- [font=Times New Roman][font=Times New Roman]1) Setup the text style to use an width other than exactly 1. It can be [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman].9999 or 1.000001 or etc.[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]2) Create the text or use property painter to 'paint' the new info to [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]existing text[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]3) Some where in the drawing, create a line that will be used for [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]reference later[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]4) At the command prompt, type WMFOUT[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]5) Select the text and the reference line (real easy if you have the text [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]on a separate layer)[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]6) Erase (or freeze) the 'real' text but keep the reference line[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]7) At the command prompt, type WMFIN & select the wmf file you created[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman] Notice the wmf doesn't come in at the same scale - the reason for the [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]reference line[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]9) After selecting the base point, use the default scale & rotation[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]10) Now, move the block made by importing the WMF so one endpoint of the [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]wmf's ref line matches up with the corresponding endpoint of the original [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]ref line[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]11) At the command prompt, type SCALE and select the wmf block[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]12) For the base point, select the endpoint you used to match up ref lines [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]with - the common endpoint[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]13) At the command prompt, type R for reference[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]14) Pick the 'common' endpoint[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]15) Pick the other endpoint of the wmf's ref line[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]16) Lastly pick the other endpoint of the original ref line[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]17) Now you can explode the block and the text should be lines[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]If you're using True Type fonts, you'll get lots of little lines. To clean [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]it up easily do this:[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]18) After the explode, do a Change and select objects = previous[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]19) Put the objects on a layer by themselves for easy removal[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]20) Draw a rectangle around the text[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]21) Use the Boundary command and pick a point between the rectangle and the [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]text[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]22) Freeze or lock every layer but the layer the text is on & erase it[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]23) Change the boundary you created to that layer for easy removal later[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]24) Use the boundary command again and pick "inside" the outline of the [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]text[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]25) Freeze or lock every layer but the layer the first boundary is on & [/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]erase it[/font]
- [font=Times New Roman]You now have the text in a outline and can solid hatch it for a fill.[/font]
- [/font]
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