This plug-in allows you to explore other commands from the community of other AutoCAD users submitting CIP (Customer Involvement Program) data based on your AutoCAD usage.
Keep your eye on the Autodesk Labs for some cutting edge technologies!
Cheers, Shaan
2 comments
If this worked with lisp commands, that would be interesting.
Maybe the lisp functions would have to be added to some list first, with descriptions, but omitting those is ignoring half my world, and those that use a lisp to define key-ins.
Does the prog catch commands within a lisp too?
Its not very useful to see to 10 commands alone, but it would be useful to see the sequences of commands relating to things like navigating, editing, plotting. So you could set up “groups” that show the 10 commands before and after a “pan operation within a viewport”. Or maybe commands surrounding an xclip or imageclip command. That will tell you useful things.
Loading...
If this worked with lisp commands, that would be interesting.
Maybe the lisp functions would have to be added to some list first, with descriptions, but omitting those is ignoring half my world, and those that use a lisp to define key-ins.
Does the prog catch commands within a lisp too?
Its not very useful to see to 10 commands alone, but it would be useful to see the sequences of commands relating to things like navigating, editing, plotting. So you could set up “groups” that show the 10 commands before and after a “pan operation within a viewport”. Or maybe commands surrounding an xclip or imageclip command. That will tell you useful things.
If this worked with lisp commands, that would be interesting.
Maybe the lisp functions would have to be added to some list first, with descriptions, but omitting those is ignoring half my world, and those that use a lisp to define key-ins.
Does the prog catch commands within a lisp too?
Its not very useful to see to 10 commands alone, but it would be useful to see the sequences of commands relating to things like navigating, editing, plotting. So you could set up “groups” that show the 10 commands before and after a “pan operation within a viewport”. Or maybe commands surrounding an xclip or imageclip command. That will tell you useful things.
If this worked with lisp commands, that would be interesting.
Maybe the lisp functions would have to be added to some list first, with descriptions, but omitting those is ignoring half my world, and those that use a lisp to define key-ins.
Does the prog catch commands within a lisp too?
Its not very useful to see to 10 commands alone, but it would be useful to see the sequences of commands relating to things like navigating, editing, plotting. So you could set up “groups” that show the 10 commands before and after a “pan operation within a viewport”. Or maybe commands surrounding an xclip or imageclip command. That will tell you useful things.