The appearance of a dialog box is important. If the box is too cluttered, it is ineffective and hard to use. Also, tiles should be arranged so they are easy to use. Consider which tiles will be used most frequently, make them prominent in the design, and arrange them so it's easy to move between them, particularly when they are used in conjunction with each other.
- What's New in AutoCAD
- AutoCAD Foundations
- Getting Started
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- AutoCAD User's Guide
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- Customization and AutoLISP
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- DXF Reference
- AutoLISP: Developer's Guide
- AutoLISP Core Concepts
- DCL Related Concepts
- About Designing Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- About Dialog Box Components (DCL)
- About Using DCL to Define Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- About Displaying Dialog Boxes in the Visual LISP Editor (Visual LISP IDE/DCL)
- About Adjusting the Layout of Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- About Dialog Box Design Guidelines (DCL)
- About Aesthetics and Ergonomics (DCL)
- About Consistent Design and Clear Language (DCL)
- About Dialog Boxes Compared to Command Line Input (DCL)
- About Providing Help (DCL)
- About Users With Disabilities (DCL)
- About Using Capitalization with Tiles (DCL)
- About Avoiding Abbreviations (DCL)
- About Layout (DCL)
- About Size and Placement of a Dialog (DCL)
- About Disabling Tiles (DCL)
- About Nested Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- About Handling Keyboard Input (DCL)
- About International Language Considerations (DCL)
- Predefined Tiles and Clusters Reference (DCL)
- About Error Handling in Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- About Managing Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- About Designing Dialog Boxes (DCL)
- ActiveX Related Concepts (Windows Only)
- Work with the VS Code AutoLISP Extension
- Work with the Visual LISP IDE (AutoCAD for Windows Only)
- AutoLISP: Reference
- AutoLISP: Tutorials
- Installation
- Release Notes