About Design Layout

Draw design features using the same drawing techniques you use in AutoCAD. There are four ways to add features to your design:

You can add ducts and conductors to existing segments as needed. For more information, see To Add Ducts and Conductors to an Existing Segment.

You can use standard AutoCAD editing commands on design features. The following AutoCAD commands are supported: OFFSET, UNDO, REDO, CUTCLIP, COPYCLIP, PASTECLIP, MOVE, COPY, EXTEND, STRETCH, TRIM, All Express Tool Commands, FILLET, ERASE, ROTATE, PEDIT, MIRROR, LENGTHEN, BREAK, CHAMFER, EXPLODE, XPLODE, SCALE, ALIGN.

If you offset Utility Design lines using the AutoCAD OFFSET command, the resulting lines are AutoCAD polylines. To create lines that are Utility Design features, use the Utility Design AUDOFFSETLINE command. For more information, see To Create Offset Lines.

As you draw, the features become part of the underlying industry model. The industry model detects any aspects of the drawing that do not conform with standards and lists these in the Validation Results palette. Where possible, the Validation Results palette provides an option to resolve the issue. For more information on design validation, see About Design Validation.

Analysis operations can be run in auto-resolve mode. In auto-resolve mode, when an issue is detected, the analysis tool automatically addresses the issue. For more information, see About Design Validation.

You can customize the operation of analysis tools by adding, removing, or modifying rules. For more information, see About Rule Points.