About Creating Hatches, Fills and Gradients

Hatching a drawing adds meaning and helps to differentiate the materials and areas. Some drawing applications such as construction drawings require hatch patterns which can increase the clarity and legibility of a drawing.

Along with patterns, you can fill an enclosed area or specified entities with a solid color or a color gradient. Like hatches, color fills add meaning to drawings and help differentiate materials and areas.

This topic discusses:

Adding Hatches, Fills and Gradients

You can use the following commands to add hatches:

Selecting Hatch Patterns and Fills

You can hatch areas using various hatch patterns or fill them with a specified color.

The following hatch options are available:

Additionally, you can create a hatch with the same properties as an existing one. See Setting Behavior Options for Hatch and Fill Boundaries.

Specifying the Hatch Start Point

By default, when hatching a closed area, the hatch pattern starts at the origin of the drawing. As a result, more complex hatch patterns might not align well with the boundary or with other hatches.

If you specify another starting point, at a suitable location, the software draws the hatch starting from the defined point. For example, you can align adjacent hatch patterns to match or apply a hatch pattern over another hatch pattern by setting a suitable starting points for their hatches.

You can define the hatch start point:

Specifying Boundaries

A boundary is a set of entities that forms a closed area. Entities that are not part of the boundary are ignored.

  Note: If the area is not fully closed, the hatch boundary cannot be determined.

There are several methods to define the boundary:

Boundaries can include closed internal regions which you can hatch or not. Internal regions are internal closed areas that are completely within the boundary area.

Additional options allow you to handle areas that are not closed and internal regions. See Setting Additional Options for Hatches and Gradient Fills.

Detecting Boundaries in Complex Drawings

Within a large drawing, you can optimize the boundary detection by specifying a set of entities to be analyzed when specifying a boundary by selecting an internal point.

To specify the set of entities you must define a so called group of entities which can include:

Specify the set of entities to be analyzed when specifying a boundary using an internal point. See Setting Additional Options for Hatches and Gradient Fills

Setting the Hatch Display Options

Optionally, use the following options to better display and select hatched entities:

Related Topics

-Hatch (command window variant)

Creating Color Gradient Fills

Editing Hatches and Fills

Creating Area Boundaries

Parent Topic

Working with Hatches and Color Fills