Autodesk 235B1-05A761-1301 User Guide - Page 126

Working with Anchors, Connection Behavior, Checking Connections

Page 126 highlights

Connecting wiring to a receptacle Connecting a plumbing line to a sink When a connection is made, the new object inherits the properties of the original object. These properties define the new object and can include system, elevation, and geometric properties, such as shape and size. The connectors of a style define the location of the connection points on the object and specify each connector's domain. The domain is the type of building system to which the object or connector belongs. For example, an electrical object, such as a junction box, belongs to the electric domain. Building systems objects can have connectors that belong to different domains. For example, an air handling unit belongs to the HVAC domain, but it has multiple connectors that belong to different domains: a connector for gas belongs to the pipe domain and a connector for power belongs to the electric domain. Each domain has a predefined list of properties that can be compared to ensure that valid connections are made. For more information, see Configuring the Connectors of a Style on page 608. Connection Behavior Connector styles specify the rules that determine which properties are compared and whether connections are allowed between objects based on the results of the comparison. For example, when connecting pipe to pipe, typically you want to ensure that the 2 pipe segments are the same size and belong to the same system unless specifically designed otherwise. RELATED For more information on connector behavior for catalog-based content, see Rules for Connector Behavior on page 652. For more information related to style-based content, see Connector Styles on page 616. Checking Connections You can verify the validity of connections, runs, and systems. The software provides tools for checking a layout for valid connections, showing the location of disconnected connections, and viewing an entire connected run from start to end. For more information, see Checking Your Drawings on page 579. Working with Anchors An anchor is a general linking mechanism within AutoCAD MEP. Building systems objects can be anchored to each other, enabling you to create a relationship between objects. Anchoring objects can be useful for positioning lavatories or toilets along a wall, or air terminals or light fixtures in a ceiling grid. You can choose from 3 types of anchors to attach building systems objects: ■ Curve anchors. Attach objects to the base curve, typically the centerline, of other objects. ■ System anchors. Attach objects to a system run. Anchored objects can be moved along the entire run to other runs assigned to the same system. 108 | Chapter 4 Drawing Essentials

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Connecting wiring to a receptacle
Connecting a plumbing line to a sink
When a connection is made, the new object inherits the properties of the original object. These properties
define the new object and can include system, elevation, and geometric properties, such as shape and size.
The connectors of a style define the location of the connection points on the object and specify each
connector
s domain. The domain is the type of building system to which the object or connector belongs.
For example, an electrical object, such as a junction box, belongs to the electric domain. Building systems
objects can have connectors that belong to different domains. For example, an air handling unit belongs to
the HVAC domain, but it has multiple connectors that belong to different domains: a connector for gas
belongs to the pipe domain and a connector for power belongs to the electric domain. Each domain has a
predefined list of properties that can be compared to ensure that valid connections are made.
For more information, see
Configuring the Connectors of a Style
on page 608.
Connection Behavior
Connector styles specify the rules that determine which properties are compared and whether connections
are allowed between objects based on the results of the comparison. For example, when connecting pipe to
pipe, typically you want to ensure that the 2 pipe segments are the same size and belong to the same system
unless specifically designed otherwise.
RELATED
For more information on connector behavior for catalog-based content, see
Rules for Connector Behavior
on page 652. For more information related to style-based content, see
Connector Styles
on page 616.
Checking Connections
You can verify the validity of connections, runs, and systems. The software provides tools for checking a
layout for valid connections, showing the location of disconnected connections, and viewing an entire
connected run from start to end. For more information, see
Checking Your Drawings
on page 579.
Working with Anchors
An anchor is a general linking mechanism within AutoCAD MEP. Building systems objects can be anchored
to each other, enabling you to create a relationship between objects. Anchoring objects can be useful for
positioning lavatories or toilets along a wall, or air terminals or light fixtures in a ceiling grid. You can choose
from 3 types of anchors to attach building systems objects:
Curve anchors.
Attach objects to the base curve, typically the centerline, of other objects.
System anchors.
Attach objects to a system run. Anchored objects can be moved along the entire run to
other runs assigned to the same system.
108
| Chapter 4
Drawing Essentials