Save time and control the drawing size by inserting references to a set of objects that have been combined to form a block. When you insert a block, you create a block reference and specify its location, scale, and rotation.
A block is one or more objects combined to create a single, named object. Using blocks provides the following advantages:
You can insert blocks from these sources:
When you insert a block reference, you specify its location, scale, and rotation. Subsequent references to that block definition can be inserted in different locations, scales, and rotation angles. When a block is inserted into a drawing, it is scaled automatically according to the ratio of units defined in the drawing to the units defined in the block. For example, if the unit of measurement is meters in the destination drawing and centimeters in the block, the block is inserted at 1/100 scale.
Although a block reference is always inserted on the current layer, the block reference preserves the properties in the block definition. This means, for example, that blocks can have multiple colors even when they are inserted on a layer set to red or some other color.
Several methods are available for inserting blocks.
A block library can be a drawing that contains blocks or a folder that contains drawing files. A block library stored on the cloud can be shared across devices and AutoCAD platforms. You can insert block definitions from a block library into your current drawing file.
You can remove block references in a drawing by erasing them, however, you remove unused block definitions from the drawing by purging.