Enter traverse data using a variety of formats and mathematical equations.
The Coordinate Geometry Editor enables you to enter and modify 2D traverse data. You can use a variety of formats and mathematical equations to quickly enter traverse data either numerically or from known COGO data.
For example, if you are working in a metric drawing and want to enter a value in feet, enter 200‘.
If Drawing Units is set to: | and Imperial to Metric Conversion is set to: | and the suffix is: | then the distance conversion is: |
---|---|---|---|
Feet | US Survey Foot | m | meters to US survey foot |
Feet | International Foot | m | meters to international foot |
Meters | US Survey Foot | ‘ | US survey foot to meters |
Meters | International Foot | ‘ | international foot to meters |
You can use the following formats to enter data into the Coordinate Geometry Editor:
Use the Latitude/Longitude format that is defined in the drawing settings to specify XY formatting of the point of beginning and point of closure.
Enter known degrees, minutes, and seconds in any of the following formats:
Use compass quadrant location format to specify direction.
Enter known directions by quadrant number and then angle, in any of the following formats:
Use COGO points to specify direction, angle and distance values.
Click to select a COGO point in the drawing, or enter either PT1 to PT2 or 1 to 2, use the relative value between points 1 and 2, enter in any of the following cells:
Pick locations in the drawing to specify X/Y coordinates, directions, distance, radius, or Δ angle.
Click , and then click two points in the drawing.
If a value is not known, enter U in the cell. The Coordinate Geometry Editor will calculate the value based on the other, known values.
You can enter a variety of mathematical equations to calculate traverse parameter values. The equations enable you to enter known data, such as the relative location of COGO points, when you define a traverse.
The following operators are valid:
The following equations are simple examples of how to enter data in the Coordinate Geometry Editor:
Equation | Result |
---|---|
(1 to 2)/2 | Calculate the angle, direction, or distance between points 1 and 2, and then divide the result by 2. |
100+200+150 | Return the sum of multiple values. Note:
This type of equation is useful for calculating the total distance of several, contiguous lot lines. |