Internet. There are several ways to access images from the Internet:
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Click the Search the Web icon at the top of the dialog box to display the AutoCAD Web browser, with which you can specify an Internet location and select an image to insert. Click the Buzzsaw icon in the Places List to access projects hosted on Buzzsaw.com. Click the FTP icon to browse FTP sites and select an image to insert.

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Creating, Inserting, and Saving Images

Search Help for


Correlating Images During Insertion Transform Page

When you insert an image, that image must be correlated in the drawing. Correlation is simply a means of positioning the image using known coordinates. You can correlate your inserted image in three different ways during the insertion process as shown in the following illustration.

Show Frames Only and Zoom to Image are always available and are independent of Correlation. If you select Show Frames Only, only the image frame will be inserted into your drawing. If you select Zoom to Image, Raster Design zooms to the extents of the image after it is correlated. You can use Quick Insert for automatic correlation during image insertion. Quick Insert uses the highest order correlation source available to perform the image insertion. There are no options to specify with Quick Insert; the image is simply inserted after you click Open on the Insert Image dialog box. You can change the default correlation information by using the Image Defaults tab on the Raster Design Options dialog box. For the new or intermediate Raster Design user, the Correlation Wizard is recommended. Because the Wizard goes through the correlation process step by step, it helps you to understand the different correlation options required for proper image insertion. The Correlation Wizard is the default Insert Option. You can use the Correlation dialog box if you are an experienced user and want to quickly establish correlation parameters with minimal keystrokes. If you are unsure about the correlation options required for proper image insertion, you may want to use the default, the Correlation Wizard. If you choose to use the Correlation dialog box, any changes you make are incorporated the next time you use the correlation feature. If you choose the Correlation Wizard, or the Correlation dialog box, you are prompted with three pages:
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Pick Correlation Source Modify Correlation Values Insertion

If you are running Autodesk Map or Autodesk Land Desktop, you will also be prompted with the Transform Page.

Inserting Images

35

Pick Correlation Source Page


Search Help for
Pick Correlation Source Page

When you insert an image, Raster Design searches for all available correlation files for the image and displays them in the Correlation Source list.

Depending on what type of image you are inserting and whether or not a resource file or a world file exists for the image, you might see the following sources listed.
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Image File: For certain types of images, correlation data can be saved as part of an image file. These file types include RLC, IG4, IGS, GeoTags in GeoTIFF, or HDR File in SPOT. Resource File: Can be created by the Raster Design Export command or previous versions of Raster Design ESP. Resource files have an .res file extension. World File: Can be created by the Raster Design Export command for all image formats. World files have different file extensions, depending on file type. Image Defaults: The values you set in the Raster Design Options dialog box.

The information displayed on the Pick Correlation Source page reflects the values stored in the correlation source you have chosen.

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Modify Correlation Values Page


Search Help for
Modify Correlation Values Page

You can use the Modify Correlation Values Page to specify the correlation values of insertion point, scale, and rotation for a specific insertion. Although you start with the values read from the correlation file and then modify them for a specific image insertion, the original correlation values stored in the file are not modified.

NOTE If you are running Raster Design on Autodesk Map or Autodesk Land
Desktop, Density Units appear only if a global coordinate system is not set. You can modify the correlation source values by entering new values or by pasting values from the clipboard.

Insertion Page
Search Help for
Insertion Values Page

You can use the Insertion Page to view and change the AutoCAD insertion point, scale, and rotation after any unit conversions have been applied. You might need to change an images scale by reducing or enlarging it. For example, you may want to change a scale in reference to the zoom factor you are using in AutoCAD.

Inserting Images

37

The Insertion page is used when you want to apply a coordinate system transformation. You may change the existing values by entering new ones or by manually picking coordinates from the screen. You can also change the color of the image.

Search Help for


Inserting Images Inserting an Image Using the Command Line

With the Raster Design Insert command, you can insert several images at the same time. When you select more than one image to insert, the default correlation information (from a resource file, world file, image file, or insertion defaults) is used to automatically position the images. This option is very useful when you have a group of images, such as tiled quadrant sheets, that have correlation data stored with the images.

Key Concepts: Insert


s s s

You can insert binary, grayscale, and up to 32-bit color images. You can preview an image and view its statistics before you insert it. You can insert images using either the Raster Design Image Insert (iinsert) command or the AutoCAD IMAGE command. However, if you want to insert an image using a correlation source such as a resource or world file, then you must use the Raster Design iinsert command. If you set the AutoCAD FILEDIA variable to <0>, then you can bypass the Insert Image dialog box when you insert an image. After you enter the Insert command on the command line, simply type the name of the image you want to insert.

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Saving Images
Search Help for
Saving Images

There are a few methods you can use to save an image you have edited. One method is to save your drawing file using the AutoCAD SAVE command. With this command, you will be prompted to save the images you have edited. Because there is a link between the drawing and the image files, the image data is not stored in the drawing file, but in a separate file on disk. You can also choose to save an image without saving the drawing file by using the Image Save (isave) command. You can use this command to save more than one image at a time. If you want to save an image to a different name, file type, or location, then you can use the Image Save As (isaveas) command. Using this command, you can convert a read-only file to a file you can edit.

Key Concepts: Saving Images


s

When you save your drawing using the AutoCAD SAVE command, the correlation information (insertion point, rotation, scale, and image filename) is saved in the drawing file. Edits you have made to the images are saved in the image files. When you use AutoCAD SAVE, you are prompted to save only the image files you have edited. You have the option of either saving each edited image individually, or saving all of the edited images in your drawing. You can skip over an image if you dont want to save the changes you made. If a new image has been created in your drawingby using the inew command, the vmerge command, or a REM command, you will be prompted to name the new image when you save the drawing. If you use the AutoCAD IMAGE command to detach an image, which erases all references to it in the drawing, Raster Design first checks to see if the image has been edited. If so, you are prompted to save the image before continuing. You can cancel the Detach command, you can save the edits, or you can detach the image without saving the edits.

Saving Images

39

Exporting Images
Search Help for
Saving an Image by Exporting

When you save an AutoCAD drawing file containing a raster image, the image correlation data is saved in the drawing file. Therefore, the next time you open the drawing, the image is displayed with the correct insertion point, scale, and rotation angle. This correlation data is saved only in the drawing file, not in the image file itself. If you want to insert the image into another drawing and use the same correlation data for the image, you can manually correlate the image again, or you can save time by creating a correlation file for the image. Then, the next time you insert the image into a drawing, you can simply choose the correlation file as the correlation source, and the image is positioned, scaled, and rotated correctly. No additional correlation is required. To create a correlation file to use in other drawings or programs, you can export the image using the Image Export Image (iexport) command. When you export an image, not only can you create a correlation file for the image, but you can also save the image with a different name, file format, or location. You can also export the correlation file itself, without exporting the associated image using the Image Export World (iworldout) command. The resulting world file retains the file name of the associated image, but the file extension is modified to indicate that the file is a world file (for instance, exporting a world file for the image lakshor.tif will create the file lakshor.tfw). You can choose the type of correlation data you want to create by using the Export Options dialog box.

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For all image types, you can save the correlation data as a resource file or a world file. For certain image types, you can also save correlation information within the image file itself.

Key Concepts: Exporting Images


s

When you export an image, you have the option of maintaining the link between the drawing and the newly saved image by selecting Maintain Drawing Link to Image. If you dont specify a different image name, file format, or file location when you export the image, maintaining the link has no effect. However, if you do change any of these variables, a new image file is created. The new image file will replace the image file that currently exists in the drawing (if the Maintain Drawing Link to Image check box is selected). For example, if Maintain Drawing Link to Image is selected when you export image.tif, and you specify picture.tif as the new filename for the exported image, picture.tif replaces image.tif in your drawing. If Maintain Drawing Link to Image is not selected, image.tif remains in the drawing and picture.tif is saved to the file you specified.

When you export an image and choose Resource File as the correlation output type, a resource file with the extension .res is created for the image in the path specified in the Raster Design Options dialog box. You can create resource files for all image types.

NOTE Resource files are specific to Raster Design. If you want to create a correlation file that can be used by other programs, you need to create a world file.
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When you export an image and choose World File as the correlation output type, a world file is created for the image in the same directory where the image is located. You can create world files for all image types. You can insert a read-only image into a drawing and then save it to a readwrite format using the Export command or the Save As command. However, only the Export command saves the image correlation information. When you export rotated images, Raster Design gives you the option to burn in the rotation, which means that, although the image still appears rotated, it is inserted into a frame with a rotation of zero.

Exporting Images

41

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Setting Image Properties

4
In this chapter
s

In this chapter, you will learn how to manage your images for maximum efficiency as you work. From the Image Manage dialog box, you can manage image files, change their display order or their active

Setting up data about each image in your drawing Changing image propertieslayer, color, linetype, and display Making a color transparent Masking images

path, even export images to the internet.

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Setting Up Your Data


Search Help for
Managing Images

When you first insert an image into your drawing, you create one instance of that image (called an insertion) in the drawing. If you place copies of the same image in the drawing, each copy is treated as a separate insertion of the same image. The Image Manage dialog box is divided into two tabs that allow you to control attributes for insertions and images separately: You can use the Insertions tab to:
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change the display order of insertions preview insertions erase insertions show or hide insertions save or export insertions zoom to insertions

You can use the Images tab to:


s s s s s

show the relationship of images and insertions in the drawing rename images detach images unload or reload images change or save the active path in the drawing

From the Image menu, select Manage.


Click the buttons to move selected insertions forward or back in the display order list. Right-click on an image name to display the shortcut menu.

NOTE You can click the Help button in the dialog box to see a Help topic that
describes each column of this dialog box.

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To manage images with the Image Manage dialog box


Steps 1 Insert two images into your drawing so that one of the images is on top of the other image. 2 Select Image Manage to display the Image Manage dialog box. The last image you inserted is at the top of the list. 3 On the Insertions tab of the Image Manage dialog box, select the second image, then use the Move Forward button to move the second listed image name up in the list so that it is now above the other image name. The image is now displayed on top of the other image instead of below it. 4 From the list, select the name of one of the images, and click Zoom To. This option is helpful if you insert an image using an insertion point that is outside your current AutoCAD display window, or if you insert an image using a different scale factor. 5 With the image name still selected, click Properties. In the AutoCAD Properties dialog box you can adjust color, layer, and linetype information, and pick the transparency color. Changing Image Properties Zooming to an Image Changing the Display Order of the Images Use to locate

Inserting Images

Managing Images and Insertions

Key Concepts: Image Manage


s s s

To access the Image Manage dialog box, you can select Image Manage, or you can type imanage. If you have edited an image but not yet saved it, an asterisk (*) is displayed next to the image name. After you save the image, the asterisk disappears. If there is more than one insertion of an image in your drawing, the Image Manage dialog box numbers the insertions. For example, if there are two insertions of cadplot.tif in your drawing, then you would see cadplot and cadplot:1 listed.

Setting Up Your Data | 45

If you edit an insertion of an image, such as cadplot:2, the naming convention changes to indicate that the image has been edited. The image is then listed in the Image Manage dialog box as cadplot_1*. The image listed first in the Image Manage dialog box is displayed on top of all other images it overlaps. The image that is listed last is displayed under images that overlap it. To modify this order, drag the names of the images up or down in the list.

TIP You can also use the AutoCAD to modify the display order. From the
AutoCAD Tools menu, choose Display Order. Because images are also AutoCAD entities, an image that you edit appears to be placed on top of other images and vectors, even though the image display order has not actually been changed. Use the AutoCAD REGEN command to restore the images and vectors to their correct order.

Changing Layer, Color, Linetype, and Display


Search Help for
Changing Image Properties

Each image in your drawing has properties you can control. You can access all of the image and mask properties on AutoCADs Properties dialog box.

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Raster Design - specific properties include:


s s s s s s s s

Color Linetype Brightness Contrast Show image Show clipped image Show non-ortho Transparency color

It is recommended that you use the AutoCAD Properties dialog box to manipulate your images. This combines AutoCAD functionality with that of Raster Design, providing an environment that is easy to use. For more information on AutoCADs Properties dialog box, see AutoCAD 2002 Command Reference in the AutoCAD Help or printed AutoCAD 2002 Users Guide.

Key Concepts: Image Properties


s s s s s s

You can select an image in the drawing, right-click, and then select Properties to access the AutoCAD Properties dialog box. Each image has its own properties. However, you can select multiple images and set all their properties at the same time. Color selects a transparency color for a grayscale or color image and turns transparency on and off. Layer moves the selected image(s) to another layer. Linetype chooses a different linetype for the image frame. Display controls whether the image or only the frame is displayed in the drawing, whether to use color or display in transparency color, whether clipped areas are displayed, or whether images rotated at an angle other than 0, 90, 180, 270 (nonortho images) are displayed.

Changing Layer, Color, Linetype, and Display | 47

Applying Transparency Color


In binary images, the transparency color is always the background color of the image. In color and grayscale images, you can choose which color to make transparent. You can selectively turn on transparency. When transparency is on, the image pixels that are drawn in the transparency color become transparent. When transparency is off, the pixels become solid again. To make a color transparent
Steps 1 Select a color or grayscale image, right-click and select Properties to access the AutoCAD Properties dialog box. 2 On the Category tab, click Transparency and choose Yes. Use to locate

Selecting an Image

3 To choose a color to make transparent, select a color image, right-click and select Properties to access the AutoCAD Properties dialog box. 4 On the Category tab, select Transparency Color and click to display the Transparency Color dialog box.

Changing the Transparency Color of an Image

5 Click Select< to choose a transparency color. Now you can see through pixels drawn in the transparency color.

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Transparency on When transparency for the parcel map is enabled, you can see the underlying aerial photograph.

Transparency off When transparency for the parcel map is disabled, you cannot see the underlying aerial photograph.

Aerial photographs under a parcel map

You can make only one color in each image transparent. The transparency color has three uses:
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You can make all pixels of a specified color transparent. For example, if you specify black as the transparency color for an image, then you can make each black pixel in the image transparent. Any time you use Rub or Crop, the rubbed or cropped areas are displayed in the transparency color. For example, if you choose blue as the transparency color, all rubs are displayed in blue. If you turn on transparency for that image, the rubbed areas become transparent. For more information, see Rubbing and Cropping on page 65. When you merge two images together, any blank space is filled with the transparency color of the destination image. For more information, see Merging Images on page 68.

Key Concepts: Transparency Color


s

You can make one color in each grayscale and color image transparent by selecting a transparency color for the image. To make the color transparent, select Yes to Transparency in the AutoCAD Properties dialog box. To turn off transparency, select No to Transparency. For binary images, you can turn transparency on or off, which means that the background area on a binary image will be either transparent or solid. You cannot choose a transparency color for a binary image. The transparency color is always the background color. By default, binary

Applying Transparency Color | 49

images are always inserted with transparency on so that the background is transparent. The image pixels are not erased or permanently modified when you make a color transparent. You can restore the original pixel color by selecting No to Transparency in the AutoCAD Properties dialog box.

Masking Images
Search Help for
Masking Images

To display and plot a subset of the images in your drawing, you can use an image mask. An image mask hides, moves, or does not affect the images that are completely outside the mask boundary. The mask boundary is an AutoCAD object that you can move, stretch, scale, and erase like any other AutoCAD object. You can control how the mask affects the images outside the image mask by using the New Image Mask dialog box.

You can mask images using a rectangular or polygonal boundary. For example, in the following illustration, the polygonal mask was created with the Hide Image(s) option.

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The third illustration shows what happens when you select the Show Image Frame(s) option.

Tiled quad sheets, with image frames visible

Polygonal mask

Polygonal mask with image frames visible

Effects of polygonal mask on a group of tiled quad sheets

A mask is similar to an image clip that you can create with the AutoCAD IMAGECLIP command, but a Raster Design mask is more global than a clip because it affects all the images in your drawing instead of only one image. Like a clip, a mask does not permanently modify the images. You can turn off the mask to redisplay all the images. You can also convert the mask to individual image clips. Converting a mask to image clips converts the global mask to clips on each image.

Masking Images | 51

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Image Editing

5
In this chapter
s

When you edit images with Raster Design, you work seamlessly with AutoCAD. You can edit, convert, manipulate, and save images in formats compatible with your application, and you can share images with others.

Correlating images with the AutoCAD coordinate system Rubbersheeting Enhancing images using the Histogram editing filter Enhancing images using image processing and cleanup commands Managing the image palette Selecting images Rubbing and cropping images Merging images

s s

s s s s

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Correlating Images
Search Help for
Correlating an Image After Insertion

Correlating refers to the process of positioning an image within the AutoCAD coordinate system so the scale, rotation, and coordinates match AutoCAD units and coordinates. When you insert an image, you can specify units, position, scale, and rotation for the image. After you insert the image, you can fine tune the correlation by matching the image to existing geometry or even correct distortions in the image that were caused by poor scanning, lens distortion, paralax, and so on. Raster Design has several commands you can use to correlate images after they are inserted. These commands are located in the Image Correlate menu. The correlation commands include the following:
s s s

Match (imatch) for matching the position, scale, and rotation of an image to another image or to existing geometry. Scale (iscale) and Displace (idisplace), for scaling, and moving images (respectively). Rubbersheet (irsheet) for correcting distortions within the image (see the following section, Rubbersheeting an Image After Correlation on page 55).

One way to correlate an image is to use an existing correlation source. To do this, you can select the correlation source when you insert the image. The Insert command opens the Correlation Wizard. The Correlation Wizard searches for any correlation files that might exist, and lists the available files to choose from on the Pick Correlation Source Page.

The Correlation sources that Raster Design can use are resource files, world files, and image files that contain stored correlation information. For more information about inserting images with the Correlation Wizard or the Correlation dialog box, see Chapter 3, Creating, Inserting, and Saving Images on page 31.

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Rubbersheeting an Image After Correlation


Image distortions can sometimes prevent you from aligning an image in your drawing. You can use the Rubbersheet command to:
s s s

Fix distortions in aerial photography caused by aircraft tilt, camera distortion, and unevenness of terrain. Save money on orthophotography when absolute accuracy is not required. Correct most of the distortions in an image resulting from paralax.

Rubbersheeting works by transforming an image so that points you specify in the image match corresponding points in the drawing as closely as possible. These matched points, consisting of a source point in the image, and a destination point in the drawing, are known collectively as control points. You can enter control points by picking them directly from the image, or you can use the Grid tool to make a grid of destination points that you match to their corresponding source points.

NOTE If you are using Autodesk Land Desktop, you can substitute COGO points by typing .P, .G, or .N when Raster Design prompts you to enter destination points. For more information see, Snapping to COGO Points in Help.
Raster Design features two methods for transforming the image:
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The Triangular method uses the control points you enter to triangulate the image, then performs a series of small transformations on those triangular areas. The area to be transformed is called the convex hull and is defined by the outermost destination points. Image data outside the convex hull is discarded. If you want to preserve more image data, you should place control points near the extents of the image. The Polynomial method uses the control points you specify to perform a single transformation based on the entire image. However, the Polynomial method does not always result in perfectly matched control points. The resulting error is expressed as a numerical distance in the Rubbersheet dialog box and is displayed graphically on the image after the control points have been entered. By adjusting the Polynomial Degree upward, you can reduce the error and increase the accuracy of the matching

Correlating Images

55

points. However, this reduced error can create a higher degree of warping as the image is transformed more dramatically to match the control points. Therefore, you should use the lowest possible polynomial degree that still gives you acceptable results. Higher polynomial degrees result in smaller errors at the control points, but also result in more warping in places where there are no control points.

TIP Rubbersheeting is best suited for making minor transformations to an


image. For best results, start with a comprehensive and accurate network of survey control points, then use match and scale before rubbersheeting to get the image as close to the desired results as possible. You should have a good spread of control points over the entire image. When you do not want the image to move, you can specify anchor points.

In the Rubbersheet dialog box, add control points to your image or import a control point file to apply to your image. After your points are added to your image, click Export to save your control point set.

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Key Concepts: Correlating Images


s s s

s s

You can correlate an image when you are inserting it or after it has been inserted into the drawing. You can use the AutoCAD Properties dialog box to modify the insertion point, scale, and rotation of an image. You can use the iscale or idisplace commands to move, or scale the image. These commands allow you to rotate, scale, or move an image based on reference points you select from the raster image. You can also use AutoCAD commands like MOVE, SCALE, and ROTATE to correlate an image. There are two rubbersheeting methods you can use to correct distortions in an image. The Polynomial method transforms the entire image to approximate your control points. The Triangular method transforms the image to exactly match your control points. However, image data outside of the convex hull of control points is discarded. You can save the correlation information by exporting the image after you correlate it. When you export an image, you can create a resource file, a world file, or both, which you or others can use to correlate the image in another drawing or another software program. For more information about exporting, see Exporting Images on page 40.

Enhancing Images Using the Histogram Editing Filters


The Raster Design Histogram is a set of multi-purpose editing filters you can use to permanently change the appearance of grayscale and color images. A histogram is a bar graph that represents the number of pixels per pixel shade in a selected image or images. Dark pixels are shown on the left, grays or midtones are in the middle, and lighter shades are on the right. The number of pixels per pixel shade is represented by the height of the corresponding bar.

Enhancing Images Using the Histogram Editing Filters

57

When you use the Image Image Processing Histogram (ihistogram) command on an image, a histogram is created for that image in the Histogram dialog box, as shown in the following illustration.

The Histogram dialog box has several options you can use to modify the image histogram. For example, you can
s s s s s

Adjust the brightness and contrast of one or more images using the Brightness/Contrast tab. Maximize the image detail using the Equalize tab. Convert grayscale and color images to binary images using the Threshold tab. Convert color images to grayscale using the Color to Grayscale tab. Adjust the contrast in a non-linear fashion using the Tonal Adjustment tab.

The AutoCAD IMAGEADJUST command makes display-only adjustments, but the edits you make to an image using the Histogram command are permanent. Therefore, if you edit the image using the Histogram command,

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save the image, and then insert the image into another drawing, the changes you made with the Histogram command will be respected. You can limit the effect of brightness, contrast, equalizing, or tonal adjustments to a portion of the image called a sub-region. You can define a subregion using one of four methods:
s s s s

Use an existing closed vector entity to define the region. Use an existing image clip. Define a rectangular sub-region by clicking two-points. Define a polygonal sub-region by clicking several points.

For indexed color images (8-bit), histogram changes may effect the image outside the sub-region depending on which sub-region option you select:
s

Retain current palette applies your changes to the sub-region by mapping to the closest colors from the current palette. This option maintains the current palette and will not affect pixels outside the selected region. Rebuild palette with all colors creates a new palette to best accommodate all colors in the entire image. Because this image changes the palette, pixels inside and outside the sub-region may be affected by this option. Rebuild palette with new colors also creates a new palette, but this option guarantees that colors in the sub-region are included in the palette by giving preference to those pixels over pixels outside the sub-region. Because this image changes the palette, pixels outside the sub-region may be affected by this option.

To make tonal adjustments to a portion of an image


Steps 1 Select an image you want to adjust. You can adjust only grayscale and color images using the histogram. 2 Select Image Image Processing Histogram to create the histogram for the image(s) that you selected. 3 Type W and press ENTER, then enter two points to define a rectangular sub-region. The histogram is displayed in the Histogram dialog box. 4 Click the Tonal Adjustment tab, and view the selected image in the Preview area. Making Tonal Adjustments to an Image Use to locate

Selecting an Image

Enhancing Images Using the Histogram Editing Filters

59

To make tonal adjustments to a portion of an image (continued)


Steps 5 In the Select Curve Type drop-down list, choose Fitted, then click and drag on the curve to adjust the contrast in certain parts of the histogram until the image preview appears the way that you want it to. 6 In the Apply Changes To section, select the SubRegion option. 7 If the image is an 8-bit color image, select Rebuild palette with new colors from the Sub-Region Options drop-down list. This option creates a new palette, but guarantees that colors in the sub-region are included in the palette. Because this image changes the palette, pixels outside the sub-region may be affected by this option. 8 Click Close to exit the dialog box. Use to locate

Key Concepts: Enhancing Grayscale and Color Images


s s

s s s

You cannot view a histogram of a binary image because binary images only have two colors. The histogram adjustments affect all images that are currently selected, not just the image displayed in the preview. You can preview how the histogram adjustments will affect an image in the selection set by clicking its name in the list of images. For color images, you can modify all channels (Red, Green, and Blue) together or separately. For indexed color images (8-bit), histogram changes may effect the image outside the sub-region depending on which sub-region option you select. If you make changes to the display of the image using the AutoCAD IMAGEADJUST command, then the image that is saved to disk is displayed in the Histogram Preview area. If you make changes to the image with the ihistogram command, then the IMAGEADJUST controls are reset.

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Enhancing Images Using Image Processing and Cleanup Commands


In addition to the Histogram filters, Raster Design has several other image editing commands in the Image Image Processing and Image Cleanup menus that you can use to permanently edit your images. You can use the Color Depth command to convert images to different color depths. If you are working with a bitonal image, you can use Bitonal Filters to edit your raster drawing. These filters can be used in conjunction with cleanup commands, such as Despeckle (binary images only) and Deskew.

There are several filter types to choose from:


s

Smooth removes unnecessary pixels from the edges of raster objects and fills holes in raster lines.

Thin trims raster objects by one pixel per pass in the direction you specify.

Enhancing Images Using Image Processing and Cleanup Commands

61

Thicken widens the edges of raster objects by one pixel per pass in the direction you specify.

Separate works when raster lines are partially merged, converting them into two distinct lines.

Skeletonize thins all raster data to one pixel in thickness. After you thin your raster data to a one pixel width, you can run the Thicken filter to achieve a uniform width.

To remove speckles from an image


Steps 1 Insert a binary raster image into your drawing that has speckles you want to remove. 2 Select the image. 3 Select Image Cleanup Despeckle. Use to locate

Inserting Images

Selecting an Image Removing Speckles from an Image

4 Type W and press ENTER, then enter two points to define a rectangular sub-region. 5 Type P to pick the speckle size, and select two points to draw a window around the speckle size to be removed. Draw this window as closely as possible around the largest pixel that you want to remove.

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To remove speckles from an image (continued)


Steps 6 Type zoom to see the speckle better. 7 Click any speckles you do not want removed, then press ENTER. 8 If too many pixels are removed, type UNDO and try the command again, using a smaller speckle size. Use to locate

Key Concepts: Image Processing and Cleanup Commands


s s s s

You can invert binary, grayscale, and color images using the Invert command (iinvert), making the light areas dark and dark areas light. You can use the Despeckle command (idespeckle) to remove speckles from a binary image. You can use the Color Depth command (idepth) to convert a color image to grayscale or make other color depth conversions. You can use the Convolve command (iconvolve) to remove certain defects or produce special effects. For example, you can use an edge filter to emphasize a detail such as a fence line. You can mirror images using the Mirror command (imirror).

Managing the Image Palette


Search Help for
Using the Palette Manager

The Palette Manager gives you complete control of the image palette by providing tools that can change, condense, or combine colors, assign transparency, or convert grayscale images to paletted color images. The Palette Manager also gives you detailed information about the palette by displaying and organizing the palette by color, frequency, index, and so on. You can even enact palette standards by importing and exporting external palettes. The Palette Manager displays the palette in two ways:
s

The color table (in the upper portion of the Palette Manager dialog box) displays the palette as an array of color buttons, each representing a separate entry in the palette. Hovering over a color button displays the color value, frequency, and index for that entry. You can click a single color to select it, or you can select multiple colors using standard Windows selection techniques, such as windowing.

Managing the Image Palette

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The list view (in the lower portion of the Palette Manager dialog box) lists each entry in the palette, along with the color values, frequency, index, color, and transparency status for that entry.

Selecting Images
Search Help for
Selecting an Image

To select an image, you can either select the image frame, or press SHIFT while clicking within the image. You can select more than one image at a time using either selection method. Image selection methods
Frame Selection Method How to select an image Click the frame. Use an AutoCAD crossing window to select the frame edge.
SHIFT

+ Left-Click Method

Press SHIFT while clicking the image(s) with the left button of your mouse.

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Image selection methods (continued)


Frame Selection Method What happens AutoCAD grips are displayed at the corners of the image frame.
SHIFT

+ Left-Click Method

If you click more than one image, the Image Select dialog box is displayed so you can select the images you want to include. AutoCAD grips are displayed at the corners of the selected image frame.

Advantages

You can select an image using this method before or after selecting a command. The frame must be visible in the drawing.

You can select an image when image frames are turned off or when you have zoomed in so you cannot see the image frame. You must use this method before selecting a command.

Disadvantages

Key Concepts: Selecting Images


s

If your pointer is positioned over more than one image when you press SHIFT and click the image, the Image Select dialog box is displayed. The images that you have selected are highlighted. You can use this dialog box to clear the selection set, to change the selection set by adding or removing images, or to select all images that are inserted in the drawing. By default, SHIFT + left-click Image Select on the Settings Tab of the Options dialog box is selected. This check box must be selected if you want to select images using the SHIFT + left-click method.

Rubbing and Cropping


You can use the Rub and Crop commands to remove selected areas of binary, grayscale, and color images. Rubs and crops permanently alter an image.
s

A Rub changes the removed pixels to the current transparency color that is set for the image. The rubbed areas become transparent if transparency is enabled for the image. A Crop deletes pixel data outside the selected boundary area. If a crop boundary is not rectangular, for instance when you use the Crop Circular Region command, the area between the crop boundary and the rectangular image frame is filled with the transparency color.

Rubbing and Cropping

65

Rub and crop boundaries can be made up from many different shapes: circles, rectangles, lines, arcs, and polygons. The boundaries can encompass more than one image at a time. In the cropped floorplan illustration, note that the size of the image frame is automatically adjusted when you crop an image.

Original floorplan image

Areas rubbed from floorplan

Cropped floorplan

To rub a color or grayscale image


Steps 1 On a selected color or grayscale image, right-click to display the shortcut menu, and then select Image Properties. 2 Click the Display tab and click Select to choose a transparency color. 3 You can select the Enable Transparency check box to enable transparency, or you can clear this check box to disable transparency. If transparency is disabled, the rubbed area is displayed in the transparency color. If transparency is enabled, the rubbed area will be transparent. 4 Click OK to exit the dialog box. 5 Select Image Remove Rectangular Region. Rubbing Raster Data Within a Rectangular Region Use to locate

Changing the Transparency Color of an Image

6 On the image, choose a rectangular rub boundary. All pixels inside the rub boundary are changed to the transparency color.

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To rub a binary image


Steps 1 Insert a binary image containing linework into your drawing. A good sample image to use is fm.rlc that is in the \samples folder. 2 Type AUTORUB on the command line. To define the rub/crop line width, pick two points, one on each side of the line you want to rub. This step is necessary only if you are rubbing lines, polylines, arcs, or donuts or if you are cropping a line. You can also set the rub/crop line width from the Settings tab of the Raster Design Options dialog box. To rub binary raster entities, you can use raster snaps to accurately select the raster to be rubbed. Raster snaps work only with the active binary image. 3 Select Image Snap and select the End check box to pick the endpoints of the raster line you want to rub. 4 When the crosshairs snap to the point you want to select, click your mouse. 5 Pick a point on the other end of the line to rub the line. Specifying Raster Snap Settings Rubbing a Raster Line Setting the Rub/Crop Line Width Use to locate

Inserting Images

Key Concepts: Rubbing and Cropping


s

s s s

s s

When two images are on top of each other and you rub or crop the visible image, both images are modified. You can lock the layer an image frame is on to prevent the image from being modified. Rubs and crops do not affect vectors in the rub or crop area. The commands affect only raster data. Rubs create either transparent or solid regions, depending on the state of the Enable Transparency check box in the AutoCAD Properties dialog box. When you crop an image using a polygonal or circular crop, all raster data between the image frame and the selected crop boundary is changed to the transparency color. A crop affects only the images you touch with the crop boundary. No images outside of this boundary are affected. You can use the AUTORUB command to set the rub/crop line width, as well as to turn autorub on or off.

Rubbing and Cropping

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Merging Images
You can use the Merge Images (iimerge) command to merge two or more images into one image. Merging images can reduce the number of images you must archive with your project files. To merge images, select a destination image to merge the source images into. Raster Design merges the source images into a single destination image. The properties of the destination image, such as dots per inch (dpi), transparency color, and color depth, determine the properties of the merged result. For example, if the source image has a value of 200 dpi, and the destination image has the value of 400 dpi, the resulting image takes the value 400 dpi. The extents of the destination image are expanded to encompass the source images if necessary. Any background is filled with the transparency color. You can change the transparency color of your image. For more information about changing the transparency color, see Chapter 4, Setting Image Properties on page 43. The following illustration portrays two merged images in AutoCADs Layout1.

Notice that any drawing space, not encompassed by the merged image, is filled with the transparency color.

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To merge raster images


Steps 1 Select Image Merge Merge Images. 2 Select the source images. 3 Select the destination image. You are prompted to remove the source images after the merge. 4 Type Yes to remove the source images. Type No to keep the source images in the drawing. 5 Click Yes to start the merge process. 6 Select Image Write Save As to save the new merged image. Saving an Image to Another File Name, Type, or Location Use to locate

Merging Images

Key Concepts: Merging Images


s s s

You can merge images with different rotation angles. You can merge images of different types (binary, grayscale, or color). Merging respects image clips and display order.

Merging Images

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Working with Raster Data

6
In this chapter
s s s

With the new Raster Design raster editing tools, you can use standard AutoCAD commands and create raster entity manipulation (REM) regions from existing vector geometry. You can enhance bitonal regions and preview and refine images before editing. The new raster snaps improve your productivity, by allowing you to work with multiple images using any command.

Editing raster images using REM Creating REM Objects Merging vector images Snapping to binary raster entities

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Editing Raster Using REM


Search Help for
Overview of Raster Entity Manipulation (REM) Tools Manipulating REM Objects

You can use raster entity manipulation (REM) to edit binary, color, and grayscale raster data. Unlike commands such as Mirror, Histogram, and Invert, which operate on a whole image, REM can be used to edit small sections of an image. For example, you can adjust the radius of a raster circle, remove some dimension lines from a mechanical drawing, or copy electrical symbols from one image to another. With REM, you can create different types of REM objects by selecting raster. These custom objects have replaced the REM selection set of earlier Raster Design releases. REM Objects allow you to treat raster like vector. You can use AutoCAD commands, including MOVE, SCALE, COPY, and ROTATE, to operate on the REM objects you create. You can edit raster images using the same commands, concepts, and operations you would use to edit vector. Use REM to:
s s s s s

Manipulate existing raster to make simple changes Erase a portion of a drawing Move or clip a detail Change the location of something, such as a lot line Store raster-only drawings (rather than hybrid)

REM Objects
There are three types of REM objects: Region Objects, Enhanced Bitonal Region Objects, and Primitive Objects. You can use each of the three types of REM Objects differently as you edit your raster data. You must decide which type of object best suits your editing needs. After you define a REM object, you can use AutoCAD commands and REM commands to modify the object.

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The following illustrations show the raster selected to define each REM object and the resulting REM object.

Region Object
This rectangular region object includes all the pixels within the rectangle: the circle, the portions of the intersecting lines, and the leader line.

Rectangular region selected

Region object defined from the selection

Enhanced Bitonal Region Object


This is an example of an enhanced bitonal region object that was defined using the Smart Crossing Window selection method. This method selects the raster entities within or touching the crossing window: the circle, all the intersecting lines, and the angled leader line.

Region selected using the Smart Crossing Window selection method

Enhanced bitonal region object defined from the selection

REM Objects

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Primitive Object
This is an example of circle primitive object defined using the Smart selection method for selecting primitive objects. Raster Design detects that the selected raster entity is a circle and defines the entity as a circle primitive object.

Entity selected using Smart selection

Primitive object defined from the selection

Types of REM objects


REM object Region object Description Contains all pixels within the region geometry (for example, all pixels within a polygonal region). Contains complete raster entities within the region, determined by the selection method:
s

Image type(s) Bitonal, grayscale, color

Enhanced bitonal region object

Bitonal

Connected method: The raster entities selected are a collection of connected pixels. Smart method: The raster entities selected are the pixels that comprise a raster line, circle, or arc. Bitonal

Primitive object

Contains a single raster line, arc, or circle.

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Region Objects
Search Help for
Defining REM Region Objects

You can use a region to select all of the image pixels within the given geometry. Regions operate on all image typesbitonal, grayscale, and color. You can define a rectangular, polygonal, diagonal, or circular region. On grayscale and color images, regions are hatched so that the object is distinguished from the raster image. A hatch is not necessary for an enhanced bitonal region object because the raster is already highlighted. After you have defined a REM region object, you can use AutoCAD commands to modify it; see Using REM Objects to Edit Raster Images on page 84 in this chapter. After you have completed your changes to the region, you must merge your REM Object back into your original raster image or create a new image; see Merging REM Objects into Existing Images on page 86 and Converting REM Objects to a New Raster Image on page 86 in this chapter. For example, you might want to select a housing development within an aerial photo as a region object. You can then use the region object as a base for your street drawing.

REM region objects


Types of REM regions Rectangular region Polygonal region Diagonal region Circular region From existing vector Use to locate

Defining a REM Rectangular Region Defining a REM Polygonal Region Define a REM Diagonal Region Define a REM Circular Region Defining a Region From Existing Vector

REM Objects

75

Each vertex of a polygonal, rectangular, or diagonal REM region object has a grip. If you move a grip, the entire object moves. Stretching the grip scales the object. There are five grips for each circular region object. There is one grip at the center of the circle, and four on the circumference of the circle. If you move any of the grips, the entire circle moves.

Enhanced Bitonal Regions


Search Help for
Defining REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Objects

You can use an enhanced bitonal region to create a REM object that contains all the pixels within your selection area. After you have defined your Enhanced Bitonal Region Object, you can use AutoCAD commands to modify it; see Using REM Objects to Edit Raster Images on page 84. After you have completed your changes to the region, you must merge your REM Object back into your original raster image or create a new image; see Merging REM Objects into Existing Images on page 86 and Converting REM Objects to a New Raster Image on page 86.

There are several options you can use to define enhanced bitonal region objects from raster entities in bitonal images:
s s s s

Windows and crossing windows Polygons and crossing polygons Fences Connected entities

You can also choose whether the object includes all the connected pixels within the enhanced bitonal region (referred to as the Connected method) or only the pixels that define a line, a circle, or an arc (referred to as the Smart method).

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After you define the enhanced bitonal region object, you can modify the object using AutoCAD commands and REM commands.

NOTE You can use enhanced bitonal regions on bitonal images only.

Selection Options for Enhanced Bitonal Region Objects


Search Help for
Defining REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Objects (see illustration)

You can use one of two different selection options to define an enhanced bitonal region. Both selection methods are modeled after AutoCADs SELECT command, but the behavior of the selection method depends on whether you choose the Connected option or the Smart option. The following examples show the options you can use to define enhanced bitonal region objects using the Smart and Connected options. In these examples, the gray lines show the region that is selected, and the light gray areas show the resulting enhanced bitonal region object. These illustrations are also available in color in the Help.

Enhanced bitonal region objects


Smart selection sets Smart Window A Smart Window selects the raster entities that are entirely within the window. Entities that extend outside the window are not included in the selection. In this example, the leader lines and text are selected. The dimension lines extend outside the window and are not included. Connected selection sets Connected Window A Connected Window selects the raster entities that are entirely within the window and that are not connected to entities extending outside the window. In this example, the text is selected. The leader lines are not selected because they are connected to the dimension lines, which extend outside the window.

REM Objects

77

Enhanced bitonal region objects (continued)


Smart selection sets Smart Crossing Window A Smart Crossing Window selects the raster entities that are within the window and that touch the window. In this example, the leader lines, the text, and the dimension lines are selected. Connected selection sets Connected Crossing Window A Connected Crossing Window selects the raster entities that are within the window, that touch the window, and that are connected to entities that touch the window. In this example, all entities except the text in the upper right are selected. This text is not connected to any entities.

Smart WPolygon A Smart Window Polygon selects the raster entities that are entirely within the polygon. Entities that extend outside the polygon are not included in the selection. In this example, the leader lines and text are selected. The dimension lines and the circle extend outside the polygon and are not included.

Connected WPolygon A Connected Window Polygon selects the raster entities that are within the polygon and that are not connected to entities that extend outside the polygon. In this example, the text is selected. The leader lines are not selected because they are connected to the dimension lines, which extend outside the polygon. The circle also extends outside the polygon.

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Enhanced bitonal region objects (continued)


Smart selection sets Smart CPolygon A Smart Crossing Polygon selects the raster entities that are within the polygon and that touch the polygon. In this example, the leader lines, the text, the dimension lines, and the circle are included in the selection. Connected selection sets Connected CPolygon A Connected Crossing Polygon selects the raster entities that are within the polygon, that touch the polygon, and that are connected to entities that touch the polygon. In this example, all entities except the text in the upper right are selected. This text is not connected to any entities.

Smart Fence A Smart Fence selects the raster entities that touch the fence. In this example, the leader lines and the dimension lines are included in the selection. The text, which is enclosed by the fence but does not touch the fence, is not included.

Connected Fence A Connected Fence selects the raster entities that touch the fence and that are connected to entities that touch the fence. In this example, all entities except the two areas of text are selected. The text does not touch the fence and is not connected to any entities.

REM Objects

79

Enhanced bitonal region objects (continued)


Smart selection sets Connected selection sets Connected Entity A Connected Entity selects a raster entity and any entities that are connected to the entity. In this example, all entities except the two areas of text are selected. This text is not connected to any entities. The crosshairs show the single point used to select the connected entities.

Connected Option
If you use the Connected option to create a REM object, a raster object is defined from a collection of all the image pixels that are all connected. That is, for a given pixel in the raster object, you can get to any other pixel by following ON pixels. This option is the same as the flood fill option found in many image editing programs.

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Connected option
Selection methods window Use to locate

Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Using a Connected Window Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Using a Connected Crossing Window Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Using a Connected Window Polygon Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Using a Connected Crossing Polygon Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Using a Connected Fence Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region Using a Connected Entity

crossing window

window polygon

crossing polygon

fence

entity

Smart Option
If you use the Smart option to create a REM object, a raster object is defined from the pixels that make up a raster line, circle, or arc.

REM Objects

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Smart option
Selection methods window Use to locate

Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region using a Smart Window Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region using a Smart Crossing Window Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region using a Smart Window Polygon Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region using a Smart Crossing Polygon Defining a REM Enhanced Bitonal Region using a Smart Fence

crossing window

window polygon

crossing polygon

fence

NOTE The entity selection method is not available using the Smart option.
You can create a REM primitive object instead. There are four grips on a REM enhanced bitonal region object, one at each vertex. If you move a grip, the entire object moves.

Primitive Objects
Search Help for
Defining REM Primitive Objects

You can use primitive regions on bitonal images. A primitive object is made up of a single raster line, circle, or arc. Primitives are more intelligent than regions and enhanced bitonal regions because their dimensions can be changed. For example, you can change the diameter of a circle and still maintain its original width. You can also use grip stretch commands or AutoCADs Properties dialog box to change the dimensions of your primitive object.

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You can define three types of REM primitive objects from raster entities in bitonal images:
s s s

Line Arc Circle

You can also use Smart Pick to define a primitive object. Raster Design automatically detects the geometry of the selected raster entity and defines the entity as a primitive line, arc, or circle. The following illustrations show selections made using Smart Pick.

Line

Circle

Arc

After you have defined your Primitive Object, you can use AutoCAD commands and REM commands to modify it; see Using REM Objects to Edit Raster Images on page 84. After you have completed your changes to the object, you must merge it back into your original raster image or create a new image from the REM objects; see Merging REM Objects into Existing Images on page 86 and Converting REM Objects to a New Raster Image on page 86.

REM Objects

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Using REM Objects to Edit Raster Images


Search Help for
Using AutoCAD or Raster Design Commands to Manipulate REM Objects

You can use custom REM region objects, enhanced bitonal region objects, and Primitive Objects to edit raster data. There are several ways to work with REM objects. You can use AutoCAD commands, the REM edit mode menu, the REM toolbar, the REM flyout from the Image menu, and the REM command line interface. See Appendix D, Raster Design Command Summary. The following AutoCAD commands can operate on REM objects:
s s s s s s s s s

MOVE GRIP STRETCH ROTATE SCALE COPY MIRROR ERASE UNDO MODIFY

NOTE AutoCAD commands that cannot be used on REM objects are TRIM,
EXTEND, and EXPLODE. When you run an AutoCAD command that causes a REM object to become out of sync with the original image, Raster Design erases the corresponding raster data from the source image. For example, you can define a REM object and then perform the AutoCAD MOVE command. Once the object has been moved, REM deletes the object from the original image. If you want to immediately delete a REM object after defining it, use the AutoCAD ERASE command. See AutoCAD 2002 Help for detailed instructions for using AutoCAD commands.

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Edit Mode Menu


The Edit Mode menu is a shortcut menu that appears when you select one or more REM objects and right-click. The majority of the commands on this menu are AutoCAD commands. To access REM specific commands, choose the REM flyout menu options.

You can use the Edit Mode menu to refine the selection used to create a REM region or primitive, remove subcomponents of the object, toggle transparency, or merge the object into a raster image.
Search Help for
REM Refine Mode

If you select multiple REM objects, you can use only those options that are valid for all of the selected objects. For example, if you select three REM objects and only two of them are in Refine Mode, you cannot use Refine Mode. You can do the following by using the REM Edit Mode menu:
s s s

Convert a REM object into a new raster image Change the transparency Refine the object (REM region and primitive objects only)

Using REM Objects to Edit Raster Images

85

s s

Remove subsections of the object Smooth the object

NOTE These options are also available on the REM toolbar and on the REM
flyout on the Image menu. You can use the Merge to Raster command on your modified REM object. This command takes the raster data that was part of the REM object and makes it a part of the original raster image.

Merging REM Objects into Existing Images


Search Help for
Merge REM Objects into an Image

You can merge your REM objects into an existing image by selecting Image REM Merge To Raster Image. REM merges all selected REM objects into the image they are currently over. If your REM object is not over (or under) an image, a warning message is displayed, stating that the REM object cannot be merged. If your REM object is partly touching the image, the image expands to accommodate the REM object. If your REM object is below the image and you try to merge it, it merges into the image above it. Unlike Vector Merge, display order is not respected. If you have multiple images open, then a message prompts you to select the image you want to merge the REM objects into. For example, your REM object may be over two images or span across two adjacent images.

Converting REM Objects to a New Raster Image


Search Help for
Converting REM Objects to a New RAster Image

You can convert your selected REM objects to a new raster image by selecting Image REM Convert To Raster Image. When you convert your REM objects to a new raster image, you create a new image containing your REM objects. If you have REM objects in the PICKFIRST set, REM respects AutoCADs PICKFIRST Variable. If you do not have REM objects in the PICKFIRST set, Raster Design prompts you to select REM objects. If you select more than one REM object, Raster Design merges the selected REM objects into one raster image; it does not create different raster images for each REM object selected. If your raster image was created from a REM polygonal, circular, or diagonal region, the image is clipped to match the geometry of the REM object. All data outside the clip, but within the boundary of the image, is set to the transparency color.

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Merging Vector
Search Help for
Merging Vectors into a Raster Image

You can use the Vector Merge (ivmerge) command to merge vectors into an existing or new raster image. Vector Merge allows you to make precise changes to your raster image using AutoCAD commands, while keeping your data in a raster format. To merge vectors
Steps 1 Select Image Merge Merge Vector to display the Select objects prompt at the command line. or Type ivmerge. 2 If there is more than one image in the drawing, select the vectors and image you want to merge. If the Prompt to Delete Vector check box is selected on the Vector Merge Default tab, then you will be prompted to delete the vectors. 3 Press ENTER to start the vector merge operation. Use to locate

Merging Vectors into a Raster Image

When you perform Vector Merge, you can select Raster Pen widths for the merge by specifying pen thickness in the Raster Pen Settings dialog box.

Merging Vector

87

Raster pens thicken vector entities when you merge them into the image. Thicknesses are assigned according to the specified entity color. To select raster pen widths for vector merge
Steps 1 Select Image Merge Raster Pens to display the Raster Pen Settings dialog box. or Type rpens. NOTE Type -rpens to access the command line interface. 2 From the Color Index list, select the color(s) whose width you want to modify. 3 Do one of the following to choose your pen width:
s Type your desired width in the Pen Width edit box. s Select Pick< and define the width from your

Use

to locate

Selecting Pen Widths for Vector Merge

AutoCAD screen. The chosen width is displayed in the Pen Width edit box. If you want this width to apply to all of the raster pens, select Use Fixed Width. 4 Click OK to close the dialog box and apply the raster pen settings.

Snapping to Binary Raster Entities


Search Help for
Raster Snapping

Raster snap modes make it easy to select exact positions on binary raster entities. Raster snap modes work like AutoCAD Object Snap modes, except that they snap to raster entities instead of to vector objects. Raster snaps are useful when you want to:
s s s

Trace a raster entity with VTools commands Select a raster entity to rub or crop Select a raster entity to edit with raster entity manipulation (REM) commands

NOTE Raster snapping works only with bitonal images.

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You can use Raster Snap to snap your AutoCAD cursor to the center, end, corner, intersection, or edge of a bitonal raster image. If you choose more than one snap mode, the crosshairs snap to the closest of the possible snap points. When the crosshairs snap to the point you want to select, pick the point. Raster Snap operates in two modes, on and off. When raster snapping is on (active), Raster Design displays a snap window around the AutoCAD cursor. The snap window moves along with the AutoCAD cursor and displays the crosshairs over points to which you can snap. You can use the crosshairs to pick a point.
Search Help for
Changing the Quick Bar Visibility Raster Snap Tab

You can toggle Raster Snap on and off by using the Toggle Quick Bar command from the Image menu. You can access the Raster Snap options on the AutoCAD Drafting Settings dialog box by selecting Tools Drafting Settings and selecting the Raster Snap tab.

Key Concepts: Raster Snapping


Search Help for
Specify Raster Snap Settings s s

To set the snap settings, select Tools Drafting Settings and select the Raster Snap tab or type isnap. A raster entity you want to snap to must be partially within the snap window. The snap window size is pixel dependent. If necessary, change the snap window size so that it is large enough to encompass the entire pixel width of the entity you want to snap to.

Snapping to Binary Raster Entities

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Converting Raster to Vector

7
In this chapter
s s s

The Raster Design vectorization tools make it possible for you to convert raster images into vector. You can use these tools to verify the geometry of the objects you vectorize. The follower tools can even trace complex geometry such as polylines and contours semiautomatically.

Vectorization Tools Follower tools Using vector separation

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Vectorization Tools
Search Help for
Converting Raster Entities to Vector

To get the most out of your binary raster images, you can convert your raster geometry to AutoCAD vectors. This conversion is known as vectorizing an image. Since vectorizing an image can be time consuming, you should consider your plans for the image before deciding whether or not to vectorize it.
s s s

If you only want to archive the image, you dont need to vectorize it. If you want to move, copy, or delete areas of the image, you can use the REM commands to edit the image instead of vectorizing it. If you want to remove portions of the raster image, you can use the Rub, Crop, and REM raster editing commands instead of vectorizing it.

If you cannot easily change the image using the above suggestions, or if you need to use the vector data in AutoCAD or another program, you should vectorize the entities.

Vectorizing and Verifying Dimensions with Vectorization Tools


Raster Design has vectorization tools that you can use to simplify the process of vectorizing raster entities. Each type of vectorization tool is designed to vectorize a corresponding raster geometry type. In many cases, you can convert a raster entity to vector with a single pick. You can also define the vector entity by picking two or more points on the image. After you use a vectorization tool, you can continue to vectorize raster entities using either selection method. There are seven vectorization tools:
s

The line tool converts raster lines to AutoCAD Line entities. The line tool uses two basic selection methods: one-pick, which vectorizes a raster line with a single pick, and multi-pick, which requires you to enter two points to define the start and endpoint of the raster line. The polyline tool converts raster lines to AutoCAD Polyline entities. Like the line tool, you can use two basic selection methods with the polyline tool: one-pick, which vectorizes a raster line with a single pick, and multipick, which requires you to enter two points to define the start and endpoint of the raster line. The rectangle tool converts raster rectangles to vector rectangles. You select points to define the corners and angle of the rectangle and Raster Design creates a closed polyline with the dimensions and orientation you specified.

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The circle tool converts raster circles to AutoCAD Circle entities. You can select the raster circle using several methods, including a one-pick method that vectorizes a raster circle with a single pick. The arc tool converts raster arcs to AutoCAD Arc entities. You can select the raster arc using several methods, including a one-pick method that vectorizes a raster arc with a single pick. The text tool and the mtext tool replace raster text with AutoCAD text or mtext.

NOTE When using one-pick selection for the line, polyline, arc, and circle vectorization tools, Raster Design uses SmartCorrect to increase the precision with which the vectors are created. Depending on the settings you select on the VTools General tab of the Raster Design Option dialog box, Raster Design corrects the resulting vector using the current AutoCAD drafting settings and precision.
Vectorization tools can be used to verify and adjust the dimensions of the vector entities you draw, which is important because the raster image you are vectorizing might not be accurate. The scale may be incorrect, or the image might have been scanned poorly. For example, after you vectorize a line segment, you can check the line length and angle to make sure they are correct. If they arent, you can change the dimensions before you create the next line. To convert a raster line to a vector line
Steps 1 Insert a binary raster image into your drawing. A good sample image to use is fm.rlc in the \samples folder. 2 Select Image Options, then click the VTools General tab and select a VTools Removal setting. As you trace a raster entity, the Raster Design removes, deletes, or preserves the raster line according to the VTools Removal setting you selected. Click OK to exit the dialog box. 3 Select Tools Drafting Settings and select the Raster Snap tab or type isnap and select the appropriate snap modes to aid in your selection of points on the raster. 4 Select Image Vectorization Tools Line. Specifying Raster Snap Settings Use to locate

Inserting Images

Choosing a VTools Removal Setting

Convert a raster line to vector

Vectorization Tools

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To convert a raster line to a vector line (continued)


Steps 5 When the raster snap glyph snaps to the point you want to select, pick the point. The end of the raster line nearest the point you pick is considered the start point and is marked with an arrow glyph. 6 Notice that the length and angle of the line segment are displayed on the command line. If the line is not at the correct angle, type A and press ENTER to verify the angle of the vector line segment you just created. 7 Type M and press ENTER, then select another vector line to match the angle of that vector. 8 If the line is supposed to intersect another vector entity, type X and press ENTER, then click another entity to extend the vector line segment you just created so that it intersects the second entity. 9 Pick another point, or press ENTER to exit the command. Use to locate

The Follower Tools


Search Help for
Converting Raster Entities to Vector

Raster Design features several follower VTools which replace the Line Follower Extension (LFX) tools in previous versions of Raster Design. These follower tools provide a semi-automatic method of tracing the raster geometry you want to vectorize. When you use the contour follower tool, for instance, Raster Design follows the selected contour line, stopping for input only when the follower can no longer proceed on its own (for instance, when it meets a raster endpoint or a label for the contour). This pause is referred to as a decision point. At each decision point, you can provide more information, change course, back up to a previous vertex, stop the follower, and so on. Vectorization tools include three followers:
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The Polyline Follower converts raster polylines to AutoCAD Polyline entities using a follower to trace the raster polyline as you go. The Contour Follower converts raster contours to AutoCAD Polyline entities with elevation, or to contour objects (if you are using Autodesk Land Desktop) using a follower to trace the raster contour as you go.

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When a contour is completed, the contour follower prompts you to enter elevation data. The 3D Polyline Follower traces a defined fence or existing vector polyline, stopping at each point where it intersects raster (called a Raster Impact Point) to prompt for elevation data. The resulting AutoCAD 3D Polyline represents the elevation of the raster contours it intersects.

You can use the contour follower to vectorize a contour and the VText command to convert the text label associated with it.

Contour follower vectorizes contours

Magnified view of new vector

VText vectorizes text

To convert a raster contour to a vector polyline


Steps 1 Insert a binary raster image into your drawing. A good sample image to use is contour.rlc in the \samples folder. 2 Select Image Options. Then click the VTools Follower tab and select Polyline from the Contour Creates drop-down list. Click OK to exit the dialog box. 3 Select Image Vectorization Tools Contour Follower. 4 Select a raster contour. The contour follower traces the contour until it comes to a point where confusing geometry or a raster intersection (if configured to stop at raster intersection) force it to pause for input. This is called a decision point. Convert Raster Entities to Vector Using the Contour Follower Use to locate

Inserting Images

Changing Contour Follower Settings

Vectorization Tools

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To convert a raster contour to a vector polyline (continued)


Steps 5 If you want to manually add a point, type A and press ENTER, then click to add the point to the polyline. 6 If you want to specify a direction for the follower to proceed, type D and press ENTER, then click in the direction you want the follower to proceed. 7 If you want to close the polyline, type C and press ENTER. 8 Enter an elevation for the contour, then press ENTER. 9 You can select another contour to follow, or you press ENTER to exit the command. Use to locate

Using Vector Separation


Search Help for
Changing the General Vector Separation Options

One of the most powerful aspects of vectorization tools is the Vector Separation Options. Rather than managing layers and polyline widths on an entity-by-entity basis, the Vector Separation Options automatically assign these values to the vectors created by vectorization tools. There are two ways to use vector separation:
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You can separate vectors based on the width of the raster lines by using the General tab of the Vector Separation Options dialog box. Most mechanical drawings, for instance, use thinner lines to represent dimension lines, and thicker lines to draw the objects. Vector Separation can place each type of line on its own layer based on the width of the raster lines. Simply specify a range of line widths for the

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raster entity, then assign layer and polyline width values to those ranges. When you use a vectorization tool, Raster Design examines the raster line width and assigns the values you specified for that width to the newly created vectors.

You can assign layer and polyline widths to contours based on their elevation interval using the Contour tab of the Vector Separation Options dialog box. For instance, you might set the elevation interval for major contours to 50, and the elevation interval for minor contours to 10. If you then followed a contour and set the elevation value to 450, the resulting vector contour would be assigned to the major layer. Likewise, if you traced a contour and set the elevation value to 440, the resulting vector would be assigned to the minor layer.

Click Vector Separation on the VTools General tab of the Raster Design Options dialog box to access the Vector Separation Options dialog box.

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To adjust the vector separation options


Steps 1 Insert a binary raster image into your drawing. A good sample image to use is Facil.cal in the \samples folder. 2 Select Image Options. Click the VTools General tab, and then click the Vector Separation button. 3 Click the General tab. 4 In the Width Table section, select the Use Width Table check box. 5 Click Insert Below. 6 With the new row still highlighted, double-click the Maximum cell, then enter a new value. 7 With the new row highlighted, double-click the Layer cell, then select a new layer from the drop-down list. 8 To determine the width of a raster line, click Query Width, then click a raster line. The width is reported in pixels and in AutoCAD units. Click OK to exit the Entity Width Information dialog box. 9 In the default section, select a layer from the Layer dropdown list. Entities which do not meet the line width criteria of the Width Table are assigned to this layer. 10 Click Save As Default to retain the current vector separation settings. Vector separation settings are not saved with the drawing. Unless you save the current settings as the default, they will not be saved for future drawing sessions. Vector separation files have a .vs extension. 11 Click OK to exit the Vector Separation Options dialog box. 12 Click OK to exit the Raster Design Options dialog box. Changing the General Vector Separation Options Use to locate

Inserting Images

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Key Concepts: Vectorization Tools


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s s

Vectorization tools work best when you convert raster to vector on binary images. One-pick selection and follower tools do not work with grayscale or color photographs. The follower commands trace complex raster geometry, such as contours, by relying on interaction from you at key decision points. Before using vectorization tools, adjust the settings in the Raster Design Options dialog box. Use the options on the VTools General and VTools Follower tabs to customize the vectorization tools to your particular needs. For instance, by adjusting the VTools Removal setting, you can choose to delete a preset line width, delete using REM delete (which preserves raster intersections), or you can choose to leave the raster entity in your drawing. By adjusting the Contour Creates setting, you can control whether the Contour Follower creates a polyline or a contour object. Use Vector Separation Options to automatically assign a layer and polyline width to the vectors you create with vectorization tools. You can assign these values based on either raster line width or the elevation of the resulting vectors.

Vectorization Tools

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Converting Raster Text to AutoCAD Text

8
In this chapter
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The Text Recognition commands make it possible for you to convert raster text into AutoCAD Text or Mtext. The results of the text recognition search engine are displayed in a verification window where you can make edits and then insert the new text into the drawing.

Entering Text Recognition settings Recognizing text Recognizing text in a table

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Converting Raster Text


Search Help for
Changing Text Using Text Recognition Entering Settings for Text Recognition

Using the Text Recognition commands, you can convert raster text to AutoCAD Text or Mtext. You can use the Recognize Text command to convert areas of text that are in paragraph form, and the Recognize Table command to convert areas of text in a table. The text recognition commands are useful for:
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extracting data from drawings for catalog purposes. converting notes and specifications from an existing project for use in a new project. converting raster text and raster text in tables to be used in other documents such as Word or Excel.

After you enter settings for the search parameters, the recognized text is displayed in the Verification window where you can edit and format the text.

Settings for Text Recognition


The Text Recognition Setup dialog box has the following three sections:
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Input: In this section you enter the search parameters for the recognition such as the text format, selection shape, language dictionary and language character set. AutoCAD Output: In this section you determine the Output Type, Text Height and Removal Method. Verification Display: In this section you enter the settings to determine how the recognized text is displayed in the Verification window. You have options to enable the Verifier, a box that displays the original raster text in the Edit pane, and also control the re-sizing ratio of the two panes in the Verification window using the Viewer/Editor slide control.

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The Text Recognition Setup is the same for both the Recognize Text and Recognize Table commands.

Verifying Text
The Text (Table) Verification window has two panes, the View pane (upper) where the original raster text is displayed, and the Edit pane (lower) where the recognized text is displayed. After reviewing the recognition results in the Edit pane, it may be necessary to redefine the search parameters. You can return to the Text Recognition Setup dialog box by clicking the Setup button in the Verification window and. You can make corrections to the text directly in the Edit pane, or you can use the Find Next button to display Suspect words and Rejected characters in the Change To box. Suspect words are highlighted in green, rejected characters are highlighted in yellow and characters that the search engine did not recognize are displayed as red tildes. You can choose a word from the Change To drop-down list or type the correct word in the Change To box and then click Replace. No text recognition program is 100% accurate, therefore it is essential that you carefully review all the text in the Edit pane, not only the highlighted areas.

Converting Raster Text

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To convert a raster text to AutoCAD Text


Steps 1 Select Image Text Recognition Recognize Setup. 2 Enter settings for Input, AutoCAD Output, and Verification Display in the Text Recognition Setup dialog box. 3 Click OK. 4 Select Image Text Recognition Recognize Text. 5 Select the area of text for recognition. 6 Review the text in the Text Verification window. 7 Make changes to the text directly in the Edit pane or use the Find Next and Replace buttons. 8 Click OK to insert the text into the drawing. Recognizing Text Entering Settings for Text Recognition Use to locate

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To convert a raster text in a table to AutoCAD Text


Steps 1 Select Image Text Recognition Recognize Setup. 2 Enter settings for Input, AutoCAD Output, and Verification Display. By default the Output Entity is Text. 3 Click OK. 4 Select Image Text Recognition Recognize Table. 5 Select the table for recognition. 6 Review the recognized text in the Text Verification window. 7 Make changes to the text directly in the Edit pane or by using the Find Next and Replace buttons. 8 Click OK to add the table to the image. Recognizing Text in a Table Entering Settings for Text Recognition Use to locate

Key Concepts: Text Recognition


s s s s

Text Recognition allows you to convert areas of text for use in use multiple projects. In the Verification window you can edit and format the recognized text. Search parameters can be redefined from the Verification window. Recognized text can be output to Word or Excel and printed for review.

Converting Raster Text

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Part 11

Installation Guide

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108

Part II

Installation Guide

Installing Raster Design

A
In this appendix
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This appendix includes complete instructions for installing Raster Design, both for single users and for network users worldwide. It is recommended you review all the options before you begin your installation process.

Single-user installation Network administrator installation Your Raster Design CD Checking system requirements Preparing for installation Installation recommendations Where to install your files Unique installation conditions Raster Design program group icons Raster Design menus

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Choosing Your Installation Options


You have two main installation options to choose from: single-user installation and network installation. To decide which installation option best suits your needs, read the following sections: Single-User Installation, and Network Installation. The Network Installation section describes two sub-options: network deployment and client deployment. Read through the common characteristics of both before you consider their advantages and disadvantages.

Single-User Installation
You can install Raster Design as a single-user in a non-network environment. Installing the product directly from the CD allows you to choose the folder where you would like Raster Design to be installed. Compare the advantages and disadvantages of a single-user install to those described in the next section, Network Administrator Installation, to decide which installation best suits the needs of your company.

An installation of Raster Design exists on your computer only.

Advantages
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Does not require a network. Installs all the program files onto your computer, allowing Raster Design to run at its maximum speed. No network dependency. If the network goes down, you can continue to use Raster Design. Complete control over where Raster Design is installed on your computer.

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Installing Raster Design

Disadvantages
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Uses more disk space on your computer. Only your individual computer has Raster Design installed and running, therefore only one person at a time can use it. Decentralizes the use of Raster Design, making product updates more time consuming to install. For example, if an administrator needs to apply a patch to Raster Design, the patch must be applied to each computer that has Raster Design installed.

If you want to install Raster Design as a single-user, refer to Installing SingleUser Raster Design. on page 122.

Network Installation
Before you proceed, you must first decide which installation option suits your needs. If you are a Network Administrator, there are three main installation options to choose from: network deployment, client deployment, and single user deployment. Raster Design actively supports all of these options. Please read the descriptions of each of these options and consider the pros and cons before making your decision.
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s s

Network deployment installs the minimum number of Raster Design program files on the clients computer. Instead, most Raster Design files are stored on the network server. Client deployment installs all of the Raster Design program files on the clients computer. Single User deployment installs all of the program files on the clients computer using a single-user license.

Network Installation

111

Common Characteristics
With network, client, and single user deployments, you can control where Raster Design is installed on each of the client computers, and which preconfigured settings each client computer uses. This saves time in communicating corporate installation standards. You can also define which AutoCAD Desktop(s) that Raster Design is installed on. Network and Client deployments are created for network installations on the network server. You must have an AutoCAD desktop installed, including a version of the Autodesk License Manager (which is installed with the network installation of your AutoCAD desktop). Single user deployments, on the other hand, do not require the Autodesk License Manager. Installations from deployments are either silent or verbose. Silent installations write errors to a log file specified during deployment creation. Verbose installations display errors as error messages.

NOTE During a network setup, Autodesk Raster Design 3 does not detect if the previous version of Raster Design (CAD Overlay) is already installed. Before installing Raster Design, you should first uninstall CAD Overlay.

Advantages to Network and Client Deployments


s s

Allows for floating licensing, making it possible for different client computers to run Raster Design as needed, allowing more flexibility. Controls where Raster Design is installed on each client computer and which pre-configured settings are used.

Disadvantages to Network and Client Deployments


s

Client computers cannot operate Raster Design if the network is down.

Network Deployment
If you want to minimize the number of Raster Design files installed on the client computers, you should install using network deployment. All Raster Design files can be stored in a centralized location on your network server., which makes updating information to all of the clients much faster. For example, if you need to install a patch, you can install the patch on your network server rather than installing the patch on each client computer.

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An installation of Raster Design exists on the Server, in one installation location.

A desktop icon is created that points to a network installation of Raster Design.

Clients retrieve Raster Design licenses from a centralized server.

Network Installation

113

Advantages
s s

Saves disk space on the client computers. Centralizes the use of Raster Design, making it faster to update the product.

Disadvantages
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Slower performance on each of the client computers, as Raster Design needs to access the network server to access Raster Design files.

If you want to install Raster Design as a network deployment, see Installing Raster Design on a Network on page 123.

Client Deployment
As a network administrator, you should install Raster Design using client deployment if you want the client computers to contain all of the program files. You can control where Raster Design is installed on all of the client computers, and which pre-configured settings each client computer uses. This saves time communicating corporate installation standards.

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Installing Raster Design

Each client can install Raster Design directly from the Network.

A full deployment of Raster Design is installed on the client computer from the Network.

Clients retrieve Raster Design Licenses from a centralized server.

Network Installation

115

Advantages
s

Installs all program files onto your client computers, allowing Raster Design to run at its maximum speed.

Disadvantages
s s s

Uses more disk space on your client computer. Network dependent. Decentralizes the use of Raster Design, making product updates more time consuming to install.

If you want to install Raster Design as a network deployment, see Installing Raster Design on a Network on page 123.

Single User Deployment


As a network administrator, you should install Raster Design using single user deployment if you want the client computers to contain all of the program files, but you do not want to use the Autodesk License Manager. You can control where Raster Design is installed on all of the client computers, and which pre-configured settings each client computer uses. This saves time communicating corporate installation standards.

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Installing Raster Design

Each client can install Raster Design directly from the Network.

A full deployment of Raster Design is installed on the client computer from the Network.

Advantages
s s

Installs all program files onto your client computers, allowing Raster Design to run at its maximum speed. Does not rely on Autodesk License Manager.

Disadvantages
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Uses more disk space on your client computer. Decentralizes the use of Raster Design, making product updates more time consuming to install.

Network Installation

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Your Raster Design CD


Depending on the country you live in, you received one of two different Raster Design CDs when you purchased Raster Design. One CD is distributed within the United States and Canada, and the other CD is distributed internationally. The differences between the two CDs are described below.

The Raster Design CD for Customers in the United States and Canada (Domestic)
If you are a customer within the United States or Canada, then your CD includes both a single-user unlocked version of Raster Design and a network version of Raster Design. The network version of Raster Design uses the Autodesk License Manager (AdLM) for client and network deployments, which you can use to license Raster Design from a license server on a network. The Autodesk License Manager can be installed as an option from your AutoCAD 2002 network install.
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Install the single-user unlocked version of Raster Design from your Raster Design CD. You must contact Autodesk to receive an authorization code within 15 days after installing this version. The unlocked version can only be installed and used on one computer, at one location, at any one time. Install the network version of Raster Design from your Raster Design CD. If you are creating a client or network deployment, you must contact Autodesk to license this version immediately after installing it in order to use the software.

NOTE All information about licensing Raster Design is in Appendix B,


Licensing Raster Design on page 125.

The Raster Design CD for International Customers


If you are an international customer, then your CD includes both a locked single-user, and a network version of Raster Design. The client and network versions of Raster Design use the Autodesk License Manager (AdLM), which you can use to license Raster Design from a license server on a network. The Autodesk License Manager can be installed as an option form your AutoCAD 2002 network install.

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Installing Raster Design

Install the locked version of Raster Design from your Raster Design CD. You must contact Autodesk to license this version within 15 days after installing it in order to use the software.

WARNING! Before you install Raster Design, decide which type of licensing you want to use. For more information, see Appendix B, Licensing Raster Design on page 125.
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Install the network version of Raster Design from your Raster Design CD. If you are creating a network or client deployment, you must contact Autodesk to license this version immediately after installing it in order to use the software.

Checking System Requirements


To run properly, Autodesk Raster Design 3 requires a minimum of the following hardware and software. If your computer does not meet the minimum requirements, then upgrade your computer before installing any software. This prevents later problems.

Minimum System Requirements


One of the following AutoCAD 2002-based products:
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AutoCAD 2002 Autodesk Architectural Desktop 3.3 Autodesk Land Desktop 3 Autodesk Map 5 AutoCAD Mechanical 6 Autodesk Mechanical Desktop 6

Hardware Requirements
You should have 75 MB of disk space available in addition to the minimum system requirements of AutoCAD 2002, or the AutoCAD 2002-based product upon which Raster Design is installed.

Checking System Requirements

119

NOTE AutoCAD 2002 requires that users be assigned either Power User or Administrator permissions when using the Windows NT or Windows 2000 operating system. Failure to assign these permissions causes AutoCAD 2002 and its third-party applications to perform incorrectly. See the Windows 2000 Help system for information about assigning user permissions.

Network Installation of Raster Design


System administrators planning to install Raster Design on a network must have TCP/IP installed and functioning on the computers that are running Raster Design.

Requirements for Sharing Data in a Network Environment


Search Help for
Setting the Locking Method for Image Files

In addition to the software and hardware requirements that are described in the preceding section, the following is required for sharing Raster Design data in a network environment:
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Each user must have a unique network login name to use raster file locking. The login name is used to identify users so that images can be locked appropriately. If you share the same network login name with another user, then your image files could be overwritten. For raster file locking to work properly, everyone on the network must use the same file locking method and folder. These settings are controlled through the Raster Design Options dialog box.

Preparing for Installation


Be sure to configure the following items before you install Raster Design.

Virtual Memory Settings


For the maximum performance, use the Virtual Memory settings recommended in your Windows manual.

File Systems
Raster Design runs on the Windows XP, Windows NT and Windows 2000 (FAT & NTFS), and Windows 98 file systems.

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Log in as Administrator (Windows NT and Windows 2000 Only)


When you install Raster Design, be sure you are logged in as Administrator, or that your login name is part of the Administrator Group.

NOTE AutoCAD 2002 requires that users be assigned either Power User or Administrator permissions when using the Windows NT or Windows 2000 operating system. Failure to assign these permissions causes AutoCAD 2002 and its third-party applications to perform incorrectly. See the Windows NT or Windows 2000 Help system for information about assigning user permissions.

Installation Recommendations
Decide which type of installation you want to use. For more information, see Choosing Your Installation Options on page 110. Autodesk recommends that you follow the following steps to install Raster Design. To install Raster Design
Steps 1 Make sure that AutoCAD 2002, or an appropriate AutoCAD 2002 desktop, loads and runs properly and that peripheral devices (such as monitors, digitizers, plotters, and so on) are configured and working properly before you install Raster Design. 2 Uninstall any previous version of Raster Design before installing Autodesk Raster Design 3. NOTE Do not install Raster Design in the same folder as a previous version without uninstalling the previous version. 3 Decide where you want to install the program files. The default installation folder is c:\Program Files\RasterDesign3.

Installation Recommendations

121

Unique Installation Conditions


Custom Installation
During installation, you can choose to install:
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Program Files (files needed to run Raster Design) Sample and tutorial images

More than One AutoCAD


For single-user and network deployment installs, if you have more than one installation of AutoCAD, then you are prompted to select which AutoCAD(s) you want to use with Raster Design. Desktop icons and Program Group items are created for each AutoCAD you have selected.

NOTE Autodesk Raster Design 3 will only install to AutoCAD 2002, or an


AutoCAD 2002-based desktop.

Installing Single-User Raster Design.


To install single-user Raster Design
Steps 1 Place the Raster Design CD in the CD-ROM drive. 2 Select Start Run. 3 In the Open box, type e:\setup (where e is the drive letter for the CD-ROM drive), and then click OK. 4 Follow the instructions on the screen. Click Next to proceed through the installation process.

If you installed the single-user locked or unlocked version of Raster Design (in the United States and Canada), then you can start Raster Design. When you start the program, you are prompted to enter an authorization code.

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Installing Raster Design

Follow the instructions on screen to obtain your authorization code. You have up to 15 days to obtain this code and enter it. Registration begins the process of obtaining your authorization code and licensing the software. For more information about registering and licensing Raster Design, see Licensing Raster Design on page 125.

Installing Raster Design on a Network


Only a client or network deployment of Raster Design can be installed on a network installation of AutoCAD, or an AutoCAD desktop. To install Raster Design on a network, follow the same steps used for the network installation of your AutoCAD or desktop, with one minor change: Raster Design requires you to verify the location of your AutoCAD or desktop installation. For complete instructions about installing Raster Design on a Network, refer to the Installation Guide included with your AutoCAD desktop.

Associating Raster Design to Your AutoCAD Desktop


s

Client Deployment: When client machines install from client deployments, Raster Design is installed on the client machine and is bound to the AutoCAD Desktop(s) installed on the client machine. The network administrator chooses this AutoCAD desktop(s) when creating the client deployment. Network Deployment: When network administrators create network deployments, Raster Design is installed on the network server and is bound to an AutoCAD Desktop installation(s). The network administrator chooses this AutoCAD desktop(s) when creating the network deployment. When client machines install from the network deployment, the client machines are configured to run Raster Design, and its associated AutoCAD platform(s), from the network server.

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Raster Design Program Group Icons


After you have completed installing Raster Design, the installation program creates icons in the program group you specified. These icons are listed in the table below. Program group icons
Icon Description Raster Design starts Raster Design.

Raster Design Help Files accesses Help and online tutorials.

Portable License Utility (locked installs only) allows import and export of licenses from license pools. Raster Design License Manager Settings Utility (locked network installation or client deployments only) changes a network license to a single-user locked licenseeliminating network dependency. Raster Design Readme accesses the Raster Design Release Notes that contain the latest information on Raster Design. Raster Design License Agreement allows you to read and print a document that contains the Raster Design License Agreement.

Raster Design Menus


The Raster Design Image menu is added to your current AutoCAD menu. It is inserted to the left of the AutoCAD Help menu. Each time you run Raster Design, it checks to make sure the image menu is loaded. If it is not loaded, then Raster Design loads it if the Load menu on Raster Design Startup check box is selected in the Raster Design Options dialog box. See Appendix D, Raster Design Command Summary on page 145 for a complete listing of the Raster Design Image menu options with their corresponding command names.

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Installing Raster Design

Licensing Raster Design

B
In this appendix
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This appendix describes how to license Raster Design using flexible licensing management. With flexible licensing management, you can license Raster Design on a local computer or from a license server on a network.

Flexible licensing Domestic single-user licensing International single-user licensing Floating licensing

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Flexible Licensing Overview


Whether you activate Raster Design with a locked single-user or floating licensing, you must obtain an authorization code to activate the licenses for Raster Design. Review the following information to determine the licensing method that you want to use.

Single-User Licensing
Licenses that are assigned to a single local computer are called single-user licenses. With a single-user license, you can install and run Raster Design from a local computer. The license is only valid for that computer. You can log on to a network to share certain project files with other users, but you cannot share the program files. Licensing for single users is different for locked and unlocked versions of Raster Design. For more information on the locked version, see Authorizing Raster Design for an International Single User on page 129. For more information on the unlocked version, see Authorizing Raster Design for a Domestic Single User on page 128.

Floating Licensing
Licenses that are issued by the license manager program installed on a server are called floating licenses. With floating licensing, you can install Raster Design locally or on a network. However, the license manager program must be installed on a server that is accessible to each client computer. The license manager issues and manages the licenses. The number of users who can run Raster Design depends on the number of available licenses from the license manager. Any Windows 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, or Windows XP workstation on the network can be set up as a license server. However, for best performance, a Windows NT, Windows 2000, or Windows XP workstation is recommended. The benefit of floating licensing is that the licenses are not tied to a particular machine. This allows any client to run Raster Design provided that there are available licenses. For more information, see Licensing Raster Design on a Network on page 140 in this chapter.

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Appendix B

Licensing Raster Design

Network Terminology
Before licensing, take a moment to become familiar with the following terminology: Network terminology
Term Autodesk License Manager Definition A program that issues and manages software licenses. The Autodesk License Manager (ADLM) is installed as an option during the AutoCAD 2002 network installation. A method of licensing that controls single or multiple user access to software programs. Licenses are assigned on a first come, first serve basis. For example, if there are five Raster Design licenses available, any five users can use Raster Design. This method requires the use of the Autodesk License Manager. License Server Local Any computer that is running a license manager program. A computer and the software or data files on that computer. For example, a local hard drive is the hard drive in your computer. A computer that provides software and /or data to other computers that are attached to the network. Project data that can be accessed by more than one user. Programs that can be accessed by multiple users simultaneously from a single installation of software. E.g. network deployments. The most common network protocol utilized under 32-bit Window platforms for AutoCAD Licensing.

Floating Licensing

Server

Shared Data Shared Program

TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol) Authorization Code

The code that you receive when you register Raster Design. This code activates your licenses. You can get your authorization codes by registering your software.

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127

Registering Your Software


After you have installed Raster Design, you must register your software. By registering your software, you receive the authorization code or codes necessary to activate your licenses and you receive new Raster Design program releases, training classes, and new support information. Refer to the Read This First Card in your Raster Design product box.

NOTE If you installed a locked or unlocked single-user Raster Design, you must enter your authorization codes on your local computer. If you installed a network Raster Design, then the authorization codes need to be entered on the server running Autodesk License Manager.

Authorizing Raster Design for a Domestic Single User


The first time you start Raster Design, the Begin page of the Authorization wizard is displayed. You can authorize Raster Design at that time, or run Raster Design and authorize it later. Raster Design displays the Begin page for 15 days each time you start the program until you provide an authorization code. After 15 days, you must enter an authorization code to run Raster Design. You can authorize Raster Design in one of the following ways:
s

s s s

Internet: Guides you through entering your registration information and sends it to Autodesk over the Internet. Registration/authorization occurs almost instantly once you submit your information. Fax: Guides you through entering your registration information. Saves the information in a file that you can print and fax to Autodesk. E-mail: Guides you through creating an E-mail message with your registration information, which you can send to Autodesk. Post/Mail: Guides you through entering your registration information. Saves the information in a file that you can print and mail to Autodesk.

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To authorize Raster Design 1 Double-click the Raster Design 3 icon on your desktop. 2 On the Begin page of the Authorization wizard, select Authorize Raster Design 3 and choose Next. 3 Do one of the following:
s s

Select Register and Authorize, which guides you through the electronic registration process. Select Enter Authorization Code, where you enter your authorization code (which you receive after youve registered your product).

4 Choose Next and follow the on-screen instructions.

Authorizing Raster Design for an International Single User


When you authorize a single-user version of Raster Design outside of the United States, or when you authorize educational, NFR (Not For Resale), Try and Buy, and Term Use versions of Raster Design worldwide, only the computer you authorized is licensed to run that copy of Raster Design. The licensing software identifies the licensed computer to which it is authorized. The following section, Important License Information, provides information about the licensing software, possible license errors, and precautions you can take to avoid problems. License Errors on page 133 explains what to do if you receive a license error. The Raster Design license is only valid on one computer at a time. However, with the Raster Design Portable License Utility, you can transfer the license between computers. See Transferring a License on page 134 for instructions.

Authorizing Raster Design for an International Single User

129

Important License Information


The licensing software uses the following components on your computer to identify the license rights on that computer:
s s s

primary boot disk files in the license folder system date and time

Making changes to any of these components may cause a license error that requires you to reauthorize your copy of Raster Design. You can avoid most license errors if you take precautions:
s s s

Do not change Volume Names Do not change the Network card (and hence MAC address) Do not change the system clock beyond changes necessary for travel or Daylight Savings Time.

The following sections provide important license information and describe ways to protect your license from errors.

Understanding the License Folder


When you install Raster Design, Setup installs a hidden license folder named c:\c_dilla. Do not tamper with the license folder or any files within the folder. Tampering with the license folder or the files within the folder may cause license errors.

Changing the System Clock


The Raster Design license allows for time changes within two days of the current time on your system clock. If you set the system clock back more than two days, the next time you start Raster Design, you receive a message that gives you the option of correcting the system clock. If you do not correct the system clock, you receive a license error and must reauthorize Raster Design. For security reasons, you can only set your clock back twice.

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Licensing Raster Design

Updating Components on a Licensed Computer or Installing a New Computer


If you make changes to your computer, or if you install a new computer, you need to take steps to ensure that you do not receive license errors. To move your license to a newly installed computer 1 If you have a new computer, and you now wish to use Raster Design on the new computer, install Raster Design on the new computer. 2 Move the license to the new computer using the instructions in Transferring a License on page 134. 3 Uninstall Raster Design from your old computer. To avoid license errors due to updating a computer 1 Before updating the hardware on your computer, transfer the license to a different computer using the instructions in Transferring a License on page 134.

NOTE If you are installing a new computer, and you can still access the licensed copy of Raster Design on your old computer, you do not need to transfer the license at this time. You can install the new computer, then transfer the license from your old computer to the new one.
2 Make the required changes to your computer. 3 Reinstall Raster Design, if necessary. 4 Import the license back to the updated computer using the instructions in Transferring a License on page 134.

NOTE Verify that the machine identification code on your computer has not changed, even if you made changes to your computer that did not require you to reinstall Raster Design. The machine identification code may change depending on the changes you made.

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131

Uninstalling and Reinstalling Raster Design


The license information is not removed when you uninstall Raster Design. If you reinstall on the same machine, the Raster Design license information is still valid. You do not have to reauthorize.

Restoring from a Disk Backup


In a lab or training environment, it is common to install software on a master PC, create an image, and then copy that image to multiple PCs. After each class or test session, this image is used to restore the PCs to a known state so that no modified files are carried forward into the new session. To avoid reauthorizing each lab machine after this process, using Raster Design in this environment requires a small exception to the rule about modified files. Before the PC master image is restored, the c:\c_dilla folder must be backed up and restored after the master image is restored. To perform an initial setup (one-time only) 1 Install Raster Design on the master PC. 2 Remove any files from c:\c_dilla, but leave the directory c:\c_dilla\setup. 3 Create the master image from the bootable partition. 4 Restore the image onto each PC. 5 Launch Raster Design and authorize it on each PC. Unique request codes are generated for each PC and cannot be reused.

NOTE You do not need to back up the c_dilla folder at this point, because
it is modified during use. To restore the original configuration (ongoing) 1 After the last time Raster Design is run on the PC, copy the c:\c_dilla folder to a backup. The files should easily fit on a floppy disk. 2 Restore the master image. 3 Before running Raster Design 3, restore the specific c:\c_dilla folder for each individual PC.

132

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Licensing Raster Design

License Errors
Many license errors require you to reauthorize Raster Design. If you receive an error, follow the instructions in Installing Single-User Raster Design. on page 122 to request an authorization code. You can continue to run Raster Design for seven days after receiving most license errors. After seven days, you must enter an authorization code to run Raster Design. Receiving another error of the same type that you originally received within the seven-day waiting period eliminates any remaining time. In that case, you must enter an authorization code to run Raster Design.

Raster Design Portable License Utility


Those using the single user locked version of Raster Design can use the Portable License Utility to create a single license that can be shared among several computerssimilar to the way hardware locks are used. You can run Raster Design on any computer in the pool. However, you can only run Raster Design on one computer at a time using the same license. The Portable License Utility controls the transfer of an active license from one computer to another and ensures that the software is activated only on the computer that is licensed.

Understanding License Transfers


You can transfer your active license by using either a transfer file or a transfer code. The first time you transfer your license, or if you have changed your license details since the last transfer, you must use a transfer file. A transfer file contains all of the information necessary to transfer a license between computers. You can transfer a file on a diskette in a shared network folder, or as an E-mail attachment. The option to use a transfer file is always available when you export a license. A transfer code is a 16-character code that is generated by the exporting computer. You enter the transfer code on the computer to which you are transferring the license. The transfer code option is not available the first time the license is exported or if the machine identification code changes. In these cases you must use a transfer file.

License Errors

133

Viewing License Status


You can view license status on the Export tab in the Portable License Utility. You must have at least one active license to run Raster Design. If the Export tab is empty, you have no active licenses on the current computer. You can export any active license. To view license status 1 On the computer with the active license, from the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility to run the Portable License Utility. 2 Choose the Export tab. License information is displayed in a tree view. 3 Expand the tree view so that you can view the status for each license and the names of other computers in the pool by double-clicking any of the licenses in the list. 4 Select the item you want to view. The Export Information box, located at the bottom of the Export tab, displays additional information about the selected item. The Export button exports the license to the selected computer. See Transferring a License on page 134. To modify the information contained in a pool of computers, use the controls on the Pool tab. See Modifying the Pool of Computers on page 138.

Transferring a License
To transfer a license, you must do all of the following:
s s

s s

Install Raster Design on all computers that you want to include in the pool. See Installing Single-User Raster Design. on page 122. Obtain a machine identification code from the target computer or computers (the computer to which you are transferring the license) and add each target computer to the pool. See To add a computer to the pool of computers in this section. Export the license from the source computer (the computer where the license is currently active). See To export the active license on page 136. Import the active license onto the target computer. See To import a license on page 137.

134

Appendix B

Licensing Raster Design

Adding a Computer to the Pool


With the Portable License Utility, you can create a pool of computers that share a single license. You can add a computer to the pool at any time. To add a computer to the pool of computers 1 Install and authorize Raster Design on the source computer. 2 Install Raster Design on the target computer. 3 On the target computer, from the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 4 Choose the Import tab. 5 Make a note of the machine identification code (MIC) displayed on the Import tab. You need this code for a later step. 6 Return to the source computer. From the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 7 On the Pool tab, choose Add. 8 In the Machine Name box, enter a name for the target computer. 9 In the Machine Identification Code box, enter the code that you obtained from the target machine in step 5, and then choose OK.

Exporting a License
After adding the target computer to the pool, you can export the active license from the original computer to a target computer. When you export the license, the Portable License Utility creates a license file in the location that you specify. For security reasons, you must specify the target location for the license when you export it. Before you export a license, make sure that the target computer is available. The license can be imported only on the target computer that you specify in the Portable License Utility.

NOTE Once you have exported the license from the source computer, you cannot run Raster Design on that computer. To use Raster Design on that computer again, you must first complete the license transfer process by importing the license onto the target computer. You must then export the license from the target computer and import it to the first computer.

Raster Design Portable License Utility

135

To export the active license 1 On the computer with the active license, from the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 2 On the Export tab, double-click the license you want to export. 3 Under the license, double-click Pool to display the other computers in the pool. 4 From the list of computers, select a target computer. Once you have exported a license from the source computer to the target computer, you can import that license only on the target computer. You cannot replace the license on the source computer. If the license transfer information is lost in the process of transferring, you can return to the source computer and export the license again, but only to the original target computer. 5 Choose Export. The Exporting dialog box displays information about the license and the target computer under Export Details.
s s s

License Name: Displays the name of the license that youre exporting. Machine Name: Displays the name of the target computer. Machine Identification Code: Displays the machine identification code of the target computer.

6 In the Exporting dialog box, verify that the machine name and the machine identification code are correct for the target computer. Choose OK.

NOTE Choosing OK in this dialog box makes the license unavailable, and
you can no longer run Raster Design 3 on the current machine. 7 In the Export Type Selection dialog box, select the options you want and enter the information as follows:
s

Transfer Code: Transfers the license in the form of a transfer code. Make a note of the code displayed after you choose Transfer, and then enter this code on the target computer. If this is the first time you have transferred a license to this computer, the Transfer Code option is not available. You must use the Transfer File option.

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Appendix B

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Transfer File: Transfers the license using a transfer file. Enter the full path of the transfer file in the box beside this option, or choose Browse to select the file name. You can transfer the file to a diskette or to a shared network directory. The Portable License Utility creates the license.ctl file in the location that you specify. You import this file to the computer on which you want to run Raster Design.

Transfer Pool Information with File: Transfers pool information in addition to the license. If you select this option, information on all of the computers in the pool is copied to the target computer when you import the license. If you want to transfer the license back to the source computer, you can easily locate the correct computer and obtain its machine identification code.

Browse button: If you selected the Transfer File option, choose Browse to select the file name. Alternatively, you can enter the file name directly in the box beside the Transfer File option. Transfer button: Transfers the license.

8 Choose Transfer. Choosing Transfer finishes creating the license transfer file and closes the Export Type Selection dialog box.

Importing a License
Using the Import tab, you can receive a license that has been exported from another computer if the current computer was specified as the target computer during the export. To import a license 1 On the computer you want to license, from the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 2 Choose the Import tab. The machine identification code that is displayed near the top of the Import tab is the identifying code for the host computer. This is the code you entered when adding this computer to the pool. 3 Under Transfer Details, select one of the following options, and then enter the required information. Select the same transfer option you used when you exported the license:

Raster Design Portable License Utility

137

Transfer Code: Select this option if the license received from the exporting computer is in the form of a transfer code. In the box, enter the transfer code that was generated when you exported the license. Read Transfer File: Select this option if the license from the exporting computer is in the form of a transfer file. Enter the full path of the exported file in the box beside this option, or use the Browse button to find the file.

NOTE If you have misplaced the transfer code or the transfer file, return to the computer that last had the active license. Run the Portable License Utility, and then choose Export again. You must export the license to the same computer that you originally selected.
4 Choose Import to complete the process. The license is imported to the target computer. You can now run Raster Design on this computer. If you want to return the license to the original computer, repeat the export and import process. The original computer now becomes the target computer.

Modifying the Pool of Computers


You can use the Pool tab to edit the information for computers in the pool, and you can remove computers from the pool. To edit computer information 1 From the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 2 Choose the Pool tab. The pool tree, located at the top of the Pool tab, displays a list of licenses available in the pool. You can expand the pool tree to display more information on any license listed. 3 From the pool tree, select the computer you want to edit. The Pool Information box, located at the bottom of the Pool tab, displays information about the item currently selected in the pool tree. 4 Choose Edit to change the machine name or the machine identification code of the currently selected computer. 5 Modify the machine information as necessary, and then choose Exit.

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Appendix B

Licensing Raster Design

To remove a computer from the pool 1 From the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 2 Choose the Pool tab. 3 In the list of computers, select the computer you want to remove from the pool. 4 Choose Remove.

Specifying Portable License Utility Options


You can control the automatic display of Help files as well as specify the language you want to use in the Portable License Utility. You can also view version information. To specify options for the Portable License Utility 1 From the Start menu (Windows), choose Programs Raster Design 3 Raster Design Portable License Utility. 2 Choose the Options tab. 3 Select or clear the following options:
s

Disable Help Screen at Start-up: When cleared, displays the Help screen automatically when you start the Portable License Utility. You can view Help when the Portable License Utility is running by choosing the Help button even when this option is selected. Language: Specifies a language from the Language list for the Portable License Utility and the Help page. You must restart the Portable License Utility for this setting to take effect. Version: Provides information about the current copy of the Portable License Utility.

4 Choose OK.

Raster Design Portable License Utility

139

Licensing Raster Design on a Network


Rather than purchasing a single-user license for every Raster Design user or workstation, you can purchase a network license for a maximum number of concurrent users, and purchase additional licenses from your dealer as needed. You can also upgrade from a single-license package to a networklicense package. Raster Design is not site-licensed. When a user starts Raster Design, Raster Design sends a message to the AdLM through the network protocol, and requests a license. If the number of available licenses has not been exceeded, the AdLM assigns a license to the user. The Raster Design session then starts on the workstation, and the number of available licenses is reduced by one. When a user quits Raster Design, the AdLM frees a license for another user. Multiple sessions on an individual workstation use only one license. When the last session is closed, the license is available. Raster Design uses the TCP/IP protocol to communicate with the AdLM. For more information on floating licenses, refer to the AutoCAD 2002 Installation Guide included with your AutoCAD desktop.

Using the License Manager Settings Utility


You can use Raster Designs License Manager Settings Utility to switch your license between a network license and a single-user locked license. Even if you have created a client deployment from a locked network installation, you can purchase one or more single-user locked licenses in addition to your network licenses. You can then issue a locked license to a user who does not have access to your network. For example, if you have created a client deployment of Raster Design on your local machine, you are dependent on the network. If you later need to work without the network, you can use the License Manager Settings Utility to switch your license to a single-user locked licenseallowing you to run Raster Design independent of the network.

140

Appendix B

Licensing Raster Design

Supported Image Formats

C
In this appendix
s

You can use many common binary, grayscale, and color image formats with Raster Design. Raster Design supports all the image formats that AutoCAD 2002 supports.

Supported image formats

141

Supported Image Formats


Search Help for
Supported Image Formats

If you open a drawing containing an image format that is not supported, Raster Design does not load the image. If you attempt to insert an image that uses an unsupported format, then you are warned that the format is not supported.
s s s s s s

1-bit images are two color (binary/bitonal). 4-bit images are grayscale or color (16-color). 8-bit images are grayscale or color (256-color). 24-bit and 32-bit images are both true color. Raster Design can save images as 1 bit, 8 bit, or 24 bit. Raster Design can read more image formats than it can write. All readable formats are listed in the Read column of the following table. All writable formats are listed in the Write column. For instance, Raster Design can read wavelet compressed images such as SID and ECW files. However it cannot write files to those formats. If you insert a read-only image into your drawing and you want to edit it, then you can use the Image Save As command to save the image to a read-write format before or after you edit it.

Raster Design can read and write world files for any image type. World files contain correlation information for images, such as scale, rotation, and insertion point. Supported image formats
Format BMP CALS File extension BMP, RLE, DIB CAL, GP4, RST, MIL, CG4 FLC, FLI BIL Description Windows Bitmap Computer Aided Acquisition and Logistics Support Animator FLIC SPOT Image Corporations raster format with georeferencing format Compuserve Graphics Exchange Format Image Systems Group 4 Image Systems Grayscale Read (bits per pixel) 1, 4, 8, 24 1 Write (bits per pixel) 1, 8, 24 1

FLIC GeoSPOT

8 8, 24

8 read-only

GIF IG4 IGS

GIF IG4 IGS

8 1 8

read-only read-only read-only

142

Appendix C

Supported Image Formats

Supported image formats (continued)


Format JFIF- JPEG File extension JPG Description Joint Photographics Expert Group, best suited for 24-bit images A simple run length encoded format Apple Computer format Portable Network Graphics Plain RLC with no header RLC1 with IST headers Usually 24-bit true color; can be 8-bit grayscale or simple run length encoded Tagged Image File Format Multiresolution Seamless Image Database Enhanced Compressed Wavelet Read (bits per pixel) 8, 24 Write (bits per pixel) 24

PCX PICT PNG RLC1 RLC2 TARGA

PCX PCT PNG RLC RLC TGA

1, 4, 8, 24 1, 8, 24 1, 8, 24 1 1 8, 24

1, 8 read-only 1, 8, 24 read-only 1 8, 24

TIFF MrSID ECW

TIF SID ECW

1, 4, 8, 24 1, 4, 8, 24 1, 4, 8, 24

1, 8, 24 read-only read-only

NOTE Raster Design reads GeoTIFF even though GeoTIFF does not appear as a separate format in the Image Insert dialog box. GeoTIFF is now considered a source of correlation for TIFF files.

Supported Image Formats

143

144

Raster Design Command Summary

D
In this appendix
s s

You can enter Raster Design commands from the Image menu or from the command line. The table in this appendix lists the menu options and their corresponding command line names according to their groupings on the Image menu. For a full description of the Image menu and related online Help topics, see Accessing the Raster Design Commands on page 20.

Image menu options Command names

145

Command Summary
The following table shows each Image menu option and its corresponding command line name. Image menu
New Insert Save Save As Export Image World File Correlate Match Displace Scale Rubbersheet Manage Cleanup Deskew Despeckle Bias Invert Mirror IDESKEW IDESPECKLE IBIAS IINVERT IMIRROR IMATCH IDISPLACE ISCALE IRSHEET IMANAGE IEXPORT IWORLDOUT

Command line access


INEW IINSERT ISAVE ISAVEAS

146

Appendix D

Raster Design Command Summary

Image menu
Image Processing Histogram Convolve Bitonal Filters Change Density Change Color Depth Palette Manager Raster Entity Manipulation (REM) REM Create Region Polygonal Rectangular Diagonal Circular From Existing Vector REM Create Enhanced Bitonal Region Smart Window Smart Crossing Smart Wpolygon Smart Cpolygon Smart Fence Connected Entity Connected Window Connected Crossing

Command line access (continued)

IHISTOGRAM ICONVOLVE IBFILTER IDENSITY IDEPTH IPAL

ISPOLYREG ISRECTREG ISDIAGREG ISCIRCREG IREGFROMVEC

ISEBRSMART / Window ISEBRSMART / Crossing ISEBRSMART / WPolygon ISEBRSMART / CPolygon ISEBRSMART / Fence ISEBRCON / Entity ISEBRCON / Window ISEBRCON / Crossing

Command Summary

147

Image menu
REM Create Enhanced Bitonal Region (contd) Connected Wpolygon Connected Cpolygon Connected Fence REM Create Primitive Smart Pick Line Circle Arc From Existing Vector Clear Selected Clear All Select All Refine Mode Remove Data from Region Merge To Raster Image

Command line access (continued)

ISEBRCON / WPolygon ISEBRCON / CPolygon ISEBRCON / Fence

ISSMART ISLINE ISCIRCLE ISARC IPRIMFROMVEC ICLEAR ICLEARALL ISELECTALL IREFINEMODE IREMOVE

IMERGETOIMG

Convert To Raster Image ICONVTOIMG Transparency Smooth Copy to Clipboard Knife Mask Create IMASK ITRANSPARENT ISMOOTH ICOPYSS IKNIFE

148

Appendix D

Raster Design Command Summary

Image menu
Mask (contd) Convert to Image Clip Redefine Crop Line Circular Region Rectangular Region Aligned Rectangular Region Diagonal Region Polygonal Region Remove Line Circle Arc Polyline Circular Region Rectangular Region Diagonal Region Polygonal Region Remove Under Vector Smart Pick Line Entity Circle Entity Arc Entity

Command line access (continued)

IMASKCONVERT IMASKEDIT

ICROPLINE ICROPCIRC ICROPRECT ICROPALIGN

ICROPDIAG ICROPPOLY

IRUBLINE IRUBDONUT IRUBARC IRUBPLINE IRUBCIRC IRUBRECT IRUBDIAG IRUBPOLY IRMVEXISTING IDELSMART IDELLINE IDELCIRCLE IDELARC

Command Summary

149

Image menu
Merge Merge Images Merge Vector Raster Pens Vectorization Tools (VTools) Line Pline Rectangle Circle Arc Text Multiline Text Polyline Follower Contour Follower 3D Polyline Follower Text Recognition Recognize Text Recognize Table Recognize Setup Snap Toggle Frames Toggle Quick Bar

Command line access (continued)

IIMERGE IVMERGE RPENS

VLINE VPOLY VRECT VCIRCLE VARC VTEXT VMTEXT VFPOLY VFCONTOUR VF3DPOLY

IRECTEXT IRECTABLE IRECSETUP ISNAP IFRAME IQBAR

150

Appendix D

Raster Design Command Summary

Image menu
Options Raster Design Home Page Help About Raster Design

Command line access (continued)


IOPTIONS http://www.autodesk.com/rasterdesignuser IHELP IABOUT

Command Summary

151

152

Appendix D

Raster Design Command Summary

Glossary

access access key active Always Detach

To open or start, as a command. The key that corresponds to an underlined letter on a menu, command, or dialog box. Open and operating window, program, document, file, device, or portion of the screen. An option in the Raster Design Options dialog box. If you erase the image frames, this option automatically detaches the images. Curved line or object. Commonly created by three points. Example: You can remove a raster arc by selecting the start, center, and endpoints of the raster arc.

arc, raster

Ask Before Detach AutoInsert

An option in the Raster Design Options dialog box that prompts you to detach an image if no frames in the drawing reference that image. A Raster Design option for automatically inserting images into a drawing created with ESP or GSX, which are earlier versions of Raster Design. A Raster Design option that changes the image path of a previously inserted image to match the drawing path. A Raster Design option that removes raster entities as you trace them with the VTools commands. This option uses the Rub/Crop line width to determine the width of the raster that is removed.

AutoReplace AutoRub

153

base point

A point used for relative distance and angle when moving, copying, or rotating objects. Example: Select the base point on the image that you want to move to the destination point.

bias

The ratio of image width to image height. You can change the bias of an image by using the AutoCAD STRETCH command. Also called aspect ratio. A two color, 1-bit image, usually a line drawing. Example: A floorplan or a parcel map. The objects in a binary raster image are called raster entities. The background color of a binary image can be transparent or solid. The foreground color can be any color. Also called bitonal.

binary image

bitmap bitonal image blurring

A raster file format for images. See binary image. A method for evenly weighing all pixels in the kernel including the target. This filter, while similar to Low Pass #2, gives slightly brighter results. The visible element (usually a dotted rectangle) that is displayed when you select a range of items. Also called bounding box. Approaching maximum luminance. A higher brightness value makes all the pixels in an image lighter. Previous releases of Raster Design.

bounding outline brightness CAD Overlay GSX and CAD Overlay ESP channel clipped image

The way color conversion data is communicated or transmitted. Boundary by which you can shorten an image. Example: When you clip an image, the regions of the image that are outside the clip boundary are hidden from view. You can turn off the clip or you can delete the clip to redisplay all of the image. A clip is a display-only feature that you can use for viewing and plotting purposes. It does not permanently change image data.

154

Glossary

color channel

Each color in an image has its own channel. Example: An RGB image has red, green, and blue color channels. Color channels can be adjusted together or separately to bring out individual colors in an image. See also channel.

color depth

Every pixel in an image has information associated with it to define its color. The amount of information stored with each pixel is called color depth. The more information that is stored with each pixel, the greater the number of colors that can be represented. The information is represented as follows:
Color Depth 1-Bit 8-Bit 4-Bit 8-Bit 16-Bit 24-Bit Type of Image Black and White Grayscale Color Color Color Color Available Color(s) 1 color 256 shades of gray 16 colors 256 colors 65,366 colors 16,777,216 million colors

Color to GS configure

A tab on the Raster Design Histogram dialog box that converts a color image to an 8-bit grayscale image. To set up preferences and other settings that determine how a program operates. Example: You can set configuration values in the Raster Design Options dialog box. These settings become the default values.

continuous tone contrast

A shaded image, sometimes called half-tone in traditional publishing. The degree of darkness in areas in an image. Example: You can increase the contrast in a grayscale image to the point where the image becomes black and white. Decreasing the contrast results in an image of mostly midlevel grays.

Glossary

155

convert

Changing from one form to another. Example: Converting an image to binary can help isolate features in an image, such as the contour lines in a grayscale scan of a USGS map. After the grayscale image is converted to a binary image, you can use the VTools commands to convert the raster entities to vector objects.

Convolve filter correlate

Convolve filters can smooth or sharpen the edges of grayscale images only. The process of positioning an image within the AutoCAD coordinate system so that the images dimensions and coordinates match AutoCAD units and coordinates. A crop deletes pixel data outside a selected area of a raster image. The image frame size is adjusted automatically. A crop permanently alters an image. A drive, directory, folder, or other element that is active. Example: Windows Explorer indicates which folder is current.

crop

current

data organization datum decrement density

The method of organizing the image data when the image is saved. The data organization can be stripped, tiled, or monolithic (see also stripped, tiled, and monolithic). A reference point, line, or surface. To decrease by one. The number of dots per unit at which an image is scanned or created. The more dots per unit, the higher the density. Also called resolution. Example: If you scan an image at 300 dpi, the image density is 300 dots per inch.

density units

The units on which the image density is based. Example: Inches are the density units of an image that was scanned at 300 dots per inch.

156

Glossary

density value

The number of dots per unit that make up the image density. Example: An image scanned at 300 dots per inch has a density value of 300.

depth

The amount of information stored with each pixel. The more information stored with each pixel, the greater the number of colors that can be represented. See also color depth. Rotating a raster image Example: Use the Deskew filter when you want to rotate a raster image in reference to raster or vector objects without scaling it.

deskew

destination point detach an image disable displace display

The location to which you move an image. To move an image, you must pick a source point and a destination point. To remove all references to an image from a drawing. To turn off a feature so that it does not affect the drawing. To move an image from a source point to a destination point. The visual output device and its technology, such as a CRT-based display, a flat-panel display, or the graphics portion of your monitor. A Raster Design setting that maintains the display scale and rotation of entities in a REM selection set. Used only for the REM Copy to Clipboard command. The order in which images are displayed in AutoCAD. The sequence affects which images are under or over other images. You can change the display order so that an image is on top of all other images in your drawing. A method for correcting distortions in images, such as distortions related to parallax, unevenness of terrain, or lens distortion. See also rubbersheeting. Example: There may be times when you cannot align images using manual correlation because of distortions in the image.

Display Capture display order

distortion correction

Glossary

157

dithering Do Not Affect

The process of using a pattern of solid dots to simulate more colors than are actually available. A Raster Design option on the Image Mask Properties tab, which retains the images that are outside the mask boundary. A circle with a linewidth. Dots per inch of an image. Also called resolution or density. Example: When you scan an image, you specify the dpi, or resolution, at which you want to scan the image.

donut DPI

Draft

An option in the Raster Design Options dialog box that does not dither the pixels. This setting is recommended for binary images. A vector image in AutoCAD drawing format, saved with the filename extension DWG. Raster Design raster image correlated in an AutoCAD drawing. The unit on which an AutoCAD drawing is based. Example: A common Imperial drawing unit is inches. A common Metric drawing unit is meters.

drawing drawing image drawing unit

edge enhancement filters

Filters that improve the quality of an image by extracting individual elements, for example, boundaries and property lines. You can also use these filters for object extraction or object recognition by higher-level algorithms. An option in the Raster Design Options dialog box that prevents Raster Design from displaying warnings while you are editing an image. To make a feature active. A Raster Design option on the Image Mask Properties tab, that enables an existing mask for display. Enabling allows you to view the image clip as defined by the image mask. Compression method that is applied to an image when the image is saved. An encoding method can save disk space.

Edit Warnings

enable Enable Mask

encoding

158

Glossary

equalization

A function to bring out details in an image. Equalization changes the darkest pixels in an image to black and the lightest pixels to white and then reassigns the remaining pixels to the colors in between. Also called nonlinear contrast stretch. A Raster Design command for saving an image to another file format and for writing out correlation files for the image. Correlation files store insertion point, scale, rotation, and density information for the image. When you export an image, you can choose the type of correlation files to create. You can save the correlation information to a resource file, a world file, or to the image file. The type of correlation file you create depends on the image type you are exporting. The filename extensions, such as GIF, that Raster Design searches for when it searches for an image. Raster Design searches for images in the order that they appear in this list. An editing tool that can be used to adjust the appearance of an image. Also called editing filter. Example: The Invert filter reverses light and dark areas on an image.

Export

extension list

filter

follow

To trace a line on a binary raster entity and create vectors that AutoCAD recognizes as individual objects. Also called vectorize. The color of the raster entities in a binary image. A rectangular vector object that encloses an image. You can select the image frame by clicking it or by using any AutoCAD selection method. The image frame is an AutoCAD object that you can assign to a layer, reposition, or scale using standard AutoCAD methods. A frame can become an irregular shape if the image is cropped or clipped. See also image frame. The number of pixels in a histogram image that corresponds to the shade indicated by the placement of your cursor.

foreground color frame

freq value

Glossary

159

Gap Width

A setting that defines the maximum gap (from 0 to 10 pixels) that Raster Design can ignore as it follows a raster line, polyline, or contour. Raster Design ignores any gap that is equal to or smaller than the Gap Width. This setting is useful for scanned images that have many disconnected raster lines or in which pixels are missing as a result of imperfect scans. An image that references real-world coordinates in its correlation source. Example: Georeferenced images include GeoSPOT, GeoTIFF, and images that use world files as their correlation source.

georeferenced image

GIS (Geographic Information Systems) global coordinate system gradient directional edge enhancements filters

Computerized decision support systems that integrate spatially referenced data. These systems capture, store, retrieve, analyze, and display such data. A method to put angular spherical coordinates representing latitude and longitude into Autodesk Maps Cartesian coordinate system, and account for the curvature of the earths surface with a projection. Filters that improve the quality of the line where an object begins or ends by extracting individual elements. These filters use the vector sum of the three coordinate variables X, Y, and Z, taking into account their direction in space. Example: You can use the gradient directional edge enhancements filters in any one of the eight compass directions. Using these filters results in a black background with white outlines of the objects in the original image. An image usually created by a scanner in which continuous tones are represented as uniform shades of gray. Each pixel uses eight bits of information, producing 256 shades of gray. Small boxes displayed at various points on a selected object that can be used as handles to edit the object. Select a grip and then specify a grip editing function. The physical height of an image in pixels.

grayscale image

grips

height

160

Glossary

Hide Image(s)

A Raster Design option on the Image Mask Properties tab, used to hide the images that are outside the mask boundary. A setting in the Raster Design Options dialog box that is recommended for color and grayscale images. Example: This setting dithers the pixels on screen so the changes between shades and colors appear more gradual.

High Quality

high pass filters

A means for enhancing the edges of images. Images that do not appear clear may be sharpened by high pass filtering. A high-quality screen display (generally 640 480 pixels or better) or print output (300 dots per inch or better). A bar graph that shows the number of pixels for each color in the selected image or images. An aid to adjust the brightness and contrast of an image, to maximize details in an image, to convert a grayscale or color image to binary, or to convert a color image to grayscale. Parallel to the horizon or baseline. A drawing comprising both raster and vector data. A graphic that is composed of raster data. See also drawing and drawing image. The smallest parts that comprise an image. The description of a collection of data treated by a computer as a unit for input and output. Example: For certain types of images, correlation data can be saved as part of the image file. These file types include RLC, IG4, IGS, GeoTags in GeoTIFF, or HDR File in SPOT.

high resolution histogram

horizontal hybrid image image detail image file

image format

The method in which an image was created and saved, such as bitmap, CALS, RLC, or GIF. Some image formats, such as PICT, are read-only. A frame that encloses each image you insert (also called boundary). If you select an image frame, grips appear and hatch marks are drawn over the image to indicate that you have selected it. You can select the frame using standard AutoCAD methods (such as specifying points to define a crossing window or clicking the frame).

image frame

Glossary

161

image management image memory

The ability to modify the image display order, modify the image properties, and select the active image. A default amount of memory (RAM) set to 8 MB for images. If you increase the default amount, you might degrade the performance of your operating system. It is recommended that you use the default amount. The description of a collection of data treated by Raster Design as a unit. Example: When you select an image by clicking its frame, the image moves to the top of the display order, obscuring any vectors that intersect with it.

image selection

image type

Binary, grayscale, and color images. Example: You can use the histogram with grayscale and color image types.

image unit

The unit at which an image was scanned or created. Example: If you scan an image at 300 dots per inch, the image unit is inches.

index value

In Raster Design, the intensity of the shade (0 to 255) represented by the bar in the histogram where you place your pointer. To put or fit a drawing or photograph into your Raster Design working session. The point in AutoCAD at which text or graphics are inserted. Example: The image insertion point XYZ coordinate corresponds to the lower-left corner of the image frame.

insert image insertion point

invert

In Raster Design, a filter used to reverse position, order, or relationship. Example: If an image was originally scanned as a negative, you can invert the image to create a positive image. You can also use the Invert filter to reverse the dark and light areas of an image that was scanned from a white line blueprint.

162

Glossary

invisible

Unable to be seen. Example: When frames are invisible, or an image is on a locked layer, a frozen layer, or a layer that is turned off, you cannot select the image by clicking the frame. However, if the frames are not displayed but the image is on an editable layer, you can select the image using the SHIFT + left-click method.

layer

To form or arrange in layers. Example: When you insert an image, it is inserted onto the current AutoCAD layer. However, you can move the image to another layer. Because AutoCAD controls the visibility and behavior of the layers, you can move an image to another layer to take advantage of the AutoCAD layer properties.

layout

Management of images, including how they are displayed and in what order they are displayed, determined in the Image Management dialog box. A narrow elongated mark, such as a mark on a map recording a boundary, division, or contour. Example: You can remove a raster line by selecting a point on each end of the raster line.

line

linetype low pass filter

The display of a line or type of curve, such as continuous or dashed. A means of extracting individual elements in areas where pixel intensities change rapidly, thereby reducing highfrequency detail. The effect is a slightly blurred image. A Raster Design export option, which, if selected, replaces the original image with the image you selected to export. Used to display and plot of a subset of the images in your drawing. A mask clips the images inside the mask boundary and hides or unloads the images completely outside the mask boundary. You can mask images using a rectangular or polygonal boundary. The mask boundary is an AutoCAD object you can move, stretch, scale, and erase, just as you can any other AutoCAD object. A filter that removes random visual noise in an image by changing each pixel value to match the average value of the neighboring pixels.

Maintain Drawing Link mask

median filter

Glossary

163

memory merge commands merge images mirror

See image memory. Raster Design commands you can use to merge images, merge vectors, and select raster pen widths. To group two or more images into a single image file. To create a new version of an existing object by reflecting it along a line or plane. Example: Scanning software may mirror drawings, or occasionally scan the back of the drawing by mistake. You can correct these problems by mirroring the image. You can mirror any image along the horizontal or the vertical axis.

monolithic native capture

Encoding method for TIFF files. Saves image data in one piece. May result in slower processing time. Copies a REM selection set using the image data directly from the image file. Ignores display scale and rotation of entities. Used only for the REM Copy to Clipboard command. An option in the Raster Design Options dialog box that does not detach an image even if all image frames that reference the image are erased from the drawing. A Raster Design command used to create a mask. In Raster Design, a link endpoint that can be represented as a block or point object. Example: You can force the line follower to ignore the intermediate nodes and draw a single straight line between the start and endpoints of a line.

Never Detach

New Image Mask node

noise nongeoreferenced image nonorthogonal image ortho image

Random pixels that result from poorly scanned images. Image that is not saved with real world coordinates.

A graphic representation that intersects or lies at angles other than right angles. Also called nonortho image. Image that is rotated at 0, 90, 180, or 270 degrees.

164

Glossary

orthogonal paralax

Intersecting or lying at right angles (0, 90, 180, or 270 degrees). The apparent displacement of the position of an object with respect to a frame of reference due to a shift in the point of observation. Single dots on the screen that may be individually assigned different colors or shades of gray. Pixels make up raster images. Example: Image pixel size varies depending on the resolution of the image. For example, a 2 2 pixel in a 400 dpi image is four times smaller than a 2 2 pixel in a 200 dpi image.

pixels

point positive image PPI

A location on a drawing. Also, a defined survey point in the COGO database. An image in which the light and shade areas correspond to the original image. Pixels per inch. Also called dpi, or dots per inch. Example: When you scan an image, you specify the ppi, or resolution, at which you want to scan the image.

projection

Data devised by cartographers and mathematicians to depict three-dimensional shapes (like the earth) on twodimensional surfaces (like your screen) with minimal distortion. Attributes or characteristics of an object used to define its state, appearance, or value. Example: A drawing within Raster Design has properties that describe its appearance and behavior. These properties are displayed in the Information dialog box.

properties

quad sheet

A device for reducing image file size. Many maps are broken up into quadrants, which are square and are called quad sheets. When a group of quad sheets is inserted into a drawing, it is considered to be tiled. A pattern of closely spaced rows of dots and pixels that form the image on your computer display. See arc, raster.

raster raster arc

Glossary

165

raster data

A series of dots, or pixels. This type of data is produced when you scan a paper drawing, a blueprint, or a photograph. A raster image is an image composed of pixels. Raster entities are the lines, arcs, and other objects in a binary raster image. A Raster Design method by which segments (raster line, circle, and arc) and areas (diagonal, polygonal, rectangular, and circular) of a raster image can be selected and operated on. A Raster Design tool that allows thickening of vector entities when you merge them into an image. Thicknesses are assigned according to the specified entity color. A device to snap your cursor to the end, center, corner, intersection, or edge points of a binary raster entity. If you choose more than one snap mode, the crosshairs snap to the closest of the possible snap points. When the crosshairs snap to a point you want to select, choose the point. A source of information determined by an ordered set of coordinates. Raster entity manipulation commands. A group of commands for editing raster images. To use the REM commands, you first create a selection set. Then you select an editing command. You can select an area of a color, grayscale, or binary raster image, or you can select lines, arcs, and circles of a binary raster image. Then you can move, copy, or delete the selection set, or you can copy the selection set to the clipboard. The number of dots per unit at which an image is scanned or created. The more dots per unit, the higher the resolution. Also called density. Example: If you scan an image at 300 dpi, the image resolution is 300 dots per inch.

raster entity manipulation (REM) raster pen

raster snap

reference point REM commands

resolution

resource file

A file used by Raster Design to store image data such as insertion point, scale, and rotation. Can be used as a source of correlation information for an image when the image is inserted into a drawing. The Export command can write out a resource file for an image.

166

Glossary

respect

A Raster Design term for maintaining a particular condition. Example: Under the Vector Merge Default tab, you would select Respect Display Order if you wanted Raster Design to keep your current display order.

reverse RGB rotation angle RTF rub

See Invert. Red-green-blue. The angle at which an image is revolved about its axis. Rich text format. To remove a line or area from an image with the Raster Design Rub command. A rub changes the pixels in a selected area to the transparency color. When transparency is turned on for the image, the rubbed area becomes transparent. Rub permanently alters your image. The process of matching points in an image to known reference points in a coordinate system by warping the image. In Raster Design, a method for scaling a raster image in reference to existing raster or vector entities without rotating it. A device that converts blueprints, photographs, and line drawings to raster data. The use of marking made within outlines to suggest threedimensionality, shadow, or degrees of light and dark in a picture or drawing. Example: You can use the sharpening filters on grayscale images to make differences in shading more distinct. This can increase the sharpness of an image and enhance edges in the image. You may need to use sharpening filters to extract the highest amount of useful data from a lowresolution scan.

rubbersheet

scaling

scanner shading

shadow sharpening filters

The darkest part of an image. Sharpening filters enhance details in an image. All of these filters with the exception of the matched filters operate with a 3 3 pixel kernel.

Glossary

167

Show Image Frame(s) smoothing filters source point

A Raster Design option on the Image Mask Properties tab. Shows the frames of the images that are hidden or unloaded. A device for removing details or unwanted noise in images. Smoothing filters use spatial filtering with a 3 3 pixel kernel. The location from which you move an image. To move an image, you must pick a source point and a destination point. Spots of color or stray pixels in an image that result from scanning errors. Encoding method for TIFF files. Breaks up image data into strips for quicker processing. To move from one window or viewport to another. Also, characters you can enter on the command line to specify settings for a command or program. A Raster Design command to convert images. Example: When you use the Threshold command on a color image, Raster Design first converts the image to grayscale, and then uses the grayscale value to create the binary image. The grayscale value is obtained by adding the values of the red, green, and blue channels in an image and dividing the value by three. If you want more control over which grayscale value Raster Design uses to create the grayscale, you can convert the color image to grayscale first, and then use the Threshold command on the grayscale image.

speckles stripped switch

Threshold

threshold function thumbnail

The threshold function converts grayscale or color images to high-contrast black-and-white (binary) images. A miniature representation of an image that can greatly increase the speed at which you can preview the image in the Raster Design Insert Image dialog box, the Histogram dialog box, and the AutoCAD Image Adjust dialog box. A thumbnail is saved in the image file. A thumbnail can be created for only those image formats that allow a preview to be embedded in the image file. Encoding method for TIFF files. Breaks the image data into rectangular, tiled regions for quicker processing.

tiled

168

Glossary

toggle

To switch between two options, usually by pressing a single button. Example: The Raster Design Toggle command changes the visibility of the image frame.

transparency color

One selected color in an image. In binary images, the transparency color is always the background color. In color images, you can choose the transparency color. For a selected image, you can make all pixels of a specified color transparent. Also, any time you use a Rub command, the rubbed area is displayed in the transparency color. A Raster Design option on the Image Mask Properties tab. Unloads from memory the images that are outside the mask boundary. A mathematical object with precise direction and length, but without specific location. Vector data is stored as X,Y,Z coordinates that form points, lines, areas, and volumes. It is used to store discrete, well-defined data that can be delimited. Compare with raster. Example: In Raster Design, the image frames are vector entities, which means that you can move the image to another layer.

Unload Images

vector

vectorization tools vectorize

Raster Design commands used to manually convert a binary raster arc, circle, line, or rectangle to its equivalent vector object. Also called VTools. Converting a binary raster image to vector data. You can use the Raster Design VTools commands to vectorize a raster image. A setting that controls what happens to the underlying raster entity when a VTools command is used to vectorize the raster entity. Depending on the setting you choose, the raster entity can be rubbed or REM deleted. A file that stores correlation information about an image, such as scale, rotation, and insertion point. Example: When you export an image using the Export command, you can create a world file for the image that you can use to correlate the image in another drawing or software program. The world file is an ASCII file you can view using Notepad. Mapping programs require world files.

VTools Remove Setting

world file

Glossary

169

Write Correlation X, Y, and Z coordinates

A Raster Design export option. Writes a correlation file and chooses the correlation file type to create from the correlation output type list. Any of a set of numbers used to specify the location of a point on a line, on a surface, or in space. Example: Enter the X, Y, and Z AutoCAD coordinates to define the lower-left corner of the new image.

170

Glossary

Index

3D Polyline Follower, vectorization tool, 95

A
active image, 44 administrator, logging in as, 121 authorizing Raster Design, 128129 authorization codes, 127 Begin page (Authorization wizard), 128 methods for authorizing, 128 reauthorizing, 133 AutoCAD coordinate system, correlating images within, 54 editing commands, 26 FILEDIA variable, 38 imaging commands, 25, 27 multiple installations, 122 text or Mtext, converting raster text to, 5, 102 Autodesk License Manager (AdLM), 127 protocols for communicating with, 140 AutoRub, 65

binary raster data, 7 bitonal images. See binary images boundary. See frame brightness and contrast in images, 2526, 58

C
c_dilla folder, 130 CD-ROM, Raster Design international, 118 United States and Canada , 118 client deployment, installation, 114 color converting images to different color depths, 61 foreground of binary images, 47 REM selection, 19 rub and crop, 65 transparency, 49 color images adjusting appearance with histogram, 57 histogram, 59 making a color transparent, 47, 49 removing raster data by rubbing, 66 commands AutoCAD imaging commands, 25, 27 command line, 25, 146 Image menu, 20 Raster Design commands, 145 Raster Design toolbar, 24 communication protocols for networks, 140 computer pools (for sharing licenses), 133 adding computers to, 135 transferring pool information with licenses, 137

B
backing up the c_dilla folder, 132 Begin page, 128 binary images, 6 choosing foreground color, 47 despeckling, 63 making transparent, 47, 49 snapping to, 88 transparency color, 48 vectorizing with VTools, 92

Index

171

computers avoiding license errors when updating/installing, 131 components used in identifying license rights, 130 restoring Raster Design on lab computers, 132 configuration of Raster Design, 18 Contour Follower, vectorization tool, 94 contrast in images, 2526, 58 converting color and grayscale to binary, 58 color to grayscale, 58 image to a different format, 3940 image to different color depth, 61 raster contour to vector polyline, 95 raster text to AutoCAD text or Mtext, 102 raster to vector, 9293 coordinate system, Insertion Page, 3738 correlating images, 40, 54 Correlation Wizard, 35 creating correlation files, 40 rubbersheeting, 55 using Quick Insert, 35 using the Correlation dialog box, 35 correlation files, 54 inserting images, 26 modifying values, 37 searching for sources, 36 cropping, 65 transparency color, 65 custom installation, 122 customizing AutoCAD profile, 124 menus, 124

enhanced bitonal region object, REM, 73, 76 connected entity selection, 80 fence selection, 79 polygon selection, 78 selection options, 77 smart selection, 81 window selection, 77 enhancing images, 61 Export tab (Portable License Utility), 134 Export Type Selection dialog box, 136 exporting images, 40 exporting licenses, 135137 Exporting dialog box, 136

F
fax, authorizing Raster Design via, 128 file systems required for installation, 120 FILEDIA variable, 38 files correlation, 40, 54 transfer files, 133 filters for editing images, 61 histogram, 5759 floating licenses, 126127 folders (directories) backing up the c_dilla folder, 132 license folder (c_dilla folder), 130, 132 follower tools. See VTools formats, supported, 142 frame assigning color and layer, 7 selecting, 64

G
GeoTIFF, 143 grayscale images, 6 adjusting appearance with histogram, 57 making a color transparent, 47, 49 removing raster data by rubbing, 66 smoothing or sharpening, 63

D
deployment, single user, 111, 116 deskew, 61 despeckling images, 6162 DVIEW command, 28

E
editing images AutoCAD commands, 26 color depths, 61 filters, 57, 61 histogram, 58 histogram editing filters, 5759 image editing commands, 61 REM, 72 rubbing and cropping, 65 editing REM objects, 85 editing text, converting raster to AutoCAD text, 103 email, authorizing Raster Design via, 128

H
Help accessing online Help, 11 printing entire file, 13 tutorials, 13 histogram, 58 filter, 57 tonal adjustments, 57

I
icons, Raster Design, 124 IMAGE command, AutoCAD, 27 Image menu commands, 20, 146

172

Index

images attaching, 26 brightness and contrast, 58 changing properties, 46 converting, 3940, 58, 92 correlating, 35, 40, 54 See also correlating images creating new, 32 display order, 44 displaying data about, 44 editing. See editing images enhancing, 58, 61 exporting, 40 inserting. See inserting images managing, 27, 44 See also managing images masking, 50 merging, 68 with REM objects, 86 moving, 54 removing raster areas, 65 rubbersheeting, 55 saving, 29, 39 selecting, 64 selecting active image, 44 supported formats, 142 tonal adjustments, 2526 vectorizing with VTools, 92 See also VTools zooming to, 44 imaging commands, AutoCAD, 25 Import tab (Portable License Utility), 137 importing licenses, 137138 individual license, 137 inserting images, 26, 34, 36 changing values, 37 Correlation dialog box, 35 correlation files, 26 correlation sources, 36 Correlation Wizard, 35 from Internet, 34 Insert command, 20 Insertion Page, 37 Quick Insert, 35 Show Frames Only option, 35 installing computers, avoiding license errors, 131 installing Raster Design, 110 CD-ROM installation, 118 client deployment, 114 configuration requirements, 120 custom, 122 network, 111 network deployment, 112 on a network, 123 program group icons, 124 recommendations, 121

installing Raster Design (continued) sharing network data, 120 single user deployment, 116 single-user, 110, 118119 system requirements, 119 with multiple AutoCADs, 122 international customers, installation for, 118 Internet authorizing Raster Design via, 128 inserting images from, 34 inverting images, 61

L
lab computers, restoring Raster Design on, 132 license errors, 130, 133 avoiding, 130132 installing computers, 131 restoring Raster Design on lab computers, 132 system clock, 130 updating computers, 131 reauthorization requirements, 133 running Raster Design after receiving, 133 license folder (c_dilla folder), 130 backing up, 132 license manager (AdLM), 127 license server, registering, 128 licenses assignment of, 140 exporting, 135137 floating, 126127 identifying license rights, 130 importing, 137138 single user, 126 transferring, 133138 See also transferring licenses validity, 129 viewing status, 134 licenses (individual) c_dilla folder, 130 errors, 133 exporting, 135136 license folder, 130 machine codes, 133 motherboard BIOS, 130 Pool Information box, 138 reinstalling Raster Design and, 132 system clock, 130 transfer codes, 133, 136, 138 transfer files, 133, 136, 138 transferring, 134 See also transferring licenses transferring pool information, 137 uninstalling Raster Design and, 132 updating computer components and, 131

Index

173

licensing flexible, 126 floating, 127 from a license server, 126 from a local computer, 126 Raster Design on networks, 140 single-user, 126 terminology, 127 Line Follower Extension (LFX) tools, 94 loading Raster Design menus, 124 locking image files on a network, 120 logging in as administrator, 121

New command, 20 nonortho images, 47

O
Object Snaps, 28 online Help. See Help Optical Character Recognition (OCR), 5 See also text recognition option settings in Raster Design, 18 image masks, 19 memory, 19 new images, 19 REM objects, 19 vector merge, 19 Options tab (Portable License Utility), 139

M
Machine Identification Code box, 137 mail (post), authorizing Raster Design via, 128 maintaining link to image, 41 managing images, 27 Image Manage dialog box, 44 using AutoCAD commands, 27 managing images. See images mask, creating, 50 matching images, 54 menus, accessing commands, 20, 124 loading Image menu, 124 merging images, 68 REM objects with images, 86 vector, 87 mirroring images, 61 mouse button function, Raster Design, 19 moving images, 54 MSI Installer. See installation multiline text (Mtext), converting raster text to, 102

P
Palette Manager, 5, 63 pixels, 6 changing values, 58 making transparent, 49 removing, 65 Polyline Follower, vectorization tool, 94 Polynomial method, rubbersheeting, 55 Pool Information box, 138 Portable License Utility, 133 computer pool, 135 Export tab, 134 Import tab, 137 language, 139 post (mail), authorizing Raster Design via, 128 preferences settings in Raster Design, 18 primitive objects, REM, 82

N
network file locking, 120 installing programs on, 126 requirements, 120 sharing data, 120, 126 terminology, 127 network administrator, 111112 logging in as, in Windows NT and Windows 2000, 121 network communication protocols, 140 network installation, 111, 114, 123 network deployment, 112, 123 network version, installing domestic customers, 118 international customers, 119 networks communication protocols, 140 licensing Raster Design on, 140 network protocols, 140

Q
Quick Insert, automatic correlation with, 35

R
raster data, 7 editing, 57, 65 entities, 7 file locking, 120 pens, 8788 raster data definition, 6 snapping to, 88 text. See text recognition Raster Design accessing menu commands, 20 authorizing, 128129 Image menu commands, 146 installing. See installing Raster Design menus, 124

174

Index

Raster Design (continued) new features, 4 news group, 14 preference settings, 18 program icons, 124 reauthorizing, 133 registering software, 128 reinstalling and license authorization, 132 restoring on lab computers, 132 system requirements, 16 toolbar commands, 24 uninstalling and license authorization, 132 using command line, 25 Web home page, 14 working with, 17 Raster Design Portable License Utility, 129, 133139 disabling help screens at start-up, 139 displaying version information, 139 Export tab, 134 Import tab, 137 Options tab, 139 specifying a language for, 139 raster entity manipulation. See REM objects raster images, 7 editing with REM objects, 84 from REM objects, 86 merging vectors into, 87 raster pens, 8788 raster snap modes, 88 raster text, converting. See text recognition read-only formats, 39 reauthorizing Raster Design, 133 Recognize Text command, 102 See also text recognition reference material, 13 See also Help REGEN, 28 region objects, REM, 73, 75 registering software, 128 reinstalling Raster Design and license authorization, 132 REM objects, 72 AutoCAD editing commands, 85 converting to raster image, 86 editing raster images, 84 enhanced bitonal region, 73, 7677 merging with images, 86 primitive, 74, 82 region, 73, 75 resource files, Raster Design, 40, 54 restoring Raster Design on lab computers, 132 rotating images, 54 rubbersheeting, 54 methods for transforming image, 55

rubbing, 65 transparency color, 65

S
saving images, 21, 39 scaling images, 54 selecting images, 64 separating vectors, 9697 Shift + Left-click Image Select, 64 shortcut menu, editing REM objects, 85 Show Frames Only option, 35 single user deployment, 111, 116 using during installation, 116 single-user installation, 110 single-user licenses, 126 snap modes object, 28 raster, 88 speckles, removing from images, 62 swap file, 120 system clock, 130131 and license errors, 130 system requirements, Raster Design, 16, 119 network, 120

T
tables, converting text to AutoCAD text, 102, 105 target computer, 135 TCP/IP protocol, communicating with license manager, 140 technical support, 14 terminology, network, 127 Text (Table) Verification window, 103 text recognition, 5, 102 converting raster text to AutoCAD text, 103 converting text in tables, 102, 105 settings, 102 verifying and editing text, 103 tonal adjustment, 2526 brightness and contrast, 26 histogram editing filters, 57 to a portion of image, 59 toolbar, Raster Design, 24 Transfer File option, 137 selecting file names, 137 transferring licenses, 133138 transfer codes, 133 transfer files, 133, 137138 transferring pool information, 137 using transfer codes, 136, 138 transforming images, rubbersheeting, 55 transparency color, 49 binary images, 48 Triangular method, rubbersheeting, 55 tutorials, accessing, 13

Index

175

U
UCS, rotating, 28 UNDO command, 28 limits, 28 uninstalling Raster Design, 132 license authorization, 132

V
values, changing during image insertion, 37 vector data, 6 vectorization, 7, 92 See also VTools vectors merging, 87 using raster pen widths, 88 viewing license status, 134 virtual memory requirements for installation, 120 VTools, 7, 19, 92 configuring settings, 19 converting raster contour to vector polyline, 95

VTools (continued) converting raster lines to vector lines , 93 follower tools, 94 3D Polyline Follower, 95 Contour Follower, 94 Polyline Follower, 94 rub setting, 19 vector separation, 9697 vectorizing raster entities, 92 verifying and adjusting vector entity dimensions, 93

W
Web home page, Raster Design, 14 Windows NT and Windows 2000 logging in as administrator, 121 Windows workstation setting up as a license server, 126 world files, 40, 54

X
xrefs, 27

176

Index

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