Go to Solution. Solved by design. Unfortunately turning Aero off and using a Basic, non-aero, theme did not eliminate the freezes. Hardware configuration is currently set to be managed by the Performance Tuner. Under Manual Tune the enable hardware acceleration is checked on.
After contacting the technical support team at Autodesk, I received a reply that same day! Did not expect that; way to go Autodesk Using video screen capture technology, the support tech showed me exactly what he was doing as he played around on the file I sent trying to replicate my problem.
After a few back and forth e-mails it was determined that the hang-up only happens with complex shapes defined as a region while trying to zoom in the middle of a command once the osnaps are trying to find possible snap points. We discovered that simple regions are not a problem and the development team will be notified for a future fix. Until then work arounds include turning Osnap off when zooming around complex regions, being careful not to zoom or scroll when in the middle of command after osnaps have begun to find points on the complex region, or by exploding the region and making it a block instead.
Message 2 of 7. Message 3 of 7. Switch to 3D wireframe and you will be able to grab the previously hidden endpoints.
Steven Elliott When I was a little bitty boy, my grandmother bought me a cute little toy. Silver bells hangin' on a string Message 4 of 7.
Switching to 3d wireframe didn't work, in my case. Message 5 of 7. Message 6 of 7. While in a command, e. Yes, you'll have to use a extra finger, but so what, the finger has many uses and is said to give you more power than a regular guy.
Use the finger and be irregular. Why do you need to change the running OSNaps so frequently that you need the menu open all the time? This really sounds like a job for OSnap overrides. I think THIS add-on palette is what you need. BTW It wouldn't be too difficult to make your own ToolBar where you make macros that changes the modes permanently. If you're up for it, I can give you some example. Notice: updates available for Apache Log4j vulnerabilities. See the security advisory on the Autodesk Trust Center for more information.
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However, sometimes you may simply want to suspend the running osnaps temporarily. This button acts as a toggle, so you just need to click it again to set running object snaps back on. Try this now and notice that the OSNAP button appears "pushed in" when toggled on and "popped out" when toggled off. This visual clue is useful because you can see at a glance whether your object snaps are running or not.
Right-click on the button and select "settings…" from the context menu. Sometimes you may only want to suspend running osnaps for a single pick. In such situations it is more efficient to use the None Osnap. This osnap works in the same way as the others, so when you are prompted to pick a point, use None to suspend all running object snaps for that pick only.
The None Osnap is not an osnap in the true sense of the word. It is really an osnap utility but it can be very useful when your drawing becomes complicated and it becomes impossible to pick the point you need without snapping to some other point.
You may not have realised it but you have already been using the AutoSnap features. Using the Drafting tab of the Options dialogue box, part of which is shown on the right, you can control all of the AutoSnap features. By default, all features are turned on except for the aperture box see below. You can easily toggle the Marker, Magnet and Snap Tip features on and off by checking or unchecking their respective boxes. Notice that you can also adjust the marker size using the slider and you can change the marker colour.
The default marker colour is yellow which works well with the traditional black AutoCAD background but you may wish to change this if you prefer working with a white background.
The illustration on the left shows the Marker, Magnet and Snap Tip features in action. You may have noticed the Drafting tab of the Options dialogue box also includes a slider which controls the size of the "Aperture Box". The size of the aperture box determines how wide an area AutoCAD uses to look for object snap locations. By default the aperture box is not displayed. However, you can force the aperture box to display by checking the "Display AutoSnap aperture box" option under AutoSnap Settings.
Each time you use an osnap to pick a point, the aperture box will appear at the center of the cross hairs as in the illustration above to indicate the area AutoCAD uses to search for object snaps.
In general the default size setting is perfectly adequate. It may be necessary to reduce the aperture box size if your drawing becomes very complicated and it becomes difficult to easily select the required osnap point.
Use this command to set the object snap target height anywhere from 1 to 50 pixels. The default value is Using object snaps is a great way to construct accurate drawings.
However, when drawing become very complex, it can be quite difficult to pick the exact point you want. This is particularly problematic if there are a number of possible snap points in close proximity. Fortunately, AutoCAD has a little feature to help in such circumstances. The aperture box, described above, controls the extent of the search for object snaps from the current cursor position.
However, it cannot help you select a particular snap point within that area. The Object Snap Cycling feature allows you to cycle through all valid snap points within the aperture area, until you find the one you want.
This feature only works when running object snaps are turned on. However, it is not necessary for the aperture box to be displayed. Once the snap marker appears, you can cycle through other local snap points by pressing the TAB key on the keyboard. Each time TAB is pressed, the next snap point is highlighted along with the object or objects to which it belongs. The illustrations above show just 3 of the valid snap points in this particular arrangement of objects.
Using this feature, you can be absolutely sure that you are selecting the point you want, no matter how complex the arrangement of objects. Tracking is similar to the From Object Snap in that it can be used to avoid the necessity of drawing construction lines in order to locate points. You do not know the exact size of the rectangle. You need to draw a circumscribed circle i.
Conventionally the only way to accurately find the centre point of this circle is to draw a construction line from two diagonally opposite corners using the Endpoint or Intersection Osnaps. The centre point can then be found by snapping to the Midpoint of this construction line see illustration on the left. Tracking enables you to accurately locate the centre point without drawing any construction lines.
Follow the command sequence below to find out how tracking works. Center lines appear through the two midpoint osnaps and the intersection of these lines is marked with a cross see the image below. When you see the cross, click your mouse button to pick.
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